Saturday, July 5, 2008

Simply Irresistible... In Just Under the Wire!

I'm making it in just under the wire for Crusade #21! This month the theme is Simply Irresistible! Michelle Ward has challenged her Street Team Crusaders to try wax resist with crayons over something textured and then to paint it to color the background.














These are my first tries. I tried scribbling over an old metal button and some regular copy paper with crayons. It looked like flowers so I tried a rubber stamp too as the flower stems.

I had trouble finding a paper that was soft enough and finally ended up with some old text paper from an old encyclopedia that I've been tearing up, volume by volume. I've been at it for over a year and I've hardly made a dent in the two volumes I'm working on!

I rubbed a red crayon over a foam stamp and then sprayed it with Yellow Glimmer Mist spray paint. It's still wet in this photo!




OK, so I'm not crazy about this technique because it just doesn't seem to suit any of the papers I usually use. But I have to give it a good try, right? So I thought I'd try it in a current project.

So here it is in Vale McFadden's Calendar Journal. I used frisket to cover the cute little numbers for the dates because they were so charming. Then I gessoed the page. I used a couple of swirly foam stamps with red and green crayons. I found a romantic photo and pasted it in and tried to think of a theme for the rest of the page.

My trusty Poster Paint pens helped me fill in the rest of the page.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

SOOOOOOOO Exciting!

I finally did it! I painted some cotton fabric and quilted it on my new Bernina with free motion embroidery! Here's the result.
I used Adirondack Acrylic Daubers and for the most part, watered down the paint. The fuchsia, dark purple, and citrus green are much less watered down than the peach, sunset orange, and terra cotta. There's one other color in there with those but I can't remember which color it is.

I put a layer of aqua-solve behind it to do the stitching. First I kind of swished back and forth in a curving zig zag with a peach thread, then I used lime thread to make flower petals on top of the green circles and between the purple radiants. Then I stitched them, going out and back on each one and then doing a spiral out from the center and then reversed the spiral back in. I tried to make sure that the center was fairly solid before ending it. I sewed star shapes over the fuchsia stars in a matching thread.

When I was done embroidering it, I added a piece of felt to the back and stitched all around the edge.

Ohhhh I am SOOOOO excited about having finally done it! I've got another one started to trade with Susan Lenz for the Cyber Fyber exhibit.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

The Big Book of Numbers


Oh lookie what I did on Saturday morning! The Eleven pages went over well, despite my fears. My friend liked them just fine. I guess I was suffering from end of the project heebie jeebies or something. I definitely freaked out for nothing.


Here are all the pages (or almost all of all the pages... I was holding the camera up over my head to get this shot and this is the best of three!). There is only one I don't like and I'm not telling which one.

Two of the pages were done by ten year old kids! The blue jeans pocket, aka 15, which is the second from the right on the next to the bottom row in the photo above, and the one just below it, number 24. Jake did the blue jeans pocket which has a little packet filled with "15 things you can use in your art" and a purple satin, long-stemmed rose in it. The back of the page has a dictionary entry for "collection" and some duct tape. 24 is all hand stamped with a collage of a baby in the middle and a shrink plastic clock. The back has the old nursery rhyme, "sing a song of sixpence, a pocket full of rye, four and twenty black birds baked in a pie" on the back with some black birds and a pie. Maddie did that page and had lunch with us later. Her mom was also in the swap. Great pages! These kids have a complete grasp of collage and have done some very nice, very sophisticated pages. Maddie's mom, Karen, did a really great page for 4, which included stamped and distressed telephone book pages and torched and patinated fine copper mesh.

Thanks to Jane for hosting this swap and to Debbie at Frenzy Stamper in Scottsdale for providing the space and sign up services, etc.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Eleven, Dammit Anyway :(

I was so excited about a swap at Frenzy Stamper I'd signed up for two months ago! The pages are due tomorrow... uh, make that today... and now I'm deflated. I'd printed out the rules from the hostess and had them on my work table. But in a creative frenzy, I had used the back of the paper to stamp and stencil on and then used it in someone's journal last month. So I had to rely on memory.
Yeah, I know. Bad idea!

I've had life happen to me again as it seems to all too often lately, so I didn't get around to finishing my pages until the last minute. I worked on them for a few hours yesterday and again last night, making satisfactory progress. (Me still being awake right now, that 'yesterday' means on Thursday.) So I worked on them a bit today and got as much done as I could without a trip to the store for more adhesive. After dinner tonight, I jumped to it and got them all finished in time to go to bed at nearly a reasonable time. Then for the last check of the rules to make sure I hadn't forgotten anything.

Uh oh.

I needed danglies and to put my name on the back that I wanted to leave as is. I'd actually started thinking of the inside as the "back" in a way. I loved the stark colors on the back and the front flap and the graphic look of the characters. And I'd already tried signing them but it interfered. OK, I got out a really fine tipped gold pen and signed them as close to the bottom edge as possible. I dug out my stash of embellishment quality yarns and made a fringe for each and applied it. Not wanting to write my email address on each and thoroughly ruin the backs, I put each in a baggie with one of my Moo cards. But I'm afraid that my friend who is the hostess will be upset with me for not following the letter of the rules.

The work is supposed to be all originals and I had missed that somehow. The outsides are all original. The back is stamped and I had to stamp each one three times because my alphabet only had one letter 'e'. The word 'eleven' has three. So that worked out well actually. The front flap has a carefully placed stencil that I hand-cut and stencilled each one with an Adirondack Dauber. Can you say slow work? It was sort of fun though. I strung up some string above my work table and pre-folded the flaps so I could hang the freshly stencilled pieces on the string.

The trouble was in the photo collages inside. They weren't all originals. They weren't even original photos. They are very good color prints on regular paper. I've carefully trimmed each one, folded it, and placed it on the backing paper. But they don't follow the letter of the rules. There aren't any 3-D embellishments which is what I think she meant, although it just says 'embellishments' and 'danglies'.
Crap. :(

Monday, June 23, 2008

As the Wabbit Turns...

