Can you believe I've been away six weeks, Blog? Scandalous. I cannot hope to excuse THAT kind of absence, but for lack of anything better to post about, here's my feeble accounting for my long-term silence:
1. You know you can always count on my sharing my crafts, but everything I've been doing all this time is in the Top Secret No Reveal Till After Christmas category. If it helps you to deal with the suspense, here are some tiny hints:
--some of the stuff involves containers, some empty, some not
--some could be used as a weapon, or not
--there's pink
2. I also know I like to talk about my writing, but I'm still on my long-term authoring hiatus. I did get to do the editing of this book though. The writing is real nice, I can't wait to see the pictures!
3. You have in the past enjoyed my sharing about my random nocturnal fantasies, but the storylines of those have been a bit thin lately. But if you insist on knowing, there have been two I alternate between.
--The one in which I live in a little Jewish village in the early 20th century, have a crush on the town doctor, and get a job as his assistant. This makes more sense if you know that in real life I have a doctor who is Jewish and he's completely awesome.
--The one in which I am hired to do online research for the team of Mr. Finch and Mr. Reese of the show "Person of Interest." Because I really can't help being attracted to Michael Emerson regardless of the role he plays. (Yeah, and my husband meanwhile has a man-crush on Jim Caviezel, so we make quite the pair.)
4. There is an unbelievable quantity of great TV on right now that is simply too good to miss. I watch about 25 shows faithfully right now. Plus some football and hockey. Plus the occasional holiday special and/or "Income Property" rerun. Yes, that was 25 shows. And I'm picky, people--I cut out the shows that are just "good." Anyone who gripes that there's nothing on the Boob Tube these days needs to take another look...it's become just insane. And "Alcatraz" hasn't even started yet.
5. I've been getting too many kicks out of Facebook. It's so easy to share the thrilling stuff in my life there, I just don't get around to putting it here, Blog! Stuff like
--the fabulous drinks I've been making out of the Magic House bar
--video of our newest collectible snowman, "Spaceman" (pronounced "spa-CHAY-man" of course)
--pictures of my cats, oh heck, I'll show you one too, Blog
So I'm sure it's clear why I haven't been posting. If not, I'll spell it out for you, Blog: L...A...Z...Y. Perhaps I will do better in the new year. At least you know after December 25 you'll be seeing some crafts here, including the pink part.
Can't you wait? Till then, have some happy holidays!
Showing posts with label some black/some pink. Show all posts
Showing posts with label some black/some pink. Show all posts
December 6, 2011
April 17, 2011
Copycat
Blog, I've talked before about how I am so often inspired by other artists when I craft stuff of my own. It's hard not to be inspired by really cool art and want to try your hand at similar work in your own style. That's definitely the origin of this watercolor I did yesterday which I call "Cat-a-chrome."
The inspiration for this painting was the work of Drew Strouble aka Catman Drew (I love that name...I keep singing it in my head in my Bob Seger voice). I was introduced to Drew by the awesome Animal Planet Show "Must Love Cats." A lot of Drew's work is very realistic--truly gorgeous--and way beyond my abilities. But his "Colorful Cats" were featured on the show and I thought perhaps I could manage doing something like those stylized, psychedelic felines.
I worked awhile on developing a style of my own for the cartoonized cats. Then I figured I'd try a classic three-by-three arrangement and sketched them on watercolor paper. I did final drawing in felt tip pen, then did the painting, then went over the pen a second time. The painting came out pretty well! I haven't done any watercolor painting in a long time, and it was really fun to explore the medium again.
And you know me, Blog, I'm always happy to have more cats in the house...even the 2-D kind! Thanks, Catman Drew, for the inspiration. I hope this post will send some cat art lovers your way!
February 15, 2011
A cuppycake-lovin' critter
Blog, as you well know we have a new resident at Magic House. Yesterday (aka Valentine's Day) I brought into the world this little green guy and the cupcake he dearly loves. My money is on him being able to nom that entire cuppycake in one bite, how about you?
This is my response to the February creativity prompt from our pals at the A Creative Dream blog: "Love." The little green guy loves his fudge-frosting-topped treat, and I love him, because I modeled him after the little blue guy in the AT&T HTC phone commercials, with whom I am obsessed. In case you aren't getting that reference, here you go:
But before we address little green guy and his most remarkable feature, let us first discuss the plush cupcake he is about to nom. I based this on ideas in Warm Fuzzies, the book I referenced in my crazy hat post. You too can easily make a plush cuppycake of your own.
