Sunday, September 7, 2025

more art cards and Object #8


I suppose I’m due for a post since it’s been a week. What have I been doing all week? Just the usual; yoga class, SHARE, dinner on my two nights, errands around town. The AC is out on the car again so it’s been hot going anywhere. 


I got the two little watercolors framed. The small frames were just too tight, too crowded. 


The larger frames I had bought I discarded because the opening in the mats were smaller than the paintings. So I changed my mind again and used them after all, cutting the mats to make a larger opening. I took the zucchini painting to Hesed House on Friday but had to have a new mat for the pomegranate cut at the frame shop here because I cut the one that came with the frame too big. So here’s how the pomegranate looks in its new frame (the zucchini flower/fruit looks similar, just in a rectangular frame). Much better.


And I’ve done 3 more of the watercolor note cards and am almost finished with a fourth so I guess that’s what I’ve been doing this week.


Speaking of note cards, I got my first check from the Market at Hesed House. They sold three packs of the note cards of my colored pencil drawings. They also sold one of the framed prints but I guess it will be on next month’s check. 


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My Life In 100 Objects - #8


The staghorn fern.


After my father retired he acquired a small staghorn fern and turned his interest to some plants, gardening, but not gardening like flower beds and all that, just certain plants. Roses, the staghorn fern, plumerias. The staghorn multiplied and multiplied and multiplied until it was a huge ball, so heavy it could not be moved and he had a structure that he hung it on. After he died my sister acquired it. At some point she cut it up, gave away parts of it, kept some, and gave me one of the individual ferns. I had an old wire hanging basket, got one of those coconut fiber liners and put the fern in the basket and hung it under the magnolia tree, bringing it in every winter. That was, I don’t even remember, eight years ago? Maybe. Maybe more, maybe less. It was finally too heavy for me to lift and carry in and out last fall so now my grandson moves it in and out for me. 


I did not have a good relationship with either of my parents for different reasons. There were several years in my 20s when I refused to get a phone for the simple reason that then they couldn’t contact me. This isn’t the place to go into the history of my relationships with with my parents but my father had a stroke when I was in my early 30s and it changed his personality. He was forced to retire and he sort of disappeared into himself. When he emerged again about a decade later we began to have a more cordial relationship. Anyway, having this stag horn is a small connection to the short time when we weren’t always at odds. Few things make me think of him but this is one, every time I walk past it.




27 comments:

  1. Codex: Like the cardinal. I've noticed that you always get the proportions right. One tip if you buy a prefabricated mat trace the dimensions on the paper first. That way you don't have to custom frame.
    Congrats on the sale. I'm not surprised.

    May I ask how much did you make on the cards?

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    1. I had cut down the painting to fit the smaller frame and then forgot and cut the opening of the mat that came with the larger frame the same size. Oops. I'm charging $18 for a set of 5 which is a little more than double what the scanning, color correction, and printing came out to be. However, since my kids both work at a print shop, they didn't charge me but I wanted to price them based on if they had and also commiserate with other cards being offered. Hesed House only takes 10% but may raise it to 20% later.

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    2. Codex: I think you can charge more. You're making 2 per card? (All the sourcing and running around) your work is good enough.
      Oopsies are part of framing.

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  2. Oh, I didn't realize you get the money from the sale of your cards. I thought it went to the charity as Hesed House is a charity shelter here. Good for you!

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    1. Hesed House here is a non-profit and rely on donations and grants for their free services, which are many, to help and enhance the community. The Market is one effort to support local businesses and artisans giving them an outlet to sell their stuff. They only take 10% currently. I'll have to do a post on the Market.

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  3. I've always wanted a stag horn fern. I need to go to a nursery this next week so maybe I'll look for one then. It's time to buy my fall garden seeds.
    It is funny how powerfully an object can remind us of someone. Or an action. Whenever I sit down at the piano, all sorts of things come back to me. It's odd.
    I love your butterfly lily drawing. Perfect.

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    1. I need to get my seeds too, and turn the dirt to get it ready for planting.

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  4. Your drawings as I have said before are a wonderful place to rest the eyes. Love how you froamed the pom!

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    1. Thanks. Haven't been absorbed in an art project for a while.

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  5. Our heads aren't the only things that hold the memories.

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    1. Smells do too. White Shoulders was my mother's preferred perfume. Haven't smelled it in decades, out of fashion I guess, but I will always associate it with her.

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  6. Speaking of objects that bring back memories, I went with friends to a new restaurant in Alvin this weekend, and they had breaded pork tenderloin sandwiches as the special. I nearly died of pleasure. That was my favorite sandwich as a kid, and it's hard to find outside the midwest. My family used to have them as a special treat on Sunday afternoons at the A&W, and when I visit relatives in Kansas City, the little cafe that makes perfect ones is a "must stop." The one is Alvin was made exactly right: pork loin pounded so thin it was twice the size of the bun, then breaded with a really crisp breading and deep fried. Heaven!

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  7. That staghorn is amazing. I’ve never had one but have always loved them. Your art is exceptional. I love the pomegranate. Congrats on the sales!

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    1. Thanks, I'm having a lot of fun with these new mediums. Forty plus years of art was in glass which I am so over.

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  8. The staghorn is quite a sight. Congratulations on your cards. They are quite wonderful and I am sure will continue to sell well. Have a great week.

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  9. The larger frame definitely looks better. Good job! I bought a print to give my cousin for her birthday & couldn't find a mat locally that I liked so I ordered a variety pack & dang it if the print doesn't look good with all 10 of them. I'm going to make her decide which one to use because I have decision making disorder (& I don't know which would look better in her house & she is MUCH pickier than I am. Ha!).

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    1. I took a watercolor I bought in Scotland by a local artist back to the frame shop because after all these years I decided I didn't like the color of the mat I picked out.

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  10. The cardinal is looking at me. What wonderful new project that is with the cards, looking forward to more and more of it.

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    1. I've about got them out of my system for now. A few more and then I'll move on to something else.

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  11. Staghorn ferns are amazingly durable. My stepmother also has a huge one that's decades old. You're right -- the pomegranate looks better in the larger frame. And I love your notecards!

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    1. The staghorn definitely likes it under the magnolia tree. I had to hang it ona higher branch because the one it was hanging from broke. I'm very happy with the way the pomegranate looks framed.

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  12. Like you, there were times in my adult life that I had to remove my mother from being able to contact me. I feel less conflicted about it since I am older. I managed to forgive her and forgive myself. It was liberating. Took a lot of bearing my soul, therapy and deep thoughts! I would love a staghorn fern if I had more room in the winter to house my plants. I had a huge asparagus fern that died last winter.

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    1. I suppose I should just let all that shit go but they are both gone now and to be honest I rarely think about either of them. Of course if people are right about reincarnation and incarnating in groups changing your place in that group I suppose I'll have to deal with it all again but I'll leave it to my future self.

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  13. That was beautiful. And the watercolor is, I must possess it

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I opened my big mouth, now it's your turn.