My poor little neglected Etsy shop has finally been fluffed up just a little!  I should re-name my shop THINGS WITH WINGS, because my two main subject matters are little feathered birdies and be-winged angels. 
I'm trying to get into a big juried holiday craft show, and they really want a website or online shop to view for consideration, rather than just a few random pictures.  The deadline to register is today.  Gulp.  So, I've been scrambling to finish up those soldered shadowbox charms that have been started weeks ago, and also scrambling to include a few of my angel paintings in my shop.  For the show, I plan to have a bunch of original paintings, but will focus on offering mounted prints and cards.  That part isn't done yet, but at least I have scans of everything, including scans of originals that have long been sold.  I just need to figure out a production line process for cranking out a lot of inventory, but I realize I just don't work--or even think --that way. Also, my soldered work is so very time-consuming, it's not even funny.  I probably make pennies per hour on those sales, but I just truly love making them.  Just wish I could crank them out faster, and streamline the process somewhat.  I'll get in a groove eventually, I hope.  I find out if I've been accepted on September 30, and if I don't make it in, it won't be the end of the world.  In fact, it will give me plenty of inventory for the much, much smaller scale holiday show my friend Chris and I do every November. 
But for now, I'm going to keep adding to the shop, and hoping for a few sales there as well.  Being so new to selling in the Etsy world,  I'm struggling with whether I should open a second shop or not.  Even though both of my offerings are feathery, it feels clunky to have both things together in one shop.  Maybe I should have a separate shop just for paintings and prints.  And the existing shop just for soldered stuff.  Well, I'll sit and ruminate over that for a while, but in the meantime everything will get lumped together, so those judges can see it all in one place.  Wish me luck!  And come visit my little shop! :-)
P.S. Not all of my new stuff is feathered....I've also been playing around with old crusty watch faces and pewter hearts to tuck in my shadowboxes.  Not everyone wants to "put a bird on it", I reckon!
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
September Collage
I wanted to play around with cutting and pasting in Photoshop, and came up with this simple digital collage for Mary Green's collage challenge for September (wow...September already?!?).  I have about 10 other things I should be doing, but needed a little break to do something just for fun.  Hopefully, my next post will be about how I've restocked my Etsy shop with loads of new items (wishful thinking) and lots of other productive things.  In the meantime, here is my little collage for this month:
Then I played with a posterizing filter and think this looks pretty cool and retro:
And here are the three images we were working with:
Until next time....enjoy September!
|  | |
| Asters and Goldenrod (click to view larger) | 
And here are the three images we were working with:
Until next time....enjoy September!
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Another Collage Challege
I'm so glad to see that Mary Green is back in the blogosphere, and running her monthly collage challenge once again!  It's a simple challenge, to use at least part of each of the three images she provides, in a collage of one's choice.  Here is the little ditty I created this afternoon:
And here are the three images Mary provided (I love the all the soft colors!):
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| "Figs~ Nature's Pleasant Laxative" | 
To this mix of images, I added a little fig botanical illustration to reinforce the theme, plus some 
purple papers, and tiny little flower brads for some 3-d pizazz.  Easy-peasy and a fun little diversion.  Now I need to go get some real work done (but I'd really rather play with paper all afternoon...)! 
Friday, July 13, 2012
Where Bloggers Create-2012..................... My Studio Tour!
Welcome to my creative space...come in and take a look around!
| This is the door entering my studio/office. | 
As you enter the room, there is a long counter with file cabinets below and shelves above. There used to be a bulletin board just to the left of the shelves, but I recently replaced that with an old dollhouse. Can you believe I got this handmade cutie in the Goodwill Bins?!!
| This old house has great details! | 
| A tiny guardian angel perched on top, watching over the stash | 
| Strange bedfellows: pearls and bingo cards | 
| Vintage game pieces, and favorite old photos | 
Beneath the big house are a couple of smaller wooden houses. One of them has hooks inside and is just perfect for my etsy jewelry inventory:
| The bird hooks below hold samples for the soldering classes I teach. | 
| I just opened my etsy shop this week! I'd love for you to visit my little shop, too (see side bar). A new adventure for me! | 
Baskets on the shelves hold stamping supplies, soldering equipment, and 
more.  The vintage white doll case holds glass and cutting tools.
And I've dedicated one shallow shelf to my collection of cute face cups.  I'm always on the lookout for more:
I have an ugly open paper storage case on the counter below the shelves.  I thought about putting a simple curtain over it, but I think I'd get frustrated trying to move it out of the way when I needed something out of the cubbies, so I think I'll just leave it in its practical, ugly state.  I tend to prop up things in front of it.  Here are the things in the current rotation:
| On the left is a print I just bought from the brilliant Cori Dantini, and one of her greeting cards, too. Next to it is a darling book by the talented Salley Mavor, whose exquisite felt illustrations are scrumptious. I got to meet her at a lecture and book-signing recently. I'm in awe of her work. | 
Continuing
 along the wall, I have closed cupboards plus my photocopier, printer, 
and computer.  