I just took a strip of dark brown fleece and folded it in half lengthwise. Then I rolled it up to create the effect of swirled frosting. I stuffed the end with the cut edges inside a cuff cut from a pink sock, which stands in, of course, for the paper cupcake cup. A circle of pink felt whipped stitched to the bottom completes the cup, but before you sew it on, trim the fleece inside and/or add stuffing to make it nice and flat on the bottom. Festoon your cupcake with toppings made of puff balls, beads, buttons, etc. You can trim it with ribbon or rickrack too.
And as for the cupcake-ophile creature, Blog, let me call your attention to the one tricky feature about him of which I am truly proud: his mouth. When creating the pattern for green guy, I recognized immediately the big challenge: his mouth needs to be concave, and when you stuff something, it's impossible to give it a concave feature like that.
I had a eureka moment, though, Blog. I made a shape out of aluminum foil in the size and shape of the indentation I needed for greenie's mouth. I covered this mold with a sheet of polymer clay, trimmed it, and baked it. I popped the baked clay off the mold, then covered it with black felt, using fabric glue. I discovered I heart fabric glue!!
I cut an opening for the mouth in the fleece of the head front. I folded the edges of this opening inward, and sewed the felt-covered mouth piece inside. I cannot deny that this was tricky, since I didn't want any stitches to show. The bonus of having the clay piece inside the body was that it supported two wire armatures for the arms and legs, which I mounted there with electrical tape.
I hand sewed the front and back body pieces together, stuffing with fiberfill as I went. Then I simply had to sew on two black beady eyes, and my green guy was ready for dessert!
And, of course, to be loved....
This is my response to the February creativity prompt from our pals at the A Creative Dream blog: "Love." The little green guy loves his fudge-frosting-topped treat, and I love him, because I modeled him after the little blue guy in the AT&T HTC phone commercials, with whom I am obsessed. In case you aren't getting that reference, here you go:
But before we address little green guy and his most remarkable feature, let us first discuss the plush cupcake he is about to nom. I based this on ideas in Warm Fuzzies, the book I referenced in my crazy hat post. You too can easily make a plush cuppycake of your own.
I just took a strip of dark brown fleece and folded it in half lengthwise. Then I rolled it up to create the effect of swirled frosting. I stuffed the end with the cut edges inside a cuff cut from a pink sock, which stands in, of course, for the paper cupcake cup. A circle of pink felt whipped stitched to the bottom completes the cup, but before you sew it on, trim the fleece inside and/or add stuffing to make it nice and flat on the bottom. Festoon your cupcake with toppings made of puff balls, beads, buttons, etc. You can trim it with ribbon or rickrack too.
And as for the cupcake-ophile creature, Blog, let me call your attention to the one tricky feature about him of which I am truly proud: his mouth. When creating the pattern for green guy, I recognized immediately the big challenge: his mouth needs to be concave, and when you stuff something, it's impossible to give it a concave feature like that.
I had a eureka moment, though, Blog. I made a shape out of aluminum foil in the size and shape of the indentation I needed for greenie's mouth. I covered this mold with a sheet of polymer clay, trimmed it, and baked it. I popped the baked clay off the mold, then covered it with black felt, using fabric glue. I discovered I heart fabric glue!!
I cut an opening for the mouth in the fleece of the head front. I folded the edges of this opening inward, and sewed the felt-covered mouth piece inside. I cannot deny that this was tricky, since I didn't want any stitches to show. The bonus of having the clay piece inside the body was that it supported two wire armatures for the arms and legs, which I mounted there with electrical tape.
I hand sewed the front and back body pieces together, stuffing with fiberfill as I went. Then I simply had to sew on two black beady eyes, and my green guy was ready for dessert!
And, of course, to be loved....
Labels:
crafty crafts,
EZ crafts 4U,
some black/some pink
June 22, 2010
Let's make rocks!
As you know, Blog, my friend Martha from Chicago is visiting this week for what she dubbed "Social Media Boot Camp." And what summer camp experience is complete without arts and crafts time? So, taking a break from lessons about Facebook (she's already addicted), we had a little seminar about polymer clay. The theme? "Let's make rocks!"
Clay needs to be softened up when you start to work with it. That means either just mushing a piece up on your workboard (plastic, ceramic tile or glass), or running it through a clay-designated pasta machine, folding, and running again till blended.