When last heard from, I was going to work on posting more often, wasn't I? And there ya go, left alone to my own devices, I end up waiting even longer to post than before! You can't trust these damned wabbits, I tell ya! They tell you one thing and then do the other.

OK, so I still haven't figured out where the time goes. And it's been ages since I posted any art. So I thought I'd make up for it today.

Here's a page I did in JoAnn's Paris deco from our Round Robin in the TreasureArtTrends Yahoo group. The picture of the building is a sticker from a set I bought by the page from a roll at a now-defunct scrapbooking store, Recollections. It was owned by the same company that owns Michaels and Aaron Brothers. They closed it to focus on their other two businesses, but really, they want you to shop at Michaels. They do not 'get' that they are in no way alike and that the merchandise is not the same. I've worked in many businesses, many of them enormous in comparison to that company and this is arguably the worst business decision I've ever seen made. I digress. The postage stamp and the map legend are both from the same page as the sticker. Hmmm... everything on that page is from Recollections, including the ribbon and the aqua Adirondack Dauber that I used to influence the color of the gesso I washed over the background papers.










On this page, I used my Adirondack Daubers to create a faux landscape for the background which I then stamped on and embellished with some flowers, etc. I've added miscellaneous papers and another sticker "Sainte Chappelle" from another page of stickers with a Paris theme. I love the colors and that is my favorite, all-time text rubber stamp in the background in ColorBox Chalk Ink Maroon.

I've been in several groups that have used that theme. Once you get on a roll buying things to use in them, you are glad to have more groups use the theme so that you can use up all you have bought!

This is a page for Dawn in England from a Romance Round Robin deco in the same group. This time, I've used my favored Lyra Watercolor crayons to make the background, spritzed it with some water and swished it over with a big watercolor mop to spread it out. The heart was cut free hand from a scrap of watercolor paper. The roses are from a Shabby Cottage Studios digital collage sheet I had my sweetie print out on the laser printer at work. I used one of my sets of clear alphabet stamps to typeset the words and double stamped them in Maroon Chalk ink. For the heart, I used a Stampington heart that I think is by Christine Adolph. I inked the stamp with the same Maroon ink and stamped on scrap paper a few times, re-inked, stamped the scrap paper once and then stamped my watercolor paper scrap heart. Sometimes, when I stamp on a shape I've already cut out, I put the stamp down inked side up and lay the paper on top to put the image where I want it. Then I press on the paper with the palm of my hand or roll it with my trusty wooden brayer, being careful not to let the paper move too much. It wasn't dark enough to stand out so I inked the edge with the maroon ink. The only thing that is not happy about the chalk ink pads is that you must set them with heat.


The small doily was scavenged from a gourmet meal my sweetie, The Sports Fan, and I had when we were staying at the Little America hotel in Flagstaff, AZ. Every dish came out with one of these doilies and I grabbed them before the dishes were removed. We're talking big meal here, so I think I ended up with about 14 of them between the two of us! Our car club ended up there overnight. I can't remember what trip it was though! If you are ever going through Flagstaff, Little America is the place to stay! The rooms are really nice and not expensive. The food is great, there are two restaurants and a buffet, a humongous gift shop, interesting lobby, and gorgeous grounds. It looks like it might be a truck stop from the road and it's right by the interstate where I-17 starts by splitting off from I-40. When we were there this year, our waiter told us that they are adding a spa. If they took Golden Retreivers, you wouldn't be able to get me to leave! Sadly, no dogs allowed. We stay there at least once a year when we go on the Arizona BEAT, the British European Auto Tour, each April in our Mini Cooper S, CoopahS.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Oh My!

Where does the time go????

I've signed up to trade for this postcard with Susan Lenz for her CyberFyber, an international exhibition scheduled for January 8th through 20th, 2009 at Gallery 80808, 808 Lady Street in downtown Columbia, South Carolina.

So now I HAVE to get going and make one to send to her, for which I've given myself the deadline of the end of the week. I missed out on the ones with the arches that she made from a quilt that were all in the first batch. This one appealed to me because it reminds me of some work I did back in the 80's when I was teaching fabric painting with Procion H Fiber Reactive Dyes at the Old Armory Cultural Arts Center in Columbus, Ohio.

I really did mean to post to you all sooner than this. Time just flies by and I don't know where it's going. Just slipping through my fingers.

I don't like that. I'll work on it.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Amazing Art!

I've just come upon the most amazing art. The website name is Form and Pheromone but the artist is Christopher Marley. This is really wonderful stuff and his story is interesting too. Look at the bottom of the homepage for About the Artist.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Tempus Fugit

Sheesh, and I'm not even having that much fun!
My lovelies, please forgive the lack of posts lately. As you may know, I am the primary caregiver for my elderly mother aka Nana or The Little Troublemaker. One morning last week, I came out of my room to discover that sometime between when the Sports Fan left for work and I got up, she had gotten up and somehow managed to fall. She was conscious but said she didn't feel well. So I called 911 and we were off to the hospital where they kept her far longer than I expected, not only throwing that day into chaos but all the ones after that. She's home now and in the kitchen up to no good as I type. She now has a walker that she's using to terrorize the Golden goofy boys. (She nudges Cody with it to make him move out of her way.) I did manage to get a couple of days of relative rest while she was there, so that's good. And she doesn't call me the Wicked Witch of the West, which is what she said she dreamed she called the night nurse. The night nurse said it really happened! They had to have someone sit in her room to keep an eye on her every minute to make sure she didn't get into trouble. Whew! It isn't just me who thinks she needs to be watched like a hawk!

