Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Thursday, December 19, 2024

Holiday Card Making During a Full Moon

 

On Dec. 15, while I was happily working 
on this year's holiday cards,
I was also following the Cold Full Moon on its journey 
as it rose in the Northeast & set in the Northwest.
I felt so alive & excited!
So I stopped what I was doing 
& started making sketches & notes & 
recording full moon information in my journal. 
And then I created a series of small paintings.
I wish you all a wonderful holiday season!
I hope you'll leave me a note with a hint of who you are!

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Holiday Greeting Cards 2023

I had different Christmas-y sketch ideas for a holiday card. 
But this image was the most "autobiographical", if not 
Christmas-y. It's from a series I had printed from the original.

Before the color prints, I had copied small black & white line drawings 
from my original & handpainted each one, adding colored pencil & pearlescent paints. 

Less vibrant & smooth than the printed version, but to me 
they're sweet in their roughness.  
Happy Holiday Season to all, & Happy Winter Walking. Rita.



Monday, December 13, 2021

Fountain Pens & Ink


 I spend a good deal of time in the company of fountain pens. 
Writing in my journal/s, writing anything & everything 
that needs recording or processing.
I'm old fashioned. As much as I love word processing,
it is pen, pencil, ink, & paint that I adore using
(and scissors & glue).
This was a photo that I posted on a fountain pen site. 
It's interesting to be among fellow pen enthusiasts.
I am not the collector that many of them are,
but I do have, well, more than one pen (ahem).
Something new is to draw & paint using inks,
inspired by some of the artists on the site.
 
Goulet Pens sells small vials of ink samples, 
a great way to try out luscious colors & various brands. 

Wednesday, December 8, 2021

More Card Making Process


I have fiber artist friends
who experiment wildly with mark-making, 
 media & formats. 
I love their work 
& love learning from them, trying some of their techniques.
But in the end, I come back to drawing
&  "coloring" (Gasp!!) as my favorite mode.
These days I use watercolors & Prismacolors, 
but I'm still connected to the childhood pleasure 
I had with Crayola crayons.

I pulled an image from an older journal sketch for
December greeting cards.

In the end, what I love most is 
that I be authentically expressing myself
& finding pleasure in my process,
ignoring that old inner critic.

Recently I did a jigsaw puzzle of an illustration
by my favorite illustrator, the French Sempé.
 I found great joy in learning more about how he uses
ink line & paint & felt affirmed in my way of working.

I am fascinated by grids & boxes lately. 
In the end, my idea for Christmas cards, 
(in the above photo)
evolved to these trees without the boxes.





 

Monday, January 7, 2019

Mini Zumba Greetings





I failed to send Christmas cards this year. 
But I have promised myself that I will send winter cards.
I did make up some mini-cards to give to a few local folks,
some of them being fellow Zumba enthusiasts.
 

 And a card for my Zumba teacher. 
I have enormous gratitude for her. 
This dance & her exercise classes have enriched
my life & my health tremendously!!!

Sunday, December 23, 2018

Tis the Season for Color

 
I love playing with bright colors at this time of year.
I made a chain of 70 Origami birds for 
a friend's 70th birthday which she hung in her window.
My new "Art Bin" box.
I bought it at a local art shop 
It has replaced my old broken paintbox.
I transferred my half pans & made a new color chart. 
See what it can do. More painted collages.
Some are for gifts, some for a new show.
And then, there is the contrast of the winter outdoors.
Cold, dark & muted colors.
It is soft & beautiful & restful.
An advent calendar with over-the-top glitter!!
I bought it at a local bookstore.


Merry & bright, somber & dark. 
They are opposed, but they complement each other nicely. 

Friday, December 14, 2018

Farnsworth. Bell Ringers And A Crankie

Festive Holiday doings during the Farnsworth Art Museum's
seasonal Share the Wonder events.
First, a concert by the Penobscot Ringers,a handbell ensemble. 
It was music of the angels & had
a number of us in the audience crying for the beauty of it all!
Such beauty in the midst of some real ugliness in the world.
 After the concert, a lecture by Annie Bailey,
creator of a rotating storytelling mural for the Museum's 
front window. It tells about Maine heroine,
Abbie Burgess, a 16 year old who tended 
The Matinicus Rock Light & took care of her family
during a raging storm in 1856.
Her father, the lighthouse keeper, had gone to the mainland
for supplies, but could not get back for 4 weeks!

Bailey said she chose Abbie as a symbol
of focus of in a time of chaos.  
Something that is needed in these times too.     

(This photo of 1 scene doesn't show the mural's true size
& the window picked up reflections. But...)
The scroll's height is 4 ft. & one full rotation is 60 ft. 
The scroll, called a "Crankie", moves between 2 spools 
by way of a bicycle chain mechanism created by Andrew White. 
Bailey collaborated with a number of people 
to make this project work, & she has studied the Crankies 
of the 19th century.
There was, as with all original projects, 
trial & failure before final successes.

(I'm hoping the mural will stay up beyond its Jan. close date.) 

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Filling the Air With Christmas

 
 Greetings 
during the season of long nights
when we fill our coastal villages with
Colored Lights, 
Santas, 
Wreaths All Red and Green, 
Decorated Evergreen Trees, 
Fake Candles and~~ Sales. Lots of Sales!

Music on the radio and in shops 
fills quiet air with songs
 Jingle Bell Rock and Silver Bells,
White Christmas and Winter Wonderland...
Meanwhile I take a break,
stopping for a cup of hot soup  
in the back café of 
Beyond the Sea at Lincolnville Beach. 
I stare out the back window and sketch...
Only quiet colors here,
 of a low tide 
where the sand meets the woods beyond...
Those are ducks...
They are slower and quieter than people 
at this time of year...

May you have a serene holiday season...R.

Thursday, November 30, 2017

Batches of Mini Cards

My mom & I used to bake Batches of Christmas cookies.
A few times we made crafts. Each year during 
the darkness of the year I fall into making cards (not cookies).
This year, Batches of mini cards, 2.5"X 3". 
I call them "Reet's Paper Treats".
 Some to give away. Some to sell at The Sail Locker (click here). You can also catch the Sail Locker at the Saturday United Farmers Market of Belfast.   
 Using my bits & pieces again,
and my themes that have sat in the idea journal for awhile.
They're in cellophane packets, hence the reflections.
I forgot to photo them before wrapping.

Also a batch of 4" X 6" cards. 
Some are re-purposed pop-ons from last year's French alphabet series.
Working toward a line for summer tourist season in Maine.
So many talented artists & artisans on the coast of Maine
who are also great entrepreneurs. (Marketing is not my forté.)
"Magic for you!" says the fairy!