Showing posts with label Collage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Collage. Show all posts

Monday, January 18, 2021

Blue: Folio Book with Pockets & a Pamphlet Booklet

 

I promised myself & you, blog visitors, that I 
would glue up my painted Blue papers (previous post) 
into a folded folio.

The pages of the little tied up booklet 
have become ink swatches
of 5 favorite fountain pen inks in blue: 
Diamine Polar Glow, Noodler's Midnight, Sailor 940, 
Sailor Yonaga, & Noodler's Blue. 

The sentence in the lower right middle, on vellum says,
"Blue, réconforte-moi." Translated: "Blue, comfort me..."

Friday, May 15, 2020

What I Took For Granted...

Funny, I took spiritual gifts less for granted
than material objects, before the virus & shut down.

I don't shop online,
but art tools & materials 
were available at local shops 
within a 100 miles.
Now those shops are closed.

So a friend kindly helped me to order new #11 blades,
and a great, new ergonomic Excel knife. 
They are luxuries to me!!

I did a few test cuts, magnificent feeling
of cutting with a precision blade! 
My edges could be smoother,
but that's me needing to practice...

 I realized I could arrange these simple snippets
in an infinite number of ways,
with lovely negative shapes inbetween...

Like letters in a word, words in a sentence...
An infinite number of ways.
Boggling...
But then, a lot is boggling these days...

Thursday, September 5, 2019

I Finished my Book!!

This is a continuation from my previous post.

 Stopping to face my situation of the too many ideas 
& projects that had started to form,
& asking for help did the trick! 
Beth wrote to Just choose one project & finish it.
Not rocket science, but it helped to hear it from outside 
my own brain which was turning somersaults! 
Organizing my space & hiding the other projects was key. 

And accepting that my finished book would not be perfect...
All along there were decisions to be made.
What to do with the wildflower cutouts that I had drawn & painted 
from photos that I had taken for my project?
I had to abandon my original idea of 
making the flowers pop up from the page, 
(something I love to do in my little handmade cards),
because I had a cover that I'd bound that I'd wanted to use.
A new stiff white paper replaced the green Mi Teintes. 
(Thanks, Fiddlehead Artisan Supply for being right in town!!)

From there on, the book seemed to make itself.
Book Arts prof. Rebecca Goodale says that there's nothing
like the feeling of you & the paper working together "as one."   
(I'm paraphrasing...)
The beginning.
It's an accordion book, but can be view one spread at a time.
The middle.
The end. 
 One of my favorite parts was writing text,
inspired by my original thoughts on my subject. 
Lots & lots of editing to keep it focused & brief.
I had written in the previous post that "there was 
so little left to do" on this book. 
Haha!...Little did I know!!!
 
The cover came last. 
I wanted to decorate it more, but I had a deadline.
The handmade books, the final projects 
from our Book Arts Class will be on view at USM 
during September with a lecture & reception on September 9.

The book was delivered yesterday, & I am exhilarated!

What joy to start with vague thoughts & ideas 
& to work with them 
as they evolve into concrete words & images~
Bound into a book!
I got to experience what my young art students
used to experience!

And, I finished it!!

Thank you to USM & Rebecca Goodale's 
Summer Book Arts Course!

Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Snippets Not Sketches


 Back to playing with watercolor snippets & now, 
watercolor buttons. Buttons-bullets-chips-charms-dots...
Coincidentally I painted my dots at Dot's Café, 
unaware of the connection until later.  Fun!

                       
They were inspired by Robinsunne,
a local artist & teacher.
She makes "paper charms" in sandwiched pairs. 

Like beads, they embellish her journals.
To view one of her video tutorials
click here. For creating her paper pockets, another link.



A store bought envelope with 3 pockets,
inspired by Robinsunne's 
Tri-fold Pocket Journal Making Techniques
as seen in the linked videos.
The envelopes were intended for my color snippets,
(in the 1st photo), but there were too many, 
& I didn't want to hide them.
I think I'll put in some secret messages instead. 

I have some plans for my paper buttons.
Maybe you, Dear Readers, have some ideas...
Ideas or not, please do leave me a comment!

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, July 27, 2018

Boxes: My Key to Organization

The workshop that keeps on giving,
That was Beth's. I continue to play.
I notice my ongoing fascination with squares.
Squares. BOXES. Order. Symmetry. 
Containment which allows for freedom & chaos.
Ohhhh. I get it!

I learned about creative surface design,
but I also learned about how to organize materials
because Beth had 
So So Many!  
(Click on Sew Sew Art , 
Beth's website.)
I've been learning that my creative spirit can't flow without 
organizing my materials!

