Showing posts with label arts/crafts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arts/crafts. Show all posts

26 February 2023

The last year has been beautiful

The last year has been beautiful.

I figured out how to better split domestic responsibilities with Michael and adopted the life-changing weekly spousal one-on-one meeting. I relished no longer having dinner be my problem. I went on daily walks with Maggie and Michael and marveled at the beauty of our home in the San Francisco Bay Area. I biked around San Francisco and enjoyed excellent food with Michael and Maggie, our very good girl. I took a multitude of pictures of Maggie and cut and threw endless pieces of carrots and green beans and radishes for her. I expanded the "foods dogs can eat" list on the fridge. I picked up trash and Maggie's and other dogs' poop at the park. I discovered a great new hike we can enjoy with Maggie. I comforted and distracted Maggie during thunderstorms and fireworks. I had Wellness Wednesdays workouts, dinner, and learning with Michael, Claire, and Maggie.

I took drastic measures to eliminate invasive weeds, built new garden beds, and coaxed the garden to be more like my vision, with strawberries, raspberries, passion fruit, olallieberries, lavender, snapdragons, carnations, blueberries, corn, onions, tomatoes, garlic, green beans, radishes, carrots, potatoes, lemons, limes, pomegranates, plums, apples, avocadoes, peppers, tree dahlias, lettuce, bok choy, nasturtium, cala lilies, camellias, hydrangeas, and more. I sorted a ridiculous amount of objects, mostly trash, dug up in the yard.

I created a baking calendar to make and enjoy my favorite goodies over the course of each year. After Reading How Not to Die, I adopted a vegetarian diet and developed a really healthy and delicious smoothie recipe. I had a delightful conversation with the person in the painting I inherited from my artist grandfather. I meditated and savored my bed. I mourned the decline of Twitter. I set app limits and loved it. I became overwhelmed with all the things I wanted to do. I drew boundaries. I finally processed an email that had been in my inbox for years. I paid someone else to take the headache of taxes for the first time this year and was ecstatic when we filed a few days ago.

I grew as an empathetic manager and cheered on many people at Techtonica. I was censured for advocating for inclusion. I received a raise. I lost a job. I learned about negotiating severance and shared what I learned. Layoffs caused hiring partners to back out of their agreements, so I negotiated contract terminations and found solutions for unplaced grads and launched a new Techtonica program to support past grads looking for jobs. I said goodbye to Techtonica's Partnerships Manager of three years and interviewed and negotiated with job candidates before hiring someone amazing who starts next week. I became the resident feedback expert. I learned about and advised and played Gartic Phone with Techtonica participants. I gathered feedback, implemented changes at Techtonica, and had the satisfaction of seeing participants and staff members thrive. I learned to stop working in the evenings.

I picked up antique woodwork and furniture restoration. I figured out how to safely and effectively strip lead paint through a lot of trial and error while devouring audio books at 2.5x. I acquired a foosball table, Eastlake furniture, and a barrister bookcase. I dusted off my piano skills and the perfect 1895 piano built in San Francisco and learned a song I've liked since I heard a friend play it in Leipzig. I visited lovely historic houses and joined an old house community. I saw a tiny Buddhist temple and learned about the history of Chinese people in Mendocino County. I installed rope caulk, bronze weatherstripping, and portières to make the winter less miserable for us.

After years of mostly business writing, I started writing for me again. I researched my great uncle who died the year I was born and found out some fascinating things about him from past students and schools he worked at, then wrote about him and my grandma. I received a letter in shorthand from my grandma to treasure forever.

I continued to learn about and try to be a better advocate of anti-racism. I managed not to suffer too much from allergies with a dog in the house, but was sick and had a mysterious skin bump and weird allergic reactions to stuff outside. I started having my prescriptions mailed, and was relieved that my doctor could prescribe the restricted daily allergy medicine, Allegra D, that I'd been buying every two weeks for years. I discovered the best non-fogging, sanitizable, breathable mask, Airgami. I lost my keys. I bought two of the most comfortable Duluth coveralls for projects but then couldn't stand to make them dirty.

I appreciated over 100 books, especially A Little Life, Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, and Ejaculate Responsibly. I was in charge of the monthly family book club, mostly so I could talk to my family each month. I donated to organizations planting trees every month in hopes of curbing climate change. I grumbled about cars and smoke and noisy motorcycles and junk mail and sexism and people painting woodwork and more.

I enjoyed visits and email and text and cute and funny video exchanges with friends and family.

I'm pleased with the life I've built and who I've become and I hope to grow and experience like this over the next year, too.