What's bad is that I started cleaning my art space. Oy! I've been cleaning and cleaning and organizing for a week and I'm still not done. The stuff piled up on the top of the work table is no longer way above my head when I am seated in my chair, but I was sidetracked into digging out the under table area yesterday. I've found some good stuff. And I'd show photos if I could dig out the camera from where I left it on the work table!

So I'll share some photos of stuff I did before the cleaning started.

As you know, Michelle Ward is urging her Street Team peeps to stretch their wings creatively and here are more of the recent challenges. I decided to use some of them in a Calendar Journal I was working on as part of the CalendarGirlz Round Robin. These are full sized Calendar Journals with a page and a facing art page for every week of the month. Another group within the larger group is working on Mini Calendar Journals.
This paper casting was done with TP (yes, toilet paper!) dampened and brushed randomly with watered down Perfect Paper Adhesive (PPA, my favorite adhesive) to hold the layers together after drying. I think it's three layers. After the casting dried, I spray painted it with Merlot Glimmer Mists. The stamp used is a Tim Holtz lion rampant from his collection for Stampers Anonymous. I inked the stamp with black ink before I put the paper on it. It really doesn't show up well in this photo and I didn't take another. :( The background is pink acrylic over gesso and the green on the left is deli wrap that I used to catch the excess when I painted something else. I'm sure that the paints on that are Outside the Margins' Color Mist spray paints. I love clear stamps, especially alphabets, so that's what I used for the lettering. This set of mis-matched upper case letters is Scratchy Alphabet by Magenta.
You can tell that I like the lime Adirondack Acrylic Dauber, right? Yep, I like lots of those colors which is probably why I buy and use them when I could easily mix the paint myself. Sheesh, I am a spoiled art girl! Tooooooo lazy to mix some paint! I used one of my favorite stamps, the Marquette Bible stamp negative from Ma Vinci's Reliquary to stamp black ink on some plain ol' white paper twice. I cut it out and glued it to a CJ page I edged in lime paint.
Then I used a stencil I cut with my new electric stencil cutter from an old inkjet transparency. I made sure that the dauber was really juicy so that this 11 has lots of texture. By the way, the transparencies are not the best choice for use with the stencil cutter as they are either a bit thick or a bit too heat resistant and it takes a lot more effort than it should to cut through. The result is not exactly the straight lines I was looking for, but in this case I liked the result. Not so appreciated in other stencils I tried cutting. I made the text to cut out with my computer on Corel Draw so I could size the text any way I wanted.
Another lime acrylic over gesso page. Another rubber stamp I love. This one is by Christine Adolph for Somerset Studios and is one of four stamps on a sort of squared off rolling pin. I turned it upside down and stamped again, eyeballing the lineup to make the stem really long and cover the entire length of the page. I put five more of the flower heads along the bottom. I'm learning to appreciate that they slope a little!
I really have been enjoying using the Sharpie poster paint pens for everything, though I mainly use them for journaling. The page truly was very elegant-looking until I started writing on it! I didn't notice that I hadn't filled in the M until after I started writing below it, then decided that I liked it that way. I wish I would be less caught up in thoughts of writing and would pay more attention to keeping what I write in better order. My writing runs uphill too much for my liking and I do wish that I could mind the margins better.
So there's a bit of what I did in May in Lizbeth's CJ.

Friday, May 23, 2008

More Fun!

Sheesh, hard to believe that this week is nearly over! And what's more, it is a three-day Holiday weekend with no plans. No plans! Yippee!!! We can kick back and relax. I hope you get a chance to relax and recharge too, my lovelies.

I've been plotting and planning blog posts all week. Trying to finish projects and experiments. Trying to get things photographed. Getting those photos cropped and sized. And that's not even mentioning getting projects in the mail to various other people to work on them. Yes, I am in more than a couple of Round Robins. I'm cutting back on swaps where I think about it forever and then work like a mad wabbit to get pages done and mailed to some hapless, unsuspecting hostess who thinks I am a responsible adult who will get her pages in on time. At least so far I don't think I've been last. Regardless, I've been working hard to try to get you more blog posts.

And finally, here I am writing to my lovelies to tell you what exactly I've been working on!

More paper casting, but that's in the next post. This post? Ohh...

Transfers! (Can you hear the Ta-Da! ??? No? Hmmm...)

OK, how about transfers that work every time???? (I thought you'd hear it now!)

Yes, you read that right. I had seen a You Tube video of Claudine Hellmuth at the most recent CHA in January where she was demonstrating transfers using Adirondack Daubers Acrylic paints to accomplish the transfer of a photo from a photocopy or laser print to a tag covered in Dauber paint. I think the one she did was a black and white print on gold metallic paint on a tag. It was pretty cool. Then I heard her tell the women to whom she was demonstrating the technique that she thought it up because there are only three ways you can accomplish a transfer: with a solvent, with a goop of some sort (gel medium, etc.), or with blah blah blah, I can't recall what the last one was.
Hmmm... if that led Claudine to paints, where might it lead me? I wasn't thrilled with having to have every possible color of Dauber at $4 each. I could mix my own acrylics from the assortment of heavy body or fluid acrylics I have here. Fluid acrylics. Hmmm... same consistency of PPA. Too bad I can't use PPA (aka Perfect Paper Adhesive, my favorite glue). Why can't I? And it has the advantage of drying clear so it won't give a background color or affect the color of the photo!

Here's a finished one that I put into a Calendar Journal page on which I was working. If you look closely, you can read the text through the tail.

I am LOVING this technique!!!

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Casting Call!

Before the month is through, I have to jump in on Michelle Ward's GPP Street Team Crusade No. 20, Casting Call. Nope, she isn't making a movie. Our leader is encouraging us to make paper casts. And you cannot say you don't have what you need to do this one!