1. Color blending. Take two or more colors of clay and combine them. You can roll out and stack thin layers of clay, fold and twist them, or just take globs of colors and smoosh and knead them together till it looks cool. Blend a little or a lot and get totally different effects. Then make into rock-like shapes.
After you've made your rocks, bake them on a tray, tile, or piece of cardboard. Polymer clay is non-toxic, but it's still not advised to use utensils or trays with it that you will later use for food preparation. Bake at 270 degrees. The time is determined by the thickest size of clay; 15 minutes for every 1/4" is the recommendation but I did our batch for 25 minutes, and the thickest stones were like 5/8".
Dry your rocks and then sit back and enjoy the many cool effects you achieved! Some may look amazingly like real rocks, others more like something J.R.R. Tolkien might envision, but either way they will pretty much all be rockin'. Sorry, Blog--you knew that pun was inevitable.
What can you do with your rocks? Well, you can use them for jewelry by poking holes through them before baking, or drilling holes afterwards, or mounting them in settings of metal clay. You can tile them on other clay projects like my mural, or switchplate covers or coasters. You can build little houses of them, or put them in the bottom of clear flower vases, or sprinkle them in the litter box for a festive look. J/K on that last, Blog. Let your imagination go, as we so often do here at Magic House, wild.
Any questions? Post in the comments!
I have tried like 50 different things to do with polymer clay, which I swear is the most versatile art medium in the world. But I'm finding I am best at creating abstract stuff with an organic feel. You know, imitating themes from plant life, water, and rocks and minerals, some of which you can see in the header of this blog, Blog. That kind of thing also goes well with the Prairie Style/natural decor in our house.
So, for my next project I'm going to try doing a small (12" x 9") mural on canvas. I will reveal all about this later, but the thing is, I needed a lot of small rocks. Happily, Martha is the only other person I know who is obsessed with rocks. She's been curious about polyclay for awhile, so was the perfect person to be my Polymer Clay Rock Making Sous Chef. We set up the kitchen with pretty much every polymer clay supply I own, and settled down to making rocks till we could make rocks no more.
It seems people out there are curious about how to make rocks from polymer clay. So let's start with the basics of what you need for this most simple of polyclay projects. Get yourself some clay from a place like Michaels or Joann. Obviously choose rock colors. You'll definitely what to get some metallic colors (silver, gold, copper) and some translucent (essential), along with white pearl and various neutrals (black, gray, white, browns, and tans). A mossy green can work too in moderation. You may also spot the "Granitex" kind of clay which comes with little flecks already in it, another great choice. The more colors the merrier, obviously! As far as brands, anything works, but Sculpey III is very easy for newbies to work with and although it's not sturdy enough for many projects, is fine for this.
There are a few basic concepts happening in rock-making that you employ individually or in combination.
2. Texturing. Add texture to your rock if you want. I made ridged rocks by rolling them over the crinkles at the corners of my aluminum foil pans. We also rolled some in kosher salt. After baking, washing them dissolved the salt leaving little pits. You can also texture rocks with rough tools like a scrubber sponge, or just poke them with a needle. But for smooth rocks, remember to smooth out your finger prints! (Sometimes we forgot.)
3. Inclusions. There is no end to the stuff you can try blending into the clay to get neat rock effects. We used herbs (ground black pepper, oregano and paprika are great choices), plant matter (finely crushed bark, dried flower petals), Perfect Pearls embossing powder, craft sand, tiny unblended bits of clay, metallic leaf, and glitter. What really worked well too was the scrapings of clay residue from the craft mat (which we dubbed "detritus," quite an accurate term). Other possibilities are dryer lint, inks or paints, or pretty much anything of fine texture or good blendability that won't rot or stink. (The "Rot or Stink Test" eliminates ideas like chocolate chips and used kitty litter, neither of which is fine enough texture anyway.)
Translucent clay appears clearer if you go straight from the oven to cold water. So we dumped our whole batch of rocks in water right away. This also dissolved the salt we used for texture.
Dry your rocks and then sit back and enjoy the many cool effects you achieved! Some may look amazingly like real rocks, others more like something J.R.R. Tolkien might envision, but either way they will pretty much all be rockin'. Sorry, Blog--you knew that pun was inevitable.