Tl;dr: Life has been very full in the last year and I'm looking forward to more.

19 June 2015

That's How I Roll Apron

This is what I gave Michael for his birthday. (Yes, it took several months for us to celebrate our birthdays.) I painted the apron myself.


That's How I Roll photo 2015-06-02 14.23.01_zpsfcdnmg96.jpg


I learned the hard way that if you want to make your own stencil with normal paper, you'd better not put on too many thick layers of paint, because the paint will seep outside of the lines. I also learned that most acrylic paint can be gotten out of material if it's still somewhat wet and you give it a good scrubbing and then wash it. Finally, I learned that Sharpie extra fine paint markers are no good and you're better off using a sponge and paint.


22 December 2012

Christmas Quilling

My sister pointed out that the cover of the Christmas Lands' End reminded her of me. I wonder why (I also wonder how much the designer got for it--a lot, I'm sure):


  Lands' End Christmas Quilling "Jesus is Born" Tree Quilling


See my Christmas tree quilling project here.

24 April 2012

Rubber Ducky, You're the One

Florentijn Hofman's Giant Rubber Ducky, http://www.florentijnhofman.nl/dev/project.php?id=154 Florentijn Hofman takes this giant rubber ducky around the world and takes pictures of it on the water. What a cheerful project. After seeing Hofman's work, I looked up the history of the rubber ducky and was amazed to realize that I can't call it a "rubber duck," it has to be "rubber ducky." I also found out that Jim Henson's Muppet song spells it "duckie," but it seems right to me to spell it with a Y.

You?

15 March 2012

29 February 2012

Origami Flowers

PhotobucketI spent hours making two of these enormous origami flowers. If you want them, they're yours. Just go to my store here.


18 January 2012

Heidi's Happiness Sun

Photobucket
My friend Heidi asked students in her daughter's class what happiness meant to them and then put their answers on the rays seen in the photograph (sorry that you can't really see the kids' answers, this is a phone picture). After hours of painting to get everything to her satisfaction, she brought her artwork to the school and sold it at a school auction. Isn't she talented?

09 September 2011

Childhood Birdhouse Painting

I've always been proud of this dinky painting I did on a birdhouse for an activity day project. I guess for an 11-year-old it was pretty good, right?

Kid Craft

Kid Craft

30 August 2011

August's Links to Love

August was a good internet month, eh?

Artsy:


A rolling table made of pallets.

Milk art.

Draw your own headboard.

A card for any occasion.

Day/night photos of New York
.

Split photos of relatives
.

Dribbble, a site for sharing creative web design.

Loveliest small dining room.

Have I already linked to this animated contemporary dancing video? Thought of You.

Just do it dancers:



If I were a shoe crazy, I might use my shoes as home decor. (But I'm not.)

Philadelphia graffiti artists turned mural artists.

Move, Learn, and Eat videos:

MOVE from Rick Mereki on Vimeo.



LEARN from Rick Mereki on Vimeo.



EAT from Rick Mereki on Vimeo.



Exposing the brick wall made all the difference--I would looove to live here.

Can biking be an art? Maybe:




Mormon:


Daughters of Mormonism podcast.


Literary:


Save Edgar Allan Poe's Baltimore house!

Sartalics to indicate sarcasm?

More Dr. Seuss books to be published!

Harry Potter trivia.

Harry Potter-related book ideas.

Backyard Scrabble.

Idiot-proof CAPTCHAs
.


Yes, I Love Technology:


Search for hotels by date on a map (Google Hotel Finder)! Why didn't anyone think of this earlier?

Google Please Hire Me.


Random:


Need to improve your body image? Have a baby.

Put a bird on it:



Heartbreaking video about rape in the Republic of Congo:




Musical squares.

"Lolita" by Throw Me the Statue:



"Lincoln's Great Depression."

3D Printing (thanks to The Graphic Bee):




A politician who takes a tank to demolish problems:



Darling clothing line. (But, as usual, out of my budget.)

Human pinball:



Get a professional hassler to motivate you.

Transfer accelerator, a.k.a. "slide" in a subway station:



Rethink the food label.

Ziploc ice cream.

I first heard this song during a fitness class and thought the use of "Sound of Music" lyrics was brilliant:




I kind of like this clear glass tub.

Planet made of diamonds.

Sayde Price's "Dirt":




Peter Bradley Adams' "The Longer I Run":




Where children sleep.

Crappy laws of parenting
.

