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Art For Kara

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This is a collaborative piece of art, made by all the girls from The Altered Workshop, who were at Art & Soul in Virginia in May.  It’s made on a full sheet of cold pressed watercolor paper.  I started by taping off the margins and painting and texturizing the background with acrylics.  A number of different artists worked on it during the retreat, including Lou McCulloch, who graciously offered this beautiful image of a warrior princess. 

The piece was made for one of our friends who is currently going through treatment for breast cancer  (some of the girls who couldn’t join us in Virginia sent separate pieces of art to go along with the big collage).  The collage embodies our friend’s tough, fighting spirit, and we all hope the image helps lift her up while she is undergoing medical treatment.  We never titled this piece while we were together, but I came to think of it as "A Pox on the House of Cancer" while I was carrying it home.

Here’s to Kara!  May she overcome and go on to a beautiful season of art and creativity in her life.

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Getting My Art Muse On

My art muse has been, well, lost.  It happens every time I clean up my studio (you would think I would learn the lesson in that, wouldn’t you?)  I’m happy that the muse seems to have returned, and although I’ve got a yucky virus (see picture of cute kids who gave me said virus below) I spent some time tonight in the studio, happily painting and layering my background for the piece I want to work on this weekend.

These are the sick babies who gave me the pesky virus.  They always look awfully sweet when they’re not feeling well.

Sick_babies

Since being sick makes me sort of random, I’ll progress on and tell you my happy skein-winder story.  Several months ago I purchased a Mama Bear skein-winder.  It was love at first sight and made winding so much more enjoyable.  But, over time, my winder got a little bit of a bounce to it and didn’t seem to work as easily.  I still loved it, but it just wasn’t the same way it was at first.

So here’s the amazing part.  I emailed Tom, the really nice guy who makes the Mama Bear.  He spent a whole lot of time emailing me to help me figure out what the problem was.  It turned out that a big part of the problem was trying to wind from my umbrella swift, which was at a much higher level, onto the Mama Bear.  Tom’s solution was to send me a second winder to  experiment with, to see if it would help.  You just don’t get that kind of customer service anywhere these days!

Here it is — winding side to side on two Mama Bear skein winders.

Reskein

I’m in love!  Thank you Tom.  And in case you’re wondering, this is how the skein (buttery soft bamboo) turned out.

Bamboo_ribbon

Next up?  A brand new yarn for me.  It’s a 50/50 blend of Suri Alpaca and Blue Faced Leicester.  It’s incredibly soft.

Alpaca_bfl

I can’t wait to start dyeing it.  I think I’m going to use the same colors I want to use in the collage piece this weekend and see if I can’t get a jumpstart on the muse.

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A Quiet Night

We’re having a quiet night here.  The cats are all exhausted from chasing yarn.  My Mom is visiting from California.  It’s perfect.

To get caught up, I need to show you a few things.  First off, the ten week plan is going so well (8 lbs and 3" of the Giotto tank in the first three weeks) that I decided to cast on another project to avoid finishing the tank too soon.  After a trip to my local yarn store, Knit Nouveau, I decided to snag their idea and knit up a skein of Sea Silk my wonderful friend gave me for Christmas, using a feather and fan lace pattern.  This is two stitches on either side for a garter border and two repeats in the middle.

Seasilk_fan

Lace never looks particularly good on the needles, but I think this is going to be fabulous when it’s done!

I’m working on two round robin books right now.  The first is Lorena’s Lutrador book on animal totems.

Lutrador

Very cool book, with a wonderful prompt.

Finally, a quick look at my yard sale score from last weekend.

Yardsale

The woodcut book offers endless ideas and inspiration. I love old lace, so the doilies are sure to find a little niche for themselves.

All in all, it’s been a very good week!  I hope y’all have a fabulous weekend and a wonderful 4th of July to those in the US.

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Morning Hodgepodge

My Aunt emailed me last night, and asked when I go to work.  I assure you, I do (a girl has to have money to buy yarn and art bits), but sometimes it’s a struggle.  The weekends are never long enough to do everything I want to do.  Here’s a little wrap up of some of the creative mess that took place in my house this weekend.  Mom, if you’re reading, it also explains why the house is going to be a frigging disaster little bit unorganized when you get here on Friday.

First off, spinning.  It’s never far from my heart.

This

Bluepurple

is now two ounces of this funky thick and thin.