 That generous Beth lent me her BOX of metallic threads.
Sparkly. Shimmery. Oooooh! Thank you, generous Beth!
The BOX for raw material for my August Art Show.
 The BOX for hand sewing & little papers,
for book covers, for little collages. 
For now it has to wait for me in its BOX 
because I need to be into the Art Show BOX.
 Another BOX of Bookmaking stuff. 
Beth's Beads. Waxed threads. Buttons!
A BOX of travel journals from France voyages.
Also waiting for me.
Rita's saved BOXES, 
thrown in a corner of the spare room.
You never know when you'll need another BOX!

I'm remembering one of the first magical 
BOXES in my life:
Jenny's Mom's BOX of old clothes in the basement,
put there so we could play Dress-Up 
when we were wee kids!!
Thank you Jenny's Mom! 

How do YOU organize your materials?

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Beth's Maine Coast Surface Design Class-2


Beth's Midsummer Surface Design Workshop.
I got to go for 2 days this time! 
(see previous posts.)
 I made a little book for Beth last year,
inspired by all of the wonderful design work
that I always see in her studio when I visit her.
Now, not just a visit, but an official class!
We made cover designs using plastic credit type cards
swooshing around paint on large sheets of paper.
 I also printed with the edges. 
On top of that I "pounced" and swirled circles
with a small round sponge gizmo.
Another student had discovered the swirling technique.
 Some of us "copied". 
I found myself cutting out circles,
& then began cutting them into spirals. 
It gave me a delicious bunch of small
snail-fiddlehead-brussel sprout-y creatures. 
I pasted them down & hung metallic thread.
How fun! The process was doing its own thing.
All I had to do was to let it!
 
We used our covers for coptic stitched journals.
I experimented on my top cover,
sort of ruining it (no photo of that!), 
so eventually I pasted a collage design over it. 
It's called Rita's Book of Progress & Imperfection
One of the biggest things that happened
at this workshop is that my perfectionism,
the crippling kind, began to be lifted. 
Beth models & teaches that: 
"You try things,
if something doesn't work, no problem. 
You just keep trying things, & having fun!"
 With a 1 1/2 " hole punch 
I've been continuing to punch circles
from my sheets of painted paper. 

These are on watercolored squares that I'd had made.
They remind me of one of those color theory exercises
that you see in books on painting.
I'd seen Beth's hand-dyed cloth beads several years ago,
& in fact she'd gifted me with some.
I finally got to make my own!!! Total joy!
Above, the cover of a small accordion book.
 Embellishing one of Beth's tags. 
I made the bead,
The rest was from 
her big box of printed papers & ribbons.
"Cloth Paper Scissors", there's a magazine by that name. 

I haven't found the magazine yet, but Marcella,
Beth's assistant shared some wonderful books. 

Austin Kleon in Steal Like an Artist says that
side projects 
inbetween work on your major project
are valuable. 
"Productive Procrastination".
"Just play. That's where the magic happens."

Now, I'm back working on my exhibit at the library.
I'll be showing sketches that were all done
"Not Far From Home" .
Which happens to be the name of the show.

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Beth's Workshop: Things I Learned

At Beth's Workshop: (Previous post Here) 
I learned of a book: 
Expressive Drawing by Steven Aimone. 
Incorporating the freedom we had as children
with our developing adult ways of making marks
and drawing.
Beth's post about that workshop is Here.
And another post Right Here.

It really was "artistic life changing"!

I am challenged by, & I get satisfaction from 
gravitating to order & simplicity 
when confronted with many materials & possibilities.
My simple sketching practice 
with line & watercolor
was affirmed & enriched by playing in this different way.
The pages I made at Beth's (see link above)
 are now in an accordion book setting.
Ah, Order. Cohesion. Sequence, 
though I have much to learn about this.
About the principle called "Unity".
A play between unconscious impulses 
& conscious art principles & choices.
The more I study art, 
the more the conscious learning
becomes unconscious while I work.
(Does that make sense??)

I'm going back this weekend for 2 more days!

There is a spot open, if any of you want to join us!
Contact Beth using the links above to her site.

Monday, July 16, 2018

Time Out For Making a Book

 
 Interlude from preparing sketches for the show:
Back to the handmade book, inspired 
by teaching some friends how to make 
non-adhesive bookcovers and handmade books.
 2nd Version.


And inspired by Beth's workshop. (see older post.)
And her buttons.

A pamphlet stitch for adding signatures 
to an accordion fold. 
A lesson in accepting imperfection.
I slid the end tabs of the accordion strip
into the cover wraps. It actually works as a book!
I'm trying to use up watercolors from one of my paint boxes.
 I keep coming back to this striped, polka-dot motif. 
Such fun to be surprised by the colors that turn out!
Meanwhile, a lot of the show sketches are framed,
but I'm creating & selecting more.
It's a huge challenge 
for this brain of mine,
I don't have time for the many ideas that pop in.
 It's a challenge to go through many old sketchbooks.
Trying to make selections 
Curating. Editing. 
 Help!
No wonder I'm taking time outs for polka dotted stripes.