What can you do with your rocks? Well, you can use them for jewelry by poking holes through them before baking, or drilling holes afterwards, or mounting them in settings of metal clay. You can tile them on other clay projects like my mural, or switchplate covers or coasters. You can build little houses of them, or put them in the bottom of clear flower vases, or sprinkle them in the litter box for a festive look. J/K on that last, Blog. Let your imagination go, as we so often do here at Magic House, wild.
Any questions? Post in the comments!
April 23, 2010
Stuff I bizarradore, Volume 2
Hey Blog, now that bizarradore is on its way to becoming a household word, let’s revisit the concept. Raindrops on roses, it’s some more random little things that I love!
Cat paw pads
and how many paws are pink?
Ten of your paws are black,
ten of your paws are pink!
That’s how many paws are black,
and how many paws are pink!
Ask anyone who knows me or has been to my house. I’m obsessed. I have collected rocks since I was five years old and would go beachcombing at Point Beach (Lake Michigan) every summer. The volume of rocks that accumulated in my room was rather annoying to my mom. Whenever I’m walking around rocks I can’t help but stare down at them, looking for free treasures.
I love how people I know personally are taking advantage of all the new ways a person can get books published these days. My friend Cherie Burbach was here recently to talk about her book; she has her own publishing company just like I do, called Bonjour Publishing. My friend Bob Le Normand, who lives in Wales, had his fantasy novel Kendulla published by a small independent press called Willow Bank Publishers. The husband of my friend Connie, Ron Pappalardo, published his book Reconciled by the Light via Lulu, a “self-publishing” service. My daughter Katie’s boyfriend Chris produced his photography book Fading Nostalgia: Polaroid Adventures on Route 66 using Blurb.com, another very nifty way to self-publish. I guess you could say I collect books written by my friends!
Any bizarradores to share, readers? Or, if you like any of mine, click the “right on” box!
Cat paw pads
What’s not to love about paw pads? They are cute and come in many colors. Some time ago I made up an annoying little song that I sing to Cody about his paw pads, to the tune of “99 Bottles of Beer.” It goes like this:
Some your paws are black,
some of your paws are pink!
How many paws are black, some of your paws are pink!
and how many paws are pink?
Ten of your paws are black,
ten of your paws are pink!
That’s how many paws are black,
and how many paws are pink!
Yeah, I’m that way. Cody truly does have twenty paw pads, and ten of them are predominantly black, while ten are predominantly pink. Which pretty much exhausts this topic.
Sometimes at night after Davie’s a-bed, I just walk around the house and look at stuff. You know, the furniture, the art on the walls, the knick-knacks and collectibles. When you live in a place, you tend to stop seeing the cool things you own. When you picked them out and bought them, you thought they were awesome, but after awhile forget to appreciate them. So I’ll admire the box frame with the leaves in it that Davie snuck back to Cedarburg to buy me as a surprise, or the polymer clay faux geode heart I made, or how nice the paint in the studio looks.
Rocks
Ask anyone who knows me or has been to my house. I’m obsessed. I have collected rocks since I was five years old and would go beachcombing at Point Beach (Lake Michigan) every summer. The volume of rocks that accumulated in my room was rather annoying to my mom. Whenever I’m walking around rocks I can’t help but stare down at them, looking for free treasures.
I have one word for heaven on earth: lapidaries.
One of the very cool things about polymer clay is that you can make rocks out of it. They look just as cool as real rocks but are lighter and easier to use for stuff. Like you can make holes in them for jewelry or stick them on things like switchplate covers. Awesome.
Books published by my friends
I love how people I know personally are taking advantage of all the new ways a person can get books published these days. My friend Cherie Burbach was here recently to talk about her book; she has her own publishing company just like I do, called Bonjour Publishing. My friend Bob Le Normand, who lives in Wales, had his fantasy novel Kendulla published by a small independent press called Willow Bank Publishers. The husband of my friend Connie, Ron Pappalardo, published his book Reconciled by the Light via Lulu, a “self-publishing” service. My daughter Katie’s boyfriend Chris produced his photography book Fading Nostalgia: Polaroid Adventures on Route 66 using Blurb.com, another very nifty way to self-publish. I guess you could say I collect books written by my friends!
- Beer chasers with bloody marys
- Steel drums
- Seeing what new outfits Kurt Hummel will sport on each episode of “Glee”
- The typeface used for the titles of the Austin Powers movies
- The word “fox”
Any bizarradores to share, readers? Or, if you like any of mine, click the “right on” box!
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