Following the lead of another Crusader, Maralena Howard, I tried toilet tissue. Yes, plain old TP, spritzed with water, laid over a deeply etched unmounted rubber stamp. I used a big paint brush with relatively stiff bristles to encourage the paper into the crevices of the stamp, added a couple more layers, encouraging each with the brush, then let it dry. (I let it dry overnight due to other circumstances. It just needs to be dry and a hair dryer or heat gun could be used for this purpose.)

The TP was white Cottonelle. After it dried in the mould, I spritzed it with Merlot Glimmer Mist, dried that with a heat gun, then dry-brushed Gold Fine Golden heavy body acrylic over it. That didn't seem enough so I was going to add black by stamping it with the same stamp, but inked. That didn't really take well - it might have been a little too damp? I realized that I don't have any black acrylic paint! I must but goodness only knows where. So I dug out the China Black Twinkling H2O and used my tiniest brush to add some definition with the black. The stamp is from Ma Vinci's Reliquary.
Since that was pretty cool and I'd just done a tour of all the Crusaders' blogs up through then, I tried someone else's idea too. Clare Brown (by the way, Clare, I love the name of your blog and the Gwen Diehn book, too!) used plain old tissue paper and that seemed like a good idea. I always save the colored tissue paper in which some things are wrapped. This paper is from Joggles and has some sort of sizing on it that makes for a harder, smoother, shinier surface and also keeps the layers of wet tissue from merging. Note to self, add some PPA (my favorite adhesive, Perfect Paper Adhesive) before adding the second and subsequent layers when doing this way again. I totally lost the last layer that just floated away when I picked it all up. It had barely an impression so was probably superfluous anyway.


I carefully added bits of glue to the layers and then dry-brushed with the Gold Fine acrylic. You can see one spot where the brush was too heavily loaded and I charged in with a firm hand instead of a light one. I love this stamp and use it a lot. It too is from Ma Vinci's Reliquary.

I think I want to try using facial tissue next, and wetting the tissue with spray watercolors instead of just plain old water.

Thanks for another fun time, expanding my art horizons, Michelle!

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Thursday, May 15, 2008

Will You Zink?

I just heard about a new printer that has the potential to change the face of journaling. Here's the skinny.

The technology behind the new printer is called Zink or Zero Ink. The printer is the Polaroid Pogo. It's a tiny thing that weighs half a pound and would probably fit into a shirt pocket or a nice little cosmetic bag to protect it from the contents of your handbag and vice versa. (Reminder to self to check out D&B for possible containers although I bet it would fit into a wristlet nicely.) The technology embeds ink crystals into layers of polymer that are activated by varying degrees of heat and pressure inside the printer.

The printer itself will connect to your camera via Bluetooth (for mobile phones) or via a USB cable from your digital camera. There's even a version that has the printer embedded into a digital camera for an all-in-one solution. I'd like to see what that weighs! Half a pound is ultralight for a printer but the opposite for a point & shoot digital camera.

Pricing looks decent. The paper is supposed to retail for $19.95 (MSRP) for 100 sheets. The printer will hold ten sheets at a time and is supposed to MSRP for $99.95. Once demand and supply even out, I'd expect the street price to be about $75 to $80.

I'm sure that there will be many more applications for this technology, but here's what is cool about it for journalers.

It prints 2" x 3" photos from compatible cell phones and digital cameras in full color. The paper has a peel-off, sticky back that will allow you to take a photo of something, print it, slap it onto a journal page, and then discuss it as you like in your journal entry. If you're shopping and you see some really cool graphics on some dishes or a throw pillow, you can use them for the background of your next entry.

For those who like to network, you can take a photo of someone who has just given you their business card, print it out, and slap it on the back of the card for a much better connection the next time you meet or try to think of that person! How many times have you mentally 'seen' the face but couldn't figure out which card it belonged to?

A picture is worth a thousand words, they say. See someone driving irratically or driving away from an accident? In a couple of clicks you can hand the evidence to the officer in charge.

The other thing I am wondering is what will happen with the technology once the really creative people start to manipulate it. We could see some really fun ways to use Zink paper.

I just heard about this less than an hour ago and I'm still thinking up great ways to use it. What I'm really wondering is why I just heard about it. A guy named Don Dodge who works for Microsoft (AKA the Evil Empire of Redmond), blogged about it in November of 2005. It's taken forever to get out there in a usable/salable format. Fuji has a similar concept out there that has failed to hit the mainstream.

So much for technology being obsolete before it even hits your desktop.

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Saturday, May 10, 2008

Stitch-Out!

Yikes, this was much more time-consuming than I'd bargained for! I was taking a class called Passport to Threads with Liz Kettle, from the Fabrics in Altered Art Yahoo group, on Quilters Keep Learning. One of the things Liz encourages everyone to do - in addition to the class work! - is to make some pages from two colors so that when you stitch across them with every pre-programmed stitch your sewing machine does, it really shows them off.


OKAY. My new machine has 160 pre-programmed stitches and four alphabets.


So ten hours, six bobbins full, 4 fat quarters, numerous sheets of felt and scraps of quilt batting, and nearly a whole large spool of embroidery thread later, I've got twelve pages of stitches, a small page of bar tacks, eyelets, and buttonholes, and the prospect of the alphabets still to do. Whew!


You can see the rest here.
Sorry that the photos aren't great. I took them over the arm of my chair in the living room, not exactly my best photographic effort.


I certainly learned a lot more about the Bernina 435EL Anniversary Edition in doing it. For one thing, I learned that there is really no rhyme or reason to how they arranged the stitches although I did have this vague feeling that I felt a theme developing, but then it kept going away. Hmmm... The feeling had more to do with the shape of the stitch motifs. The only other real multi-stitch machine I've ever had is my old Bernina 1010 (the old version that didn't have my favorite utility stitch, the three-step zig-zag), which only has utilitarian stitches.