Bluepurpspun

This was also a big yarn dyeing weekend in my house, as we had fall sweaters to dye for and I’m in the middle of working on a new little venture (you can see a sneak peak here although it isn’t operational yet).  The pink/purple/green yarn towards the front is the new superwash merino I’m working with and I confess to being totally in love with the way it sucks up the color (and the idea that I won’t have to worry about the little kids’ sweaters felting this year).
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I’m especially happy with this sock
yarn, called Fate

Fate

and with this as-yet-unnamed (Miss Ellie can only work just so hard in any one weekend) bulky merino

Bulky_merino

While all the yarn was batching, I spent some time looking at patterns online, and stumbled across this incredibly wonderful blog, Saartje Knits.  In addition to being one of those blogs you could get lost inside of reading everything, Saartje has some great free patterns, including her bootees and a cool Noro hat pattern, both of which I printed out and want to start in on soon.

The ten week plan is marching on.   For those of you who asked, it’s a sort of embarrassing diet, but if you must know, I do the Suzanne Somers low carb variant.  I’ve been told it’s close to South Beach.  I like it because I can eat all the fruit I feel like I need to eat, and whole grain pasta and breads in moderate amounts.  Essentially, it steers me towards the foods I’m inclined to like the most.  Since I’m not a white bread kind of person, a couple of fresh veggies, a good salad, and meat as sort of a side dish suits me just fine.  For instance, tonight’s dinner is braised lamb shanks, spinach & roasted garlic, and caprese salad.  I’ll add on couscous for the kids.  Bed time snack will be a big dish of blueberries, fresh from the farmer’s market.  After I had Miss Ellie, and was hunting around for a way to take off baby weight, a friend on my Parents Place Pregnancy board suggested this diet and a bunch of us went on it together.  It worked great that time, and again after my fourth baby was born.  I’m hoping it’s also the cure for the onslaught of middle-aged sluggishness and excess tummy that is afflicting me.  The key for me seems to be getting off of sugar.

The Giotto tank is happy to have progressed it’s necessary one inch for the week.  I knit it while reflecting on the importance of taking time for oneself.  No pictures, but I’m a little bit nervous that I am noticing a proficiency with the moss stitch/ribbon yarn issue on this front side that is not evident on the back.  At least this first little bit is compact and even in a way that the back of the tank isn’t.  I’m hoping I won’t feel compelled to rip out the back and reknit it after I finish the front, because I really am hoping to wear this tank when my ten week plan is up!

Moreme_2

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Fabric Painting

A couple of people emailed to ask about the handpainted fabric I used in Ellie’s She-Mootah, so i wanted to provide a little bit of information.  This is a MESSY process, so I don’t have much in the way of in progress photos or a formal tutorial, but I thought I would comment on some of the things I do.

I start with some hand-dyed fabric.  I’m very fond of PFD (prepared for dye) kona cotton.  It’s nice and it keeps its hand when painted.  I crackle dye my fabric for starters (my tutorial on crackle-dye is linked at the top right-hand corner of this page), but I use a tonal range — maybe just two colors and in pale values.  The fabric I’m using here was done in a yellow ochre and a soft brown with just a hint of green in it.

Tonight I used a lot of different stamps and some punchinella on my fabric, but you can stencil, free-hand paint, foil, emboss — the range of techniques you use depends on the use you are going to make of the fabric.  Since this fabric is likely to be washed and dried, I used techniques that could be set and my favorite fabric paints, Lumiere’s from Jacquard.

I start with a piece of about 2 yards of fabric, and I tend to visually divide it, very roughly, into either thirds or quarters so I will have coordinating fabrics to work together.  Sometimes I use a totally different color palette on the different areas, but tonight I decided to use essentially the same one in all areas, thinking I would use coordinating solids and stripes with the fabric.  So here I am, already in progress and I snatched up the camera for a sec.

In_progress

Although you can’t tell here, I started by stamping, using different stamps, in white all over the fabric.

In_progress2

After the white layer, I used different stamps in different areas, starting with fairly large stamps, then going to medium ones.  Usually I try to mix up the sizes of stamps and colors, because I like that sort of unique, different placement effect you get with random stamping, but the sizes seem to unify the fabric.

Tonight I stamped a lot until there was good coverage, sometimes I have a lighter hand.  The point is to just keep going and do whatever pleases you.  I tend to conceptualize it as being a lot like doing a background on a canvas.  At this point on a canvas I would probably glaze over it and them overstamp before doing the collage work.  Here, I can either leave it at this point, or dry it and set it, and then put it in a light overdye bath for the glaze effect and more stamping.

Here are my finished, at least for now, quadrants.  The lighting is awful because I was snapping these around midnight in the very low lighting in my dining room, but you can get some idea of the design, if not of the colors.

Coffee_cups

Coffee Cups

Pairs

Pears

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Fruit Slices (this one looks great in real life, sorry about the dreadful picture)

Chairs

Chairs

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Today

Today was one of those gorgeous, perfect days.  It started with a trip to the farmers’ market, which meant homemade chocolate covered caramel for the kids and a visit with a women who was spinning beautiful yarn from her hand-dyed roving for me.  I am so sorry I didn’t have my camera with me!

