And then there's my sister with her zentangle beads too!
Saturday, November 5, 2016
Leftover scrap experiments and the funny bunch
Figgy has been making badges. You can see and buy them here: https://www.etsy.com/uk/shop/TheMineralFact?ref=shop_home_edit.
As you will know, my mum makes all sorts of textile wonders, including her gorgeous beads that I have been inspired by and drawn from many times. Remember the Turquoise Muse?
What with Christmas approaching and an open studio coming up, my fused plastic scraps have been haunting me. Yesterday I put some of them together to make badges!
Thursday, November 3, 2016
Objects or Colour? How Do We Connect to Imagery?
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Haw Red Apples 18x18 cm pastel on paper |
For the ground, I cut a piece of Fabriano to about 20x 20 cm. I mixed some pigment and clear gesso in a shimmering raspberry square. I allowed myself more pastels than usual. The really loose phase of the drawing was strong and then I went through a disappointing phase until I ended with this.
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
The Time of Year for Dahlia Love
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Orchid and Oriental |
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Pinks and Greens |
Sunday, October 23, 2016
More Mini Prints
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Weather Over Pear |
Today I wanted to try making a few more prints. My Akua Intaglio was a mess. I am not the tidiest painter with ink and rarely wash my brush adequately because it is that little bit more difficult than swilling it in water. I keep my inks in coasters and stack them to store them. Just setting them up makes my hands filthy.
I decided to refill and straighten the inks out with a palette knife before begining. It took me over an hour to complete this bit of housekeeping but during the process I realised a few things. The inks had air dried to such an extent that they were much more like oil ink and had been behaving that way more… once they were cleaned up they were runnier and don't hold the line as well. OOPS. The other thing I learned/rediscovered is that I can mix bespoke colours using Akua pigment with blending oil, so I made a few colours. The blue int he sky is now a sky blue ready to use.
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Chartreuse Light on Blue |
What's nice about working this small is it is difficult to spend more than a few hours on a print, so in a day I had made two prints. Among other things, I am aiming to produce eight mini prints for my. I'm not sure which print to send to Lesley at Red Dot to replace the print that sold, but I'm reconfiguring spaces on a small scale.
Thursday, October 20, 2016
What sticks in your mind
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Jerusalem Artichoke & Opaline |
I have a deadline to get more work done so last night I went into the garden and cut two bouquets. It was too dark to work then, but I looked at them and thought about a pinterest album I'd seen that morning of yellows. I had filled the bouquet out with a few stems of jerusalem artichoke flowers. When I went to set something up to begin with, all of that stuff was stuck in my mind. As I chose my colours Ivor Hitchens was tyhere helping. Not really, obviously, but as I began working I thought of one of his bouquets. The opaline vase is one of my flea market treasures.
Wednesday, October 19, 2016
a crazy quilt of colour
I came up with this way of making my cards a few years ago and now when I get low on cards, which has happened often recently, I get to make more.
One of the 'stations' in my studio is my sewing machine. Another 'station' is a temporary, very chaotic station, the plastic station. I also need my printer and my computer.
When I finish a series of cards (I often use a particular colour of thread per series), I put them in one of my vintage tins, ready to take to the next event.
Monday, October 17, 2016
Experiments with AKUA
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Emily Looking left: monotype 10x15cm, Akua ink on zinc |
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Emily On the Stool monotype 10x15cm, Akua ink on zinc |
I had a big long table to myself; this is unusual, so I was able to spread out. Sue organised Emily into ten minute poses and I decided that would be enough for some monotypes. I had forgotten my roller and I mixed greys with white and black for the first few. They weren't very strong. For the third print I decided to see what would happen if I used my watercolours with the AKUA ink. I diluted it with water and blending oil and painted it onto the plate, which I had rubbed release agent onto (leaving the ghost underneath). I mixed ink with watercolour, wiped areas away, used my fingers to dab. Logically it shouldn't have worked, but it did.
For, the final monotype of the day I worked only in black, but my palette was filthy and I seem to have picked up a bit of a pinky tint. By this point I was finding drawing backwards easier and someone in the class had challenged me to put the whole body in the image. Initially I wasn't all that interested in the pose, but the more I looked the more I saw. This was almost a half hour pose and as sometimes happens, I seemed to channel Matisse.
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