While I didn't really want all these flowers and leaves and whatnot, I wanted the other things the machine does, like hmmm... gee, I can't think of what they are now. I wanted a machine that could run the embroidery unit. A lot of what I wanted was every utilitarian stitch on earth, including my favorite three-step zig-zag! I wanted a top of the line machine, and I got it! Actually, Bernina calls them sewing computers these days. I might have been able to buy a used one on eBay for somewhat less. But there's a lot of fraud on eBay with high price electronics like these sewing machines, the shipping can be prohibitive and you don't really have any way of making sure it even works as they claim. I actually feel better buying a car on eBay than one of these. So I went to the local Bernina store and bought one.


What you get with it then is 10% off everything else you buy at the store for a year as well as unlimited classes for a year. I can take the mastery classes over and over if I want to. I've taken the basic set of classes twice and I'd really recommend taking it twice to make sure that you get all of the ins and outs of using the machine. One of the things I've found hard to get used to is that you aren't supposed to pull the thread out ouf the tensioned thread path from the back. You're supposed to snip it from the spool and pull it out from the needle end.


I guess I'll get used to it. More on the new machine and me later. I'll report once I've actually done all the work towards the Threads class itself.

Friday, May 9, 2008

Dog Paddle

Last weekend, Nana and I took the boys to an AZ Golden Retreiver Connection event, their annual Swim Fest. Chance was looking forward to belly-smacking into the pool with a few tennis balls in his mouth and Cody just wanted to doodle around in the water.

It didn't really turn out that way. There were over 100 people in attendance and 79 dogs! it seems that most of the dogs had Chance's idea and most of them were a lot less shy than he turned out to be!

video

That's Cody up front, sitting on the step. Chance is the three-legged one on the far side of the pool who waffles about getting in on the other side of the pool and eventually does, swimming across the pool, grabbing a pink tennis ball and getting out. That's my puppy! And he's gotten up and come to find me everytime I've played this video because he hears me calling him. He might be a goofball, but he's a good boy and he's ours!

Oh, and the voice you hear most of is moi. Yes, I know that I sound just like Papa Smurf! :(

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Thursday, May 1, 2008

Street Team Challenges

As you know, I love participating in Michelle Ward's Street Team Challenges. This one is a follow-on from a previous challenge I missed, due to being stressed out already.


For my BookArtz Songbook project, I really wanted to use both a stencil and a hand-carved stamp. I made both. In fact, I made three stencils but only used one and didn't use either version of the stamp I carved.

So here's what happened. First, I dug out my carving medium and drew my Beatles logo that was used on Ringo's drum kit freehand on some paper with a fine-tip black Micron pen. I did a pretty good job. Not surprising as I am fairly good at lettering, especially if I can have a second go at it. And drawing from a visual reference makes it so much easier.

I transferred it to the medium by covering it with a really dark black soft pencil, laying it on top and rubbing. That worked well and I started carving with an X-acto knife and a #11 blade. This knife is one of my favorite tools. I like it so much that I have a second one to keep in one of my traveling art kits. And I couldn't find my Speedball carving set, of course.

In the past, I have always used regular wood-mounted linoleum blocks for printing. They are hard to carve, but well worth the effort. Linoleum produces nice crisp lines and has little grain. Because the surface is painted a different color from the inside, you can easily see if you've strayed from the line or made a tiny overcut. It doesn't wobble when you print with it, doesn't distort with pressure, and it is easy to load with ink.

I no longer have the package it came in, but this carving medium is white and about half an inch thick. It wiggles and jiggles and cuts way too readily. In short, I didn't like it while I was carving it. Additionally, I really didn't like printing with it! I think it is MasterCarve.

Rather than wasting more time carving up the rest of what I've got left, I think I'll spend my time trying to figure out what I did with my blank lino blocks!

So on to the stencil. I'd had the idea of doing the song title in a stencil. I was discouraged in this by two things. Firstly, when I tried to cut the first stencil, it just had too much area in the letters and not enough in the background to support them. Then I discovered that stencilling on top of the laser printed tie-dye was going to be a problem. I had to make 33 of these and I was tired of problems. So back to the logo. I used the original drawing of the logo to cut a stencil. I wasn't happy with it and determined that part of the problem was that my cutting skills were rusty. Part was that the original was distorted by having been covered with the pencil lead. Hmmm...

Back to the drawing board. I used my computer and my trusty CorelDraw X3 to simulate the logo, then printed out a few copies of the correct size onto a transparency. That turned out to be just right and I was able to cut a stencil I liked well enough to use on the sun shapes I'd laboriously cut from 90# and 140# CP Water Color paper and painted with yellow acrylics.



I used a pen to close up the ligatures that held the stencil pieces together and then painted Sunset Gold on the rays of the sun.

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All You Need Is Love... And 17 Oz. of Glue!

Here's the other project that had me so up to my ears in glue that I was sick of gluing stuff. Luckily, I had scored an entire gallon of US ArtQuest's Matte Perfect Paper Adhesive for half price when one of my favorite paper arts stores (Las Vegas Art Stamps) went out of business. I got a ton of cool stuff there but I'd really rather that the store was still there. Linda is happily retired now though and she's so nice that you can't really complain. She deserves it and she still looks too young to be retired which will be a nice thing for her to have people to remark on to her.

The project was for BookArtz (my favorite Yahoo group, now co-located on the ning social network at http://www.bookartz.com/), the songbook hostessed by lovely Lyn in Michigan (right under the thumb on the mitten, if you're way familiar with Michiganders). Now I'd been way involved in the preliminary discussions of this fat book idea, and had had a very firm idea of the song I meant to do from the beginning. What else could I do but my very own theme song, Love Shack? I even paid to download the sheet music which I was surprised not to find for free online. (If you find it for free, don't tell me because that will just piss me off, okay?)

So even I don't know how it ended up being all about All You Need Is Love!