On the way home we stopped at a couple of yard sales.  I usually limit my purchases to old books or photos, and other ephemera that I use in my collage work.  But I was stunned to find this very cool looking bag today.

Transverse1

Something about it immediately caught my eye.   Is it the quirky little  flight attendant meets Stephen Colbert drawings?

Transverse3

It is funny and kitschy all at that same time, and I guess that’s what got me.  It had almost  a Zakka feeling to it.  It had a couple of little smudgey places on the outside, but they looked easy  enough to clean off, so I took it home.

It was very easy to wipe the two or three little smudges off, and I was stunned to discover that the interior and the front pocket were both pristine.  Clearly, my little bag had never been used.  But what was it?  This was my only clue.

Transverse2

A little bit of research revealed that "Transversion" bags were made/sold by a company called NYC Loop.  They were sought after, expensive, & almost impossible to get one’s hands on.  There was even a similar print one, in a style I didn’t like nearly as much as mine, on Ebay.  Not bad for a $5 investment.  Now I’m torn between keeping it and selling it on Ebay.  But I really want to keep it.

Next up on the day was a visit with my dear art friend Kathy McElroy.  Kathy was my first roomate at an art retreat, a fellow member of the Altered Art Divas, and one of the sweetest people I know.  She brought her son and his fiancee and another son’s children to lunch.  The Judge made burgers and they were gooood!  Kathy’s grandchildren were the perfect age to play with my littles.  By the end of the day, I wasn’t sure it was going to be possible to get the kids to separate!  We spent the afternoon at the zoo.

Kids

We saw the flamingos

Flamingo

and this sweet little fellow who wandered past our table in the water play area, looking for food.

Peacock

Kathy’s kids and grandkids are all wonderful.  We were tired but really sorry to leave them.  The final success in our day of small, happy events was this.

Shemootah

This is She-Mootah.  She-Mootah is Ellie’s companion for Ollie’s Mootah.  She-Mootah is made from some fabric that I dyed, painted, and stamped on.  There is just a bit of hand-embroidery (mostly because I don’t remember much, although I was apparently pretty good at it as a child) and eyes made from my favorite buttons.  Ellie seems very happy.  She has dressed She-Mootah up in a piece of old lace and is taking her everywhere.

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Tagged & Pock-et-full

I’ve been tagged by my new friend Kim Logan in England with this meme.  Kim is far more interesting than I am, but I’ll do my best for her.

I’m supposed to divulge 7 unusual things about myself.  Here goes:

(1) I have never said "no" to a stray animal.  at one point we had 12 cats. currently, we have 5 cats, 2 dogs, and a lizard.

(2) My postgraduate degree is in law, even though art is my life.

(3) As a child, I believed the trees and the flowers talked to me.  My 8 year old daughter now believes the same thing, even though I never told her about my experience at her age.

(4) Like Kim, I always tell the truth about my age and weight.  I’m going to be 47 in July.  I’ve packed on 25 pounds since last fall (yuck) but have gone back to Pilates and started dieting, and am hoping to return to the "normal" me.

(5) For about a decade, I only wore black clothes.  I wasn’t depressed, I just liked black.  I still have probably five suits in my closet from that period (they no longer fit).

(5) My first nickname for my dh was Sugar Muffin.

(6) I always desperately wanted siblings growing up as an only child and am eternally grateful that my three first cousins adopted me as a quasi-sibling.  I’m so happy that I have four children so they will always have each other.

(7) I like anime movies from Japan as much as my kids do and just invested in a full set of Miyuzaki movies. 

There!  I did it!  As your reward for sitting through that, here are some photos from my new round robin book that i am mailing out to Karen tomorrow morning.  The RR is called pock-et-ful and it is a concept Karen and I came up with while we were driving back from Art & Soul.  Each artist made a book full of pocket pages, and each artist makes art to put in a pocket in each book and also gets to art up the pocket.

Cover1

My is by far the most grunge of the books.  It’s very rough and open to lots of interpretation.  I wanted each artist to play with the concept of the kind of art would they make if no one else was ever going to see it — making art that made them happy without thinking about anyone else.

Insidecover

  I sewed my little bags out of both paper and fabric and clipped them onto pages in the journal, which has rusted tiles for covers.  I didn’t like the pockets empty, so I decided to fill them each up with a little something —  a vintage cabinet card photo, a turn of the century postcard, a piece of fabric.

Empty_pocket_3

  And off my little book will go.  I can’t wait to see what it will be filled up with when it comes back.