Friday, May 16, 2008

The Friday Archives

Loobylu - who is one of my favorite artists and bloggers around has started the Friday Archives. I'm not sure how many of you have ever checked out my gallery, and soon it's going to undergo some major reworking.....BUT I put it up so I could look at what I've done in the past and see where I'm going.
The Friday Archives is also a good spot for this! :) And for a good insight into what a "heavy" child I was, you can see two of my early early drawings. In looking back, I don't think of myself as being kind of intense, but I guess drawing pictures of cute things was not really in my repertoire even back then.
I'm assuming we were probably studying this at the time, but I'm kind of amazed at my interest in drawing a plane. Not sure you can see from this photo, but there are skulls hidden in the clouds....just what you imagine a high school kid thinking about, eh? :)


Then this illustration was to illustrate famine in South Africa at the time. I believe the song "We are the World" was popular at the time and the profits were going to combat famine in Ethiopia, so obviously the subject was fairly common on teenagers minds.

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Saturday, May 10, 2008

But I digress!

I had a wonderful class at Crazy quilting today (pictures to come soon) but I had to put this up:


A very sweet flickr fan (who shall remain nameless until he says he likes the picture I did for him) admired my self portrait. If you've never read my blog before you'll know I'm a MAJOR Andy Warhol fan. So, from my scan of a Gerbera Daisy, I made the above pictures. I love it. I wonder if my daughter would love it in her room?

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Tuesday, April 22, 2008

A little trash to fill in! :)

My friend Diana and I went craft shop-hopping today (woo hoo) and so I will have that pillow done really soon!
However, just to fill in, I ran across this - I've seen some dogs he does too...very cool!

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Monday, April 07, 2008

1950's, victorian white and Amish/Mennonite inspiration!

The big news this Monday morning is my house is clean! :) If any of you have kids, you know the feeling of NEVER seeming to stay on top of the mess. We cleaned the house yesterday and except for a short tidy this morning I can say that the house looks great!
On top of this, I had a fabulous weekend! It actually started Friday with my being allowed to stitch on this:

If you want to read more about the fabric, I've written about it on my Houseblog, because it is fabulous vintage 1950's fabric! Be sure to check it out if you're in the Colorado area, because it's going to be included in an exhibit down in Colorado Springs. I helped a gal in our neighborhood, who is a textile conservationist do the stitching and it was very educational! It took some time to catch onto how to do the stitches, but hopefully she won't have to take out too many of them. I'm hoping to work on another post soon about her suggestions on preservation, mounting textiles and much more helpful neat stuff!

Then, speaking of the Denver Art Museum, a good friend asked me to tag along with her to see these:

This is an exhibit of Mennonite and Amish quilts. Great stuff! Even better yet, the Denver Art Museum is keeping this as a permanent textiles exhibition area! Yeah DAM!

So, after all of that, I had to get home and get to work on my own stuff. This is going to be a pillow for a really good friends daughter who is going to be baptized in the Mormon church. Her outfit has to be all white, so I figured an all white pillow would be a nice memory of the occasion.

LOVING the lace and I even found a handkerchief with an "M" on it (upside down in the photo) but it's a really huge challenge working in all one color. Obviously it's really variations of creme and white, but it makes an interesting study in textures.

It's been a busy stitching weekend and my next post will be a tutorial on my FAVORITE easy-peasy silk ribbon flower! So, watch for that (hopefully today!)

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Thursday, February 21, 2008

Frozen in Central Park

It's incredibly rare that I post twice in one day, but I had to pass this on.....be sure to watch the whole video. Whoever thought this up was a genius. COOL

And here's a group that does this on a regular basis! I'm a sucker for performance art.

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Friday, February 15, 2008

Social Networking - a time waster?

For some bizarre reason this morning I have been sucked into the vortex of social networking. I'm sort of bad anyway, but I started reading blog, then got wandering...well you know. My Space is so tacky. I just wonder if I would have loved it in High School.

Anyway, I found a cute site that does these - a random photo of Missy C. I think it does the best with portraits, but it's a good time waster.


I think it turned out pretty cute.

Then there's this http://postsecret.blogspot.com/ - really interesting - anonymous postcards revealing deep dark secrets. Oh, and I'm playing on Twitter. Still not sure what I think of it (you can see my updates in the sidebar).

Ok, enough playing. I really really need to get to work! SIGH!

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Friday, February 08, 2008

The history of a piano


A few days ago we had a repairman around - not to fix the plumbing or electrical (although heaven knows we could use that too) - but to tune and look over our piano. This is not just any piano, it's a turn of the century carved upright. An antique. However, it's really so much more than that.

I took piano lessons as a kid. Kind of going back and forth as to whether I liked it or loathed it. I never was (or am) very good at following directions. Obviously, reading music and listening to a teacher is all about following directions. However, somehow I learned to read music and enjoy playing the piano. I did an arrangement once for "Stars of Tomorrow" and won the first round, but only because I arranged the three pieces of music I liked and called it "I don't know what I want to be when I grown up".