The Kid Should See This
collects fabulous videos, like these two:





04 August 2011

Clay Castles

I took pottery classes from a good family friend who had a kiln when I was younger. It was in these classes that I built a castle. That castle sat in my room for years and there were little things about it that bugged me--like the one turret that had to be added within a matter of minutes, and the blob of clay that randomly ended up in the corner of my castle during the firing process.

About seven years later, when I took the high school pottery class, I decided to build another castle and see if I could make it more to my liking.

Compare:

Kid Pottery

High School Pottery

I think I improved upon my methods, don't you?

15 July 2011

More High School Pottery Projects

I wanted the first one to be Greek-like. Making the curls of hair with an extruder was fun. Now I just wish I had done a better job at smoothing out the clay before I fired it.

High School Pottery

High School Pottery

High School Pottery

And a puppy (talk about wrong glaze choice!) and a skull.

Kid Pottery


Kid Pottery

05 July 2011

Ugly Pottery

During high school pottery, I had this theory that the uglier you made something, the more people would like it. Or at least praise it. So I purposely made some pretty ugly objects. And what do you know? People like liked them.

The Power of Ugly Pottery


But I don't like them. So I'm throwing them away.

03 January 2011

Audrey Hepburn Silhouette Project

While at IKEA with friends last January, I saw an awesome black and white Audrey Hepburn silhouette. I liked the idea so much that I didn't forget about and when I found out I was to be giving my sister Heidi a Christmas present, I knew I wanted to try to duplicate it. I originally thought I would sketch it and then paint it with black acrylics, but I came up with a better plan. It was unfortunate that I couldn't find any square canvases, but I think it worked out just fine in the regular 16x20 format.

First, I lightened up a picture I had of it and made it enormous. Then, I split it into four sections on four pages and printed it out and taped it to the 16x20 canvas.

Audrey Hepburn Silhouette Canvas Project


Next, I used a fine-point permanent marker to trace all the details. This took forever and sacrificed quite a bit of wrist power . . . each line took about 15 layers before it went through the paper--I really should have found some bad quality paper.


Audrey Hepburn Silhouette Canvas Project Closeup

Finally, I used progressively bigger permanent markers to fill in the outlines. Whew, anyone in my room would have been high it stunk so bad. ;) But it sure looked cool. And I think my sister liked it.

Photobucket

Photobucket

What do you think?

Do you want to buy one from me? Go to my store here.
Photobucket
P.S. Enter my January giveaway here! (POST EDIT: CLOSED.)

09 November 2010

My Christmas Tree Paper Quilling

Remember when I posted about how I had discovered quilling and love it?

Well, I started trying it out last December, so I decided to do something Christmas-y. With Yulia Brodskaya's G2 Thrifty Christmas Tree as an inspiration, I included the words "Jesus is Born" using a large font that I traced on some paper. From there, I had no pattern. I just used toothpicks, glue, a paper cutter, colorful paper, scissors, and round things for curling. It took me almost a whole year to finish this thing (who knew quilling takes so long?), but I think it turned out beautifully, and after so much work, I just had to frame it! What do you think?

"Jesus is Born" Tree Quilling


Some details:

"Jesus is Born" Tree Details Quilling

"Jesus is Born" Tree Details Quilling 2


And the finished, framed work in all its glory (I had spacers put in to keep it from being smashed):

"Jesus is Born" Tree Quilling Framed


You can see it in person at my mom's holiday craft boutique (this Wednesday through Saturday, 11-8), where I'm selling mini Scherenschnitte cards and calendar envelopes. If you like my quilling, please leave a comment and/or tell your friends about it. Thanks. :)

04 November 2010

Publicity for Mom's Boutique

It's that time of year--the time when I tell everyone in the Salt Lake area who can appreciate cutesy crafts about my mom and Charla's yearly boutique. They've been doing some giveaways (to be picked up at the boutique) at the boutique blog and I promise you, not being a huge boutique-goer myself, their boutique is quality. (Plus, I'm selling a few things myself.)

So go here to enter giveaways and then show up at Charla's house for the actual boutique next week. You can also find their boutique on Facebook here.

03 October 2010

Grandma's Umbrella Reincarnated As a Skirt

















After my grandma died, I discovered a lovely Van Gogh umbrella in her closet and took it as a keepsake. It was so typically classy of her--it had triangles of Monet's water lily paintings. My grandma--she was a lady who helped me study for spelling bees and who went back to college after all of her kids were older and studied German and Latin, interests we shared. She cleaned her house thoroughly once a week and hosted extended family fast Sunday dinners for many, many years. As a girl of 13, she had walked miles and miles to attend a church some missionaries had invited her to, and after being baptized, she took a train west and found a place to live so she could be among other believers. She married a guy who was often ornery, but she vowed not to let cancer take her life until she'd formed a better relationship with him. She didn't go the modern-day "easy" way out (divorce)--she stuck it out and prayed about it and said she'd made a covenant. How I loved that lady. And so taking her umbrella was my way of saying, "I won't forget you."