As you can see from the shape I tucked into the pocket on the front (yes, I know that I like pockets a lot), shades of Fool on the Hill and Here Comes the Sun crept in there. There was a bit of Sgt. Pepper in there too, as evidenced by the tie-dye background. It's mounted on purple card stock because it was printed on a color laser printer from a PDF and I forgot that they print out just a tad smaller than the original. I think I heard that somewhere before. Hmmm...

I got sick of gluing because I had to glue the top of the front to the cardstock but not the bottom. That had the transparency with the words glued to it. I'd originally thought to do the words with a stencil but there was too much letters and too little background to make a good stencil. The back is stamped with commercial stamps. 'Love' is a bought stamp, wood-mounted. 'Is All You Need' was made up with some of my favorite clear alphabet stamps on an acrylic mount.


More on stamps and stencils in the next post!

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Wednesday, April 30, 2008

I'm Bad, I'm Bad, I Know It!

Ok, I admit it. I've been really bad about posting lately. Life has been busy. OK, so that's a crummy excuse but it is mine and I'm sticking with it. So here's a post.

Here's what I've been up to lately. A new buddy of mine was hosting an alphabet book. The problem for my friend is that the deadline had passed and she wanted to get these pages swapped and out to her participants so she asked me at the last minute to fill in on one of the letters. I'd missed the deadline for signing up because I was up to my ears in pending deadlines for current projects at the time and just couldn't contemplate doing that again until I scrubbed the paint off of myself. So she emailed and asked if I'd consider doing some quick pages to get a copy of this awesome book.

Well, you know I said yes! I'd been kicking myself for missing that one because I adore alphabeticas. The page had to be 4 x 4 and express the letter P in some way. How about purple with a penny, a pencil, and a P on the front, pearl edging, and a pink back with a paisley on it? I'd originally intended to do a pink vellum jeans pocket with a P in the faux stitching, but I'd been gluing the pages I'd just finished for another project and was thoroughly sick of that kind of glue.


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Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Thoughts on Museums and Art Collections

As someone who enjoys learning, I had to investigate the Open University when I first heard of it (I think it was through someone's blog). On and off for the past year or more, I've been taking various units there on a wide range of topics as they appeal to me.

Last night and today, I viewed the course materials for an Open University course, A216_1, Musée du Louvre. The course unit is all about how the Louvre developed as a building, an art collection, an expression of taste, and as an institution. I thought I'd share an essay written for the end of the course assignment on my blog. It's just my opinion and observation and it isn't necessarily a finished thought on the subject.

The main idea this unit brought to mind is just how incestuous the art world is and closed in that the system of commissioning and collecting works of art, then using those collections as teaching tools to train future generations of artists as well as to educate the public and other collectors leaves little room for the introduction of new ideas and original thoughts. As a consequence, it's a wonder that any new ideas are ever accepted in the world of art!

Viewing a broad collection of various schools of classical art brings into focus the difficulties faced by new ages of artists in their struggles to have their art accepted and valued. Is it any surprise that the artists of the late 19th and early 20th century were called "Les Fauvres" or The Wild Beasts? One can also see that the differences just in how the human form is interpreted on canvas alone might make gaining an audience's appreciation and value a struggle. Is a more complex depiction more valuable than one that appears simpler or more easily completed?

In thinking about this, I have in mind a comparison between the paintings of Titian, Leonardo, Monet, Ernst, Picasso (later period) and Pollack. These artists comprise the Old Masters, two Modern Masters, and two acknowledged Masters of the new school of thought. (I'm not sure I've classifed Picasso and Pollack in the most accurate manner. So I'm open to suggestion as to how to categorize them.) In choosing them, I've aimed for three very different periods of art and two acclaimed masters of each of those eras.

Art created by the Old Masters served several different functions: artistic expression, a way of making a living, a substitute for photographic evidence of the times, as well as political expression and propaganda. (Were there additional functions?) The paintings of Titian often comprise many figures interacting in one canvas, generally utilize an allegorical theme, show an outstanding use of color, and contain a great degree of detail. Leonardo most often uses a simple idea, a single subject, a limited range of earthy colors, and the most incredible degree of detail imaginable! Both aim for an illusion of realism.

The Modern Masters, Monet and Ernst, were trained classically but chose to use their own interpretation of form by painting the light reflected by the form, injected with their own emotion. The paintings could comprise one or several subjects, may not have had a theme that is obvious or of importance, rely much more on color and choose from a far wider palette, contain far less detail and are further removed from realism than their classical training would induce them to render.

The new school of painters show a release from any constraints. Their paintings are more informed by the thoughts, reactions, and emotions of the painter than by a link to the reality of the subject matter which may or may not be recognizable by the viewer. Their palettes are unrestrained and may include a degree of texture not found in classical works.

That works by all of these artists may co-exist under one roof (or collection of roofs) is a great credit to those who assemble collections of art. Comparing the work of one artist to another's is impossible. Assigning a value, be it monetary or just relative worthiness, can only ever be purely subjective and a matter of opinion. Consider that the person assigned to choose or to make this decision may or may not have any knowledge, training, skill, or even just an eye for art.
What are the criteria for decision-making? How does one decide what to include and what to reject? What gives one painting more merit than another by the same artist? By a different artist? What has been lost of not seen because of an arbitrary decision?

The whole idea of making a collection, whether it is personal or public, comes down to a few plebian criteria. What is available, how much can be spent in acquisition, and who gets to decide what is included?

So basically, what we see in museums and other collections is what someone else had an opportunity to acquire, had the funds to do it, thought it was good and managed to get the sale through, and hung on to it despite the pillages of war, political change, marriages, and other events!

Bottom line: Art is whatever you think it is.

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Too Much Fun!

Today was too much fun!