Usually the worktable has a project or two on it, and NEVER looks this tidy. Here, my little dog Barkley can often be found, staying close to 'mom'. For our "Collage College" classes, this table is joined by another smaller table, and can accommodate 8 class participants who gather to do some creating. During class, it usually looks like this:
And the other side of the table has wire bird nests in progress for my little soldered shadowboxes:
(The rest of this tour is a repeat of last year's posting. Hope you don't mind, but it's all pretty much the same, so I'm just showing it to you again.) As you look at the next wall, you see more cupboards and shelves and a HOARD of old musty books that I cannot resist lugging home anytime I find them.
I have so many old dictionaries, it is ridiculous. But I love them for collage and they make me smile. I also cannot say no to old sheet music, and maps, and wallpaper. Not to mention scrapbooking paper. It keeps stacking up, higher and higher.
The baskets hold textiles, trims and laces. Then there are my tins full of old postage stamps, and cute wooden boxes filled with old buttons sit below the little window.
The cupboards hold many supplies, catalogs, and bulky stuff. Since I'm left-handed, I put small built-in drawers on the left side of my drafting table, so all my pencils and pens are easy to access.
My drafting table is the hardest thing to keep organized. As I work, I am just MESSY, and end up doing my work on any tiny clean surface I can find. The built in light box is invaluable, and its glass top is great for xacto-cutting.
| Since this is a photo from last year, you can see the bulletin board on the right, where the dollhouse is now. | 
More hoarding lurks behind the door, in a semi-organized state--bins full of this and that:
The inside of the door holds several illustrations done for Simplicity Pattern Company. I spent years as art director of Daisy Kingdom, Inc., a fabric, craft, and publishing company based here in Portland, until it was bought out by Springs Industries, and they did a great deal of licensing with Simplicity. I still do freelance illustration and design for them and other clients.
| I have a few skill sets, but photography is NOT one of them....sorry for the lousy pics. Definitely not my forte! | 
So now we are finally done with my studio tour.  And I'll leave you with one last photograph which is all too apropos:
| The cut-out hand pointing into my studio aptly once read "DUMP HERE" | 
And now, I'm off to go snooping inside your studios!
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
My etsy shop...I FINALLY did it!
As of a couple of hours ago, I am the proud proprietress of my own little etsy shop!  It has only taken me about 3 years to get off my duff and just do it.  (I am kinda famous for my procrastinating ways, and this kinda proves it...ahem)  Who knows if my items will get any attention in the vast sea of other etsy goodies?? There is certainly a LOT of competition out there.  Yes, I regret not doing it when the notion first struck, when there were far fewer sellers.  But you know what they say about hindsight...
I do have a new-found appreciation for the amount of time it takes to do a listing, and hoping that as I get used to it, it will go faster. I took forever taking the photos, and I'm still not really satisfied with the quality--but what can I expect from my little point-and-shoot? Here's one of my favorite shots of the bunch:
So, onward and upward! I really wanted to get the shop up and running before the "Where Bloggers Create" Tour starts this weekend. Mission accomplished! Yippee skippy!
I do have a new-found appreciation for the amount of time it takes to do a listing, and hoping that as I get used to it, it will go faster. I took forever taking the photos, and I'm still not really satisfied with the quality--but what can I expect from my little point-and-shoot? Here's one of my favorite shots of the bunch:
So, onward and upward! I really wanted to get the shop up and running before the "Where Bloggers Create" Tour starts this weekend. Mission accomplished! Yippee skippy!
Monday, June 18, 2012
Concrete Leaf Castings
| Roberta has her castings tucked throughout her garden. | 
| Some of them are left natural concrete, and allowed to weather and collect moss. | 
| Others are beautifully painted in gradated colors. This leaf is approximately 15" across. | 
| Her garden plots are framed with wonderful arbors and collected treasures. | 
| She tucks old ladders and tools among the plants-- so charming! | 
| Here the rungs act as shelves for her handmade concrete planters. | 
Finally, I got to try my hand at it. Here I am, hard at work on my leaf (sorry, can't recall the name of it):
| Roberta suggested not going all the way to the leaf's edge, but rather making a scalloped finish with small adjacent balls of concrete. (Oh my, I do believe it's time to touch up my roots...) | 
| Here's the same leaf, with its scalloped edge. | 
| That same leaf. I built up the pile of sand so it came out deep and cone-shaped. Notice the copper fitting inserted at the bottom; I think this will be a little bird feeder on a pedestal. | 
| My second leaf (rhubarb), just a small little guy to tuck in my yard somewhere. We added a reddish colorant to the concrete to give it a slight terra cotta tint. | 
| This was my third leaf, a hosta. Roberta helped me curl the tip over an extra lump of sand to add an 'elfin' feel to this casting. | 
| Again, fitted for a copper-pipe pedestal. Love that cute curled tip! | 
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