Book 20/52:
I read this book aloud to my son. I really liked this one. It is a Newberry Honor Book and a National Book Award finalist.
Book 20/52:
I read this book aloud to my son. I really liked this one. It is a Newberry Honor Book and a National Book Award finalist.
Posted at 02:17 PM in books, calendar, painting | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack (0)
I'm spending very little time online lately. Instead, I'm finding myself outside as much as possible. Gardening, hiking, watching softball practice and games. This has been a good break away from screens for me. When I'm outside, I see the long distance, the big picture. When online, I can develop tunnel vision. Does anyone else feel that way too?
The top photo is my lawn. I love that it is an incredibly weedy lawn because we get blankets of dandelions, violets, thyme, and moss.
The two middle photos are of a recent hike on Pine Cobble. The top of the Cobble is a jumble of stone. I love the cairns that have been built out of this jumble. Nature's altars.
The bottom photo is of the little parade that opened the Little League season. My daughter marched with the band. I realize that I am thankful to live in a town that closes a main street so that baseball players and the school band can march to the ball park.
Posted at 10:59 AM in me, nature, outside my house, this and that | Permalink | Comments (11) | TrackBack (0)
Book 19/52:
Siddhartha Mukherjee's The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer
(This is an amazing book - science and storytelling woven into a gripping read. It is long - 470 pages - but a page turner.)
Posted at 08:14 AM in books, calendar, painting | Permalink | Comments (10) | TrackBack (0)
I bought this early reader at the library book sale a few weeks ago. It is a graphically-striking mid 20th century Russian or other slavic language book. Perhaps one of you dear readers recognizes the language?
I spent time thoroughly cleaning my work room over the weekend. It was very satisfying to clear the decks for new ideas.
Have a nice Tuesday. The sun is shining here, and we finally have a decent canopy of foliage developing on the trees. This is my favorite time of year.
Posted at 08:54 AM in books, old stuff, this and that | Permalink | Comments (12) | TrackBack (0)
Book 18/52:
Salman Rushdie's Haroun and the Sea of Stories
***********************************
Happy Mother's Day to all you mothers out there!
My family made me a mother's day perennial garden over the last couple of days. I'm a lucky mother! The bleeding hearts and violets are already beginning to bloom.
Posted at 12:13 PM in books, calendar, painting | Permalink | Comments (7) | TrackBack (0)
I have a table at the Twist Craft Fair this Friday and Saturday. Twist is held at the Northampton Center for the Arts in downtown Northampton, MA. I enjoyed the fair when I participated last November, and look forward to seeing the other crafters who will be there this weekend. If you are in the neighborhood, stop by!
Thanks to all who left such thoughtful comments on my last post. I really appreciate them!
Posted at 08:42 AM in animal sculpture, making things, sewing, this and that | Permalink | Comments (9) | TrackBack (0)
I finished the flamingo over the weekend. This burst of pink is now sitting on a shelf in my work room and I am enjoying it very much. It is made from hand-dyed wool, linen, and cotton and stands about a foot tall.
The process of designing and making this bird was a pleasure. I would say that I was in my creative "zone," that place in which my creative spirit is made manifest in the piece I am creating. The experience of making something that truly expresses me - my style and vision - is powerful.
I see so many beautiful, creative, and clever things online. At times I have wondered how I could ever find my own unique style with so many images of other people's work clouding my mind. Because I am self-taught in my craft, the internet (as well as art and craft books) have become my school. I have had to learn to take from what I see: technique, use of color, thematic ideas, materials, and meld it all into an expression of my own. My craft is what emerges after and apart from the inspiration I find online and in books.
In making my soft sculpture, I have been inspired by these artists: Lemmikkiapina, Abby Glassenberg, Jennifer Muskopf, Abigail Brown, Ann Wood, Stephanie Congdon Barnes, Tamar Mogendorff, Mimi Kirchner, and many others I'm sure. I honor their work and thank them for their inspiration. But, I need to do the hard work of making my own craft.
If you have a reasonable level of skill, it is easy to copy someone else. But, is that honest? Does that ultimately feed and satisfy your creative soul? Does it make you feel joyful? Having a creative vision and manifesting it is hard work. It does not happen overnight. You have to practice, make mistakes, rethink your ideas. You have to try and try again. The work is worth the effort - as you begin to see yourself in the pieces you create.
I have been sewing and painting this year. I paint a little each day (on my calendar) and sew on and off throughout the week. I can see many connections forming between my paintings and my sewn sculpture. The way I relate to color, shape, texture. I can see hints of this cohesive style as well when I embroider or crochet or make a collage. It is through repetition and everyday practice that I learn about myself and experience the joy of being in the moment of creation.
I am thankful for the opportunity to make things. My life is so much richer for it.
Posted at 10:39 AM in animal sculpture, making things, me, nature, sewing | Permalink | Comments (17) | TrackBack (0)
Posted at 10:19 AM in art, books, calendar, nature, painting | Permalink | Comments (11) | TrackBack (0)
Another thunderstorm with hard rain this morning. I was out walking my brother's dog while he and his family are away. We took shelter before the height of the storm.
So many wildflowers to see now: red trillium, trout lily, and spring beauties. Also skunk cabbage and fiddleheads. We hope to hike on Pine Cobble this weekend. There are many, many ladies' slippers there, although it might be too early for them.
Do you like the flamingo so far? Wings, eyes, and legs today.
The wildflower paintings are from a very large, old guide book I found at the library book sale. The paintings are quite nice, particularly in the large format.
My daughter changed the quilt on her bed. I love the blue and white. Her room is so quiet. I hope she will always be able to have such a retreat.
Posted at 10:16 AM in animal sculpture, books, inside my house, making things, nature, seasons | Permalink | Comments (14) | TrackBack (0)
Warm temperatures. Thunder storms. Daffodils in the garden. Wildflowers along the trail in the woods. I think spring is settling in.
I purchased this Peterson's Field Guide to Birds' Nests at the library book sale last week. I am enjoy looking through the pages at the wide variety of nesting that birds do. What a leap of faith for these birds to leave such fragile packages among the branches of trees and brush, or even on the ground. I guess it is the same leap of faith that we humans take when we have a baby. I believe that pregnancy and parenting are such practices in letting go. Letting go of control. Letting go of preconceived notions of how things should be. These are not always easy lessons. And they can bring both great joy and terrible heartbreak.
I made a couple more linen and wool wading birds. I think I will make a flamingo next. I have some beautiful pink hand-dyed wool and pink linen. I am also working out some patterns for butterflies. I see the wings as opportunities for embroidery. These are my spring projects.
Posted at 09:21 AM in animal sculpture, books, making things, midwifery, nature, seasons | Permalink | Comments (10) | TrackBack (0)