Since I'm in Las Vegas, I let Keri know and we planned to meet for lunch today. We met at Canonita, a Mexican restaurant in the Canal Shoppes adjacent to The Venetian Hotel and Resort on the fabled Strip. The Sports Fan was with us and the three of us drank Margaritas and Mojitos, ate chips and killer salsa, and enjoyed some fabulous Mexican food. Our waiter was fun and the location overlooking the Grand Canal was really enjoyable. But the focus was the company! We had a great time and after a couple of hours of eating, drinking, and incessant yakking, we strolled around the shops in that mall as well as those in the adjoining Palazzo shops.

What could be more fun than meeting up with an art friend and shopping for shoes and purses? Not much, I think!

Keri and Marilyn

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Check these out too!

If you are looking for free images that are copyright safe, go here: Lisa Vollrath's Ten-Two Studio. She's got some nice Irish and Spring photos on her countdown page and today is the last day! It's linkware, so just post a link to the page on your blog or on one of your groups.

Here are tiny samples of some. (Blogger is not cooperating tonight!)

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Check Them Out!

If you're checking to see if I've had anything new to say, I don't. Well, I always do but it isn't always appropriate to share with the world, yanno?!! But I did think of something that I'd like to share. Please check out my links.

I've got links to some really terrific blogs and websites in the sidebar. Between reading my own posts, listening to the tunes I've chosen, and reading about what I like to read in the way of blogs will give you a good idea of who I am. Plus, the chances are that if you like what I post, you just might like the blogs I like to read too.

First and foremost is Pomegranates and Paper, the blog of Mrs. Pom, artist, writer, mother, wife, sister, daughter, lawyer, workshop leader, chef, prolific reader, and sit down comedienne. Well, she makes me laugh. Her blog was my first blog-addiction.

My second blog-addiction was the Autumn Cottage Diarist, the online journal of an English Countrywoman. Admit it, we all want to be either an English, French, or Italian countrywoman! (Aside from the Sports Fan, I don't think many men read my blog and I know that he doesn't want to be any sort of woman. And I'm pretty certain that &rew would prefer to be a country gentleman if he abandoned his urban/suburban setting. So, apologies to any other male readers out there.)

Next up are two sisters who provide me (and the rest of you out there) with wonderful word and eye candy, Jill and eb. I first discovered Jill's Follow Your Bliss and fell in love with the colorful photos. She might be a Midwestern elementary school teacher by day but the rest of the time, she's a fabulous artist, photographer, wife, mother, sister, daughter, and more with a few addictions I share (such as shoes!). Her lovely sister, eb, is a prolific blogger who I believe coined the term Bloglandia for last year's Bloglandia ball, also invented by her and hosted on her be... dream... play blog. Her work and photographs are always a feast for the eyes.

I've recently added some other links and will blog about them in a future post. So check them out! And as Michelle Ward always reminds us, don't forget to leave a comment when you visit. It really extends the community of Bloglandia and encourages everyone to post. You know how good it feels when you get a comment, right? Hey! You don't blog? Well, get started. It could hardly be easier!

Later, my lovelies! Happy Easter from me, the Sports Fan, the boyz, Nana.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Tagged!

I've been tagged by &rew , my friend, Andrew Borloz, to reveal seven things about myself, then tag seven more people.

Hmmm...
  1. I like being blonde although I'm convinced that only brunettes are truly beautiful. Maybe we blondes are just too flashy for real outward beauty. Inner beauty is a totally different topic!
  2. I don't mind the 'good' Arizona weather like right now when it's in the 70s, but the 'bad' AZ weather that occurs between May and October when it is over 100 degrees F. is just miserable.
  3. I've given this some thought and in my mind, true comfort can only be achieved laying on one's back, floating naked in the middle of a still pond of water. I've often thought that if I put the right size hot tub out on the patio that I could be happy enough through the summer months here in the Hot Place aka AZ. But in reality, I know that the dogs would get in there with me and want to play, the Sports Fan would cannonball in and disturb me, or my mother would open the patio door to ask me how to work the microwave. And you can't read or type on a laptop floating in water. And Starbucks doesn't do home delivery. It would be easier to just move back to Colorado, wouldn't it?
  4. I've always wanted to put my foot down somewhere where nobody else had ever stepped before. I can't even decide if it is possible without being a mountain climber or an explorer of Brazilian rainforests!
  5. I am driven to analyze everything which is why I always come up with the cons and have to think about the pros. It's also why I can so easily figure out how to do things. See? Bad thing first, then good thing. It's my nature!
  6. Unlike much of the rest of humankind, I am left-footed. That means that my left foot is slightly larger than my right and that that is the foot I lift first to go up steps unless I stop and think about it. And while I'm right-handed, I can do quite a lot left-handed. I spin left-handed on a spinning wheel but not on a handspindle. OK, this is getting too bizarre for you all, isn't it?
  7. I want to have a separate room for everything I do so that I never have to put anything away. I'll just traipse from room to room, doing things. I could then hang out in a room until I've forgotten how to find the other rooms, then have a lovely surprise when I accidentally find one again.
  8. OK, just one more!

  9. I've always wanted to be the sort of girl who could get away with calling people "dude" but I've got this Papa Smurf voice that makes it sound really stupid. Plus the blonde thing kicks in and makes it totally ridiculous coming from me. *sigh*

OK, who to lay this trip on next? Hmmm... Ollie (don't expect her to actually do it because she hardly ever posts to her blog anymore), Maggie (who really only did two posts in 2005 and then abandoned her blog), Julee, Aileen, and Jo. Now I see why &rew apologized when he tagged me. I can't think of two more people who would forgive me for tagging them or who haven't been tagged already. If you are reading this and have a blog, go ahead and tag yourself!

Monday, March 3, 2008

Oops! I Lied!

I told the Fabric in Altered Art group that I had posted my work for the last couple of days on my blog and then looked to be sure. How DUH is that?!?!??? So here is what I've been up to for the TAD (Thing-A-Day) challenge!