I spent my "post-lesson" days playing some music I liked. In my late teens I inherited a baby grand piano, an antique Steinway. It was wonderful, but HUGE! I don't know how many of you have had to purchase a house around a huge piano, but it's really difficult. So, after a few years of paying crazy prices to move it and having the cats lie on it and throw up hairballs I sold it. I was sad to see it go, but I'd sort of fallen out of the habit of playing it.

Then 3 years ago we acquired my brother's piano. He was moving to England and my parents didn't want him to put it in storage. So, we found a corner of the living room and in it came. I must say I had mixed feelings at the time. Our house is mid century modern and our decorating sense lies much more toward "funky" than antique. However, the kids were little and it was fun to have the piano.

So, there it sat for 3 years, the kids pounded on it occasionally, the cats walked on the keys, but I didn't play it much. Finally a month or so ago I sat down to play and EEEP! It sounded awful. It was so far out of tune it was hard to tell if it was my fumbling playing or the piano!

So, this past week, as the repairman stood there with his machines and fabulous techniques for putting the piano back into shape, I started to tell him the story of the piano. My great grandmother purchased it for her two daughters to learn on somewhere around the turn of the century - probably the early 1900's. She was a single parent who had thrown her gold seeking husband out when he ran off to one too many gold rushes. They were Catholic, so never divorced, but she supported her two girls by making dresses for Molly Brown (among others). Then the piano went to my grandmother, where my mother learned to play on it.

I remember it in our house growing up and giggling when I found my grandfather's initials on the side of one of the keys "A.S.S." - yes, they were his initials and yes, he really enjoyed that they were! Inscribed inside the piano, above the pins are the carved name of a tuner who tuned the piano in 1910.

My family will tell you that I'm probably the least sentimental of the group, mainly because I hate when things are stored away because "we couldn't possibly give it away". I love to see things used. I think in this case, this piano will continue to be loved and with any luck for another 100 years.

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Sunday, January 27, 2008

Self Portrait - won an award! :-)


I did this self portrait a long time ago - my tribute to Andy Warhol - I studied and adore pop art...probably the biggest influence on me. Anyway, today someone stumbled on it and gave me a Garden Gnome award....cool, eh?

The Garden Gnome Award

I love how art gets around on Flickr. I also found in the new statistics area of flickr (found here) that this photo was used on a site as an avatar sort of thing....cool when someone "gets it" eh? Oddly, I'm not at all upset when people use my art, I find it totally flattering....it's neat when someone likes something enough to use it - I figure my art only has a limited following in my own circle...it's neat when it gets around on the net.

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Wednesday, November 28, 2007

I admit it, I'm a groupie!

Robin from Beadlust posted this a while ago, and I can't take my eyes off of it. I love the colors, the items, the beading. SIGH....I love it:

Wow, I have only dreams that I could come up with something this creative. Sigh.....off to wishing I had more time! :-)

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Saturday, July 21, 2007

crazy quilters stitching night.

The Rocky Mountain Crazy Quilters had their "casual" stitch night on Tuesday night...I'm always amazed by the talent and interesting projects that go on there.
This is a block for our group swap. Tammy started embellishing the block, but isn't the book that goes with it adorable! It's actually crazy quilted and embellished paper (real stitching on paper) and then glued on or put onto sticky paper (couldnt' tell which) and attached to the notebook. Cute, cute! (I'll post my block when I finish it!)
This is the always amazing and talented Rhonda's HUGE brazillian project. Not sure you can see, but this garden goes way up into her lap and includes lots of beautiful stitches.
AND! TA-DA! The progress on Tina's Wedding dress quilt! I have done the face 2x and wasn't happy with it yet! So, I'm still working. However, all of the applique is done and now it just needs some details! I think the rest of this should go quickly! (and I'll post more soon!)


My blog's 4 year anniversary was a few days ago and I'm working on an anniversary post! So, watch for that tomorrow!

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Tuesday, May 08, 2007

How to Be Creative

Being on this big "creative trip", I ran across this link - wow! All I can say, set down with a "cuppa" (as Sharon B would say) and have a good read...it's great stuff!

When Hugh MacLeod, (click the link above) sells his first book, I'm SO going to buy it! How fantastic (warning a bit of profanity, but well worth the read!)

An excerpt I loved:

13. Never compare your inside with somebody else's outside.
The more you practice your craft, the less you confuse worldly rewards with spiritual rewards, and vice versa. Even if your path never makes any money or furthers your career, that's still worth a TON.When I was 16 or 17 in Edinburgh I vaguely knew this guy who owned a shop called "Cinders", on St. Stephen's Street. It specialized in restoring antique fireplaces.
Cinders' modus operandi was very simple. Buy original Georgian and Victorian chimneypieces from old, dilapidated houses for 10 cents on the dollar, give them a loving but expedient makeover in the workshop, sell them at vast profit to yuppies.
Back then I was insatiably curious about how people made a living (I still am). So one-day, while sitting on his stoop I chatted with the fireplace guy about it.
He told me about the finer points of his trade- the hunting through old houses, the craftsmanship, the customer relations, and of course the profit.
The fellow seemed quite proud of his job. From how he described it he seemed to like his trade and be making a decent living. Scotland was going through a bit of a recession at the time; unemployment was high, money was tight; I guess for an ageing hippie things could've been a lot worse.
Very few kids ever said, "Gosh, when I grow up I'm going to be a fireplace guy!" It's not the most obvious trade in the world. I asked him about how he fell into it.
"I used to be an antiques dealer," he said. "People who spend a lot of money on antiques also seem to spend a lot of money restoring their houses. So I sort of got the whiff of opportunity just by talking to people in my antiques shop. Also, there are too many antique dealers in Edinburgh crowding the market, so I was looking for an easier way to make a living."
Like the best jobs in the world, it just kindasorta happened.
"Well, some of the fireplaces are real beauties," I said. "It must be hard parting with them."
"No it isn't," he said (and this is the part I remember most). "I mean, I like them, but because they take up so much room- they're so big and bulky- I'm relieved to be rid of them once they're sold. I just want them out of the shop ASAP and the cash in my pocket. Selling them is easy for me. Unlike antiques. I always loved antiques, so I was always falling in love with the inventory, I always wanted to hang on to my best stuff. I'd always subconsciously price them too high in order to keep them from leaving the shop."
Being young and idealistic, I told him I thought that was quite sad. Why choose to sell a "mere product" (i.e. chimneypieces) when instead you could make your living selling something you really care about (i.e. anitques)? Surely the latter would be a preferable way to work?
"The first rule of business," he said, chuckling at my na�vet�, "is never sell something you love. Otherwise, you may as well be selling your children."
15 years later I'm at a bar in New York. Some friend-of-a-friend is looking at my cartoons. He asks me if I publish. I tell him I don't. Tell him it's just a hobby. Tell him about my advertising job.
"Man, why the hell are you in advertising?" he says, pointing to my portfolio. "You should be doing this. Galleries and shit."
"Advertising's just chimneypieces," I say, speaking into my glass.
"What the fuck?"
"Never mind."

One more bit:
Don't worry about finding inspiration. It comes eventually. Inspiration precedes the desire to create, not the other way around.

Serious stuff to go on the walls of one's studio!

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Monday, April 30, 2007

Gallery up and getting my art head organized.


Starting with my picture I drew (in College) of a lady with fish. I know it SEEMS like I'm not around, but I am. This weekend, I reorganized my side bar and at the top you will see a link to my gallery...the gallery is in Flash, so if you don't have that installed, you'll have issues! :-) However, I did this mostly for me.

I think I have mentioned (not sure how recently tho) that I was a fine art major who strayed away from what I was doing for 10 years. I created absolutely nothing in that time. About 3 and a half years ago (really what prompted this blog) I dug out my Grandmother's crazy quilt and began my exploration into needlework. This exploration started on the web with many websites and great inspiration in the crazy quilt world. This year I have begun exploring other avenues of needle arts...none that has quite "fit". So, I decided a retrospective of everything I have around the house that I have created...including a couple from High School (not going to say how long ago that was!), would help me find my authentic creative self. This means digging out drawings, photographs and other interesting things (woodcuts, etc).

So, with it all up, I do have some insights...of what I liked to do, what I love to do now and interestingly an answer to why I dumped it for so long! Anyway, more later.....

I also had a comment on a post from Pam Rubert about the picture 2 posts ago and here's another of the same sculpture area:
Unfortunately, this wasn't IN Missouri (wave Hi to Pam!...should have figured out a way to drive past your studio!), but on our trip along Highway 50 in the south West part of Kansas...I believe just west of Greensburg (Home of The Big Well) and before you get to Dodge City. Just a total hole in the wall town except for all this great sculpture! I'll have to go back and get an exact town location or maybe someone will recognize it!

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Friday, April 20, 2007

Artistic Exploration and a trip to Missouri

Having two children and more going on than I probably should, I find that "recovery" often takes WAY longer than it should. Sorry for my absence. The picture above was taken on a whirlwind trip to and from Missouri - back to my college reunion to Cottey College in Nevada Missouri. We then took a side trip to Branson. For those who want to be bored with family travel pictures...they're posted here (note to grandparents..there are several pages!).

I haven't been getting much done in the craft/art department and I'm planning a big project of doing a retrospective of all the art I've done (college till now) and putting it in a gallery. Mostly for my own use. Be kind of cool to see where I have been and where I am now!

However, while you're all waiting (I'm sure with baited breath) for me to gather myself, here are a few links I've been saving:

Fabric Postcards - How to Make a Fabric Postcard - neat info on fabric postcards.

International Quilt Study Center : Education & Research : Lecture/Public Programs - yikes, I could spend days and days on this site. I highly recomment the "Quilt of the Month" under exhibitions. They email you a link with a picture and history of a different quilt a month. Neat neat stuff!

Directory to Quilt History Information Online - furthermore, if that last site doesn't give you something to do for a while...visit this site! Wow, the quantity of information is staggering!

I promise to have more soon! Just in "reworking" mode.

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