Yes, my work has been included in another Etsy treasury. This time it is all about graphite and my picture for my pencil drawing commission has been included by the fantastically named CreepyDolls. How honoured am I. The other work is beautiful and imaginative so it is even more of a thrill. You can find the treasury here.
Pages on my blog
Thursday, 24 June 2010
Yet more treasure!
Yes, my work has been included in another Etsy treasury. This time it is all about graphite and my picture for my pencil drawing commission has been included by the fantastically named CreepyDolls. How honoured am I. The other work is beautiful and imaginative so it is even more of a thrill. You can find the treasury here.
Wednesday, 23 June 2010
A little treasure
My Mona Lisa beads have been included in a Mona themed treasury on Etsy. How cool! Thanks to Inkspired for adding them. If you want to take a look you can find the whole treasury here.
Sunday, 20 June 2010
Bits and bobs
Just updating with a few handmade bits. The notepad is made out of recycled watercolour paper and mattboard for the cover and recycled diary pages. For years I bought 'day to view' diaries (one day on each page) and at the end of the year I still had many pages that had not been written on. It seemed such a shame to just throw them in the recycle bin so I now use them for scrap paper and making notepads and do my bit for the environment.

The bee ornament was made as a swap gift for the hostess of a Wendy Vecchi inspired twinchie swap. The back side of the ornament was decorated using painted matt photographic paper. I discovered that not only did it take distress ink well it doesn't come off the way the ink can on some other substrates. The ink was put in a mini mister, sprayed on a craft sheet and the paper swished through the diluted ink. Got some pretty effects too.

These are the twinchies for said swap. Two inch square and decorated with distress ink, the Tattered Florals die and Wendy Vecchi stamps. The flowers were also stamped with my own Tiny Squares stamp found in my Etsy store. I just hope the other swappers will like them.
The bee ornament was made as a swap gift for the hostess of a Wendy Vecchi inspired twinchie swap. The back side of the ornament was decorated using painted matt photographic paper. I discovered that not only did it take distress ink well it doesn't come off the way the ink can on some other substrates. The ink was put in a mini mister, sprayed on a craft sheet and the paper swished through the diluted ink. Got some pretty effects too.
These are the twinchies for said swap. Two inch square and decorated with distress ink, the Tattered Florals die and Wendy Vecchi stamps. The flowers were also stamped with my own Tiny Squares stamp found in my Etsy store. I just hope the other swappers will like them.
Tuesday, 15 June 2010
Sunday, 13 June 2010
Absentmindedness
I forgot to add my Matisse inspired badger last week when I updated Challenge Gillian. Matisse, in his later years, created art from cut paper but on a large scale. My Matisse badger is only little, 8x11 inches, but is created using gouache coated paper. Let me tell you, it's a messy business cutting out gouached paper. The design was inspired by Matisse's 'star' encrusted pieces like The Fall of Icarus and Icarus, Jazz. But anyone who has come across a badger on a moonlit night will recognise the ghostly figure shining beneath a carpet of stars.
The other pieces are my first attempts at zentangles. 'Doodles' to most people, the art crowd have taken them back to their hearts and are playing with patterns and shapes again. They remind me of some of Franz Marc's work where he used a framework over animal shapes that were then painted in different tones and colours. Although these are really simple to do they might just have a place in my experiments with colour.

Monday, 7 June 2010
Challenge Gillian - with a twist
This month I have been trying out some new thing with my art. With the brighter weather came an overwhelming desire for colour and something different. So I bought myself some books on the art of van Gogh and researched Matisse, the Fauvists and the Expressionists. Lots of fun. Armed with a little extra knowledge (and my book on Franz Marc) I tried to paint a little differently - with wild abandon using pastels, oil pastels, acrylic, watercolour, graphite and coloured pencil. These paintings are the result of my experiments.

First of all, I have the one piece of detailed work that I worked on this month. At about 16 hours of work it certainly took a lot longer than most of the other pieces. For those of you who have followed my blog for a while you will recognise him as Stanley, my sister's Rottweiler. The following brightly coloured pieces would certainly be seen on a dark night. I thought they might make nice greetings cards. The horse is heavily influenced by Franz Marc's work but the badger is all my own.


I also bought a book called Painting Abstracts by Rolina van Vliet. It gives lots of exercises for becoming an abstract painter and I have included a few of those exercises that I produced myself. I know, not the most ... what can I say? ...The most attractive, especially if you have no interest in abstract. But some of the colours are pretty. Ultimately I would like to combine the abstract background with a detailed painting to make my art a little unusual. A bold background to a painting might make a decent alternative to no background at all. Backgrounds have always given me trouble. I have never known where to place my animals when I am painting them. With a drawing you can get away with that. But paintings often need something more. This is my attempt to find an alternative.



This blue, red and yellow one reminded me of being on the coast, with sea spray battering off the rocks. Wish I could say it was deliberate but it was just a happy accident.


So there is certainly lots of colour this month. I hope you enjoy them.
First of all, I have the one piece of detailed work that I worked on this month. At about 16 hours of work it certainly took a lot longer than most of the other pieces. For those of you who have followed my blog for a while you will recognise him as Stanley, my sister's Rottweiler. The following brightly coloured pieces would certainly be seen on a dark night. I thought they might make nice greetings cards. The horse is heavily influenced by Franz Marc's work but the badger is all my own.
I also bought a book called Painting Abstracts by Rolina van Vliet. It gives lots of exercises for becoming an abstract painter and I have included a few of those exercises that I produced myself. I know, not the most ... what can I say? ...The most attractive, especially if you have no interest in abstract. But some of the colours are pretty. Ultimately I would like to combine the abstract background with a detailed painting to make my art a little unusual. A bold background to a painting might make a decent alternative to no background at all. Backgrounds have always given me trouble. I have never known where to place my animals when I am painting them. With a drawing you can get away with that. But paintings often need something more. This is my attempt to find an alternative.
This blue, red and yellow one reminded me of being on the coast, with sea spray battering off the rocks. Wish I could say it was deliberate but it was just a happy accident.
So there is certainly lots of colour this month. I hope you enjoy them.
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