I brought the umbrella to Germany and thought of her every time it rained. I was proud to carry it around.

One day a kid at church made fun of it, asking if I'd pulled it from the place where all the old ladies's misplaced umbrellas were. Oh well. He didn't know.

The strong winds that occurred now and again during rainstorms and snowstorms turned the spokes inside out many times until several were broken and limp and the umbrella was looking pretty sad. But I didn't want to let it go because of the regular reminder of my lovely grandma.

And then, I remembered how I'd seen a usable craft made out of an umbrella. So, after cutting the triangles of waterproof material off of the broken spokes and leaving them in a drawer for a long time, I got to work.
















First, I went to the fabric store looking for some blue fabric to go with the umbrella fabric. I found some, but then I decided I wasn't a big fan of the blue. So then I found a shimmery silver that seemed to go with the water lilies. But then I found some material that was the right slippery-ness and that was a purple that perfectly pulled the purple out of Monet. So I bought a yard.

At home, I planned the skirt. Making your own pattern isn't really that hard if you are flexible and can take a little more time. As I always say, "I have more time than money [in this case, for a pattern.]"
















(I ended up wanting the skirt to be less pencil-y, so I added another purple and another umbrella panel than what is shown here, which threw off the moon, no moon, moon, no moon pattern, but oh well.)

Then I used a paper bag to make a pattern for the purple fabric triangles.

















I was glad that the nature of the fabric made for really easy gathering. All I did was use normal thread with the sewing machine set to long, loose stitches, and I was able to gently pull the fabric until it was as wide as I wanted. And I cut out and hemmed an underskirt out of the leftover purple material to avoid translucency. Then I thought hard about where to put everything to sew it all together and made this image for my use (waistband, skirt, underskirt):

















After I sewed along that top line, I sewed up the side of the waistband, cut off hanging threads, and decided against hemming the bottom of the skirt one more time.

I wasn't really counting, but I can tell you that it took me between 2-3 hours. And the results:





































20 August 2010

Marla Olmstead

I just watched My Kid Could Paint That. I really like this little girl's art. Look at this painting:

Photobucket


And here are some cool things I found out about her here:

  • Marla’s first painting sold for $250 when she was 2.
  • When she paints, Marla uses acrylic paint, brushes, squirt bottles, spatulas, and the ideal child stand-by: her fingers.
  • Marla’s favorite color is pink.
  • When Marla was 2, her favorite bedtime book was a Children’s Dictionary.
  • Her favorite painting is Purse.
  • After one of her first paintings was sold, the collector found an Eeyore sticker Marla had hidden in it.
  • She was almost a Leap Day baby.
  • She loves to cook and watches The Food Network daily.
  • Her favorite things about gallery openings are the other children and the cookies.
  • She is a descendant of Frederick Law Olmsted, the landscape architect who designed Central Park.
  • One of her paintings, Digits I, hangs next to a Renoir.
  • She is much more comfortable behind the lens, and her favorite “toy” is an old digital camera.
  • Her great-grandfather, great-uncle, great-aunt and two of her second cousins are/were professional artists.
  • California collector Stuart Simpson, who owns paintings by Monet and Renoir as well as a sculpture by Rodin, bought three Marla’s paintings.
  • Some of Marla’s favorite movies are Shrek and Ice Age
  • Marla likes to eat gnocchi and watches cooking shows with her mom, and especially Emeril with her grandmother
  • Marla prefers to paint in the morning.
  • When Marla decides she is finished, she gives her painting titles like “Dinosaur,” or something reminiscent of a bedtime monster
  • 18 August 2010

    My Latest Dabblings in Oil

    Here's the picture I got the idea from. (Maybe I shouldn't show it to you, it totally defames my own version. And I'm sorry I don't remember where I got it. But whoever took the picture--thank you for inspiring me. Those reds! That lighting!)

    Photobucket


    My version:

    Photobucket


    I want to try again and this time get some help from someone who has actually taken classes in oil.

    20 July 2010

    Leonid Afremov

    I love the colors and the chunks of colors. I wish I could paint like this.

    Leonid Afremov

    Google his name in Google images and you will be amazed.