On Sunday, I did these pages for Frenzy Stamper's House Chunky Book Swap that will take place on Saturday. I'm doing 27 of each size and each pair is different. The smaller set is for me so I'll have one of each of my pages.

The background is some paper I painted that turned out the wrong color though pretty. I painted 140# CP Fabriano watercolor paper with various colors and color combinations trying not to mix the colors too much or to make any sort of pattern other than brush striations. Then I added the fabric strips (Princess Mirah Batik) and rubber stamped with black Staz-On and an Above the Mark architectural stamp. That didn't seem like enough so I added some paint with a sponge stamp that's mounted on a piece of clear plastic. I'll remember later what the brand is. You can only see half of the design because I purposely lined the center up with the edges. The paint is an Adirondack Dauber in aqua.

We wanted to watch a movie so I grabbed some pens and drew on a few pages while we watched Elizabeth, the Golden Age. Later, I added some paper flower embellishments.

I really like the pink and felt I had a bright idea with the doilies once I decided to cut out the boring white paper centers! The hearts are cut freehand from some paper I had paint-scraped for another project and edged with a black Versatile inkpad. Since that company doesn't believe in re-inkers, save your old one to use just for edging!


I feel like I've got every ink pad, bottle of paint, and rubber stamp I own out on my worktable and the surrounding area. The scary part is that I know I do have more!!!

I've got to run, but later, I'll post what I did last night!

Sunday, March 2, 2008

I've Been Busy

Yep, I've been busy. I've had a lot of projects on which to work and I'm getting things done. Definitely feels good! Here are some of the things that have been keeping me busy.

First, here's a little bound journal I made for the almost-monthly Mini Book swap on BookArtz. The cover is 140# CP Fabriano watercolor paper. The inside pages are BFK Rives. i love the creamy color of the pages, the torn edges, and most of all how versatile the paper is in accepting pens, pencils, and even water media. If you don't soak it down totally, it doesn't buckle much. I stitched it together with some left-over cord from an embroidery project a long time ago.

And here are my Matisse pages for the BookArtz Monthly Page swap. This year's theme is Artists. Pages are 5 x 5 inches and can be either about the artist or in their style in some way. I'm using my new Bernina and free-motion quilting. I like the organic shapes done in different bright colors of the same Mettler embroidery thread. The fabric is just a poly cotton over Warm n Natural batting. I basted the edges together so I wouldn't have any problems constructing the page. Next, I've added some color with Lyra watercolor crayons to the shapes on my page, the one with Matisse in machine-embroidered script and have to decide today if I'm doing that to the others or not because these puppies have to be in the mail tomorrow.

I've been working in Calendar Journals for the Calendargirlz Round Robin. I've shown other pages but here are another two from Juliet's journal with the Frida Kahlo theme.

I really like what i did with this little drawing of some Granny Smith apples for a page in a recipe book swap that I hosted and finally got mailed out after a big delay. The book turned out wonderfully and I was pleased with the covers as well as my pages and the elements of each. This was done in a commercial sketch book, so the paper had to be flattened again after I wetted it with a paint brush to give the sketch the watercolor effect. I am LOVING these watercolor crayons so much that I've got three sets! (All different sets so the colors aren't the same.)

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Yippee, It's That Time!

YIPPEE!!!
It's time to sign up for Art Unraveled 2008! In fact, it's past time. I mailed my envie, decorated a bit for Linda's and Chuck's entertainment as they open the envelopes, last Friday. Many people on the AU Yahoo group report having had little post office dramas trying to get a hand date stamp on their envie. Some post offices even extorted extra postage out of people in order to have them sate stamped and one poor gal had to fill out a big form!

I was lucky. I walked into the post office in Youngtown, AZ, which just happens to be the closest one to my house though not the one that services our zipcode (we don't live in Youngtown), waited for one man to get his stuff taken care of and then my envie was happily hand stamped by a smiling lady who then showed it to me for my approval!

I only get to go for two days because we have MINIs in the Mountains to attend and we leave Wednesday morning to drive up there. It's my favorite trip of the year. Major conflict! I really want to be at AU taking classes. Thank goodness Alma Stoller and Beryl Taylor didn't offer classes I especially wanted to take. Bev Brazelton isn't teaching anywhere this year so she won't be there to make me wish I was in her class instead of crying because I'm so happy to be driving through Colorado on Thursday afternoon! (I love Bev!) I'm big fans of Alma's and Beryl's too. I hope I get my choice of classes for the two days I can attend. I very much want to take an art quilting class with Jane Lafazio. She 'advertised' her class with a post to the Yahoo group though, so I'm sure it will be full. I just have to hope that having got my envie in the mail on the right day and using my one volunteer credit from last year to help me with early registration (you get one early or preferred registration per class you sign up to be a helper for the year before).will get me in there! I also signed up for classes on both evenings, including a watercolor journal class by Jane. i love journaling and since taking Bev's class last year, I absolutely am a fan of watercolor journaling.

Bev turned me on to using the watercolor crayons that I've had for at least four years and there's no holding me back now! I have zero confidence in my ability to paint in watercolor, but tons of confidence in my ability to do little sketches with these crayons. Hey, it's just crayons, right?!?? I always scan them before I add the water though. I have this fear that I'll like it better as a crayon sketch than as a watercolor. So far, that hasn't been true, but I often like them both ways, so at least i've preserved the original sketch by scanning it.

I've also signed up for a mosaic class that I think will be SOOOOO cool and a book structure class. I like to take a book structure class every year to keep adding to my arsenal of structures I've mastered.

So now that I've sent in my registration, I can hardly wait to find out if I got all the classes I wanted! Pretty soon, I'll be itching for August to be here so it will be time to go to AU. I'll see all my particular friends, I hope. Angie and Fran, the oh-so-talented &rew, my pal Patricia who seems to be in all the same classes I am no matter where we take them, and