It’s been a busy few days starting with Thursday when I have to get up early, have my coffee and breakfast, showered and dressed and out the door before 9 am to get to SHARE. And busy at SHARE, not overwhelming but steadily refilling baskets with the appropriate amounts of an assortment of canned goods (meat, vegetables, beans, fruit, soup, ravioli, pasta sauce, tomato sauce), raman, crackers, mac and cheese, juice, spaghetti noodles, instant mashed potatoes, snack bars, and instant oatmeal. And that’s just part of what they get. The guys that fill the orders add rice, dried beans, snacks, drinks, cereal, milk, eggs, desserts, bread, fresh produce (depending on what gets donated that day), coffee (if we have it), meat, and other miscellaneous things. There is a shelf where people can select three items that has things like ketchup, mustard, mayonnaise, peanut butter, salsa, cooking oil, flour, sugar, cake or pancake mix, miscellaneous donated canned goods, etc. Another shelf of personal hygiene items like soap, toothpaste, toothbrushes, shampoo, deodorant, etc, where they can select two things. The families we serve can only get the full complement of food once every three months but by law anyone who asks for food gets food from the very limited USDA list. We also provide clothing, sheets, blankets, pillows, appliances (one a year), and miscellaneous household goods like dinnerware, glasses, anything and everything that gets donated when people are clearing out a house.
Friday I finally started on making Paisleigh’s long skirt that she wanted because her Granny and her Gramma both wear long skirts sometimes, a simple gathered skirt with pockets.
I got it gathered with the waistband sewn on and one pocket pinned on so when she and her dad dropped by that late afternoon I held it up to her to check the placement of the pockets which was fine except even though I measured her waist and added two inches, I wasn’t sure the waistband was big enough. Damn. So Saturday afternoon, I undid everything I had done Friday and sewed the pockets on (easier before gathering), regathered the skirt, and cut another longer by another two inches waistband and sewed it on, ran the elastic and finished except for hemming for which I need Paisleigh to get the length right.
Saturday morning I also had to be up early fed, dressed, and out the door before 9 am for the art journal workshop I had signed up for at Hesed House. The woman who was putting it on provided the mixed media sketchbook, paints, markers, glue, magazines, stencils, stickers, etc. She planned for us to do three pages each using different techniques. The first page was picking out an affirmation from a set of cards she had or some other thing like a favorite scripture and write it down with black permanent marker. Then we wet the page and just splotched watercolor on it letting it spread however. My first page:
The second page was going through the magazines and cutting out a word or words and pictures and doing a sort of collage in a horizontal format using the things cut out and decorative tape, stickers, colored markers, whatever. My second page:
The third page was picking out a stencil and using a sponge brush with acrylic paint (one color), picking a watercolor color and painting a repeating shape (circle, square, rectangle), then use markers to draw on it, then pick out a smashed bottle cap (the point being to show how to include bits of trash) and glue that on (I didn’t want a bottle cap so I used a sticker), and finally to spritz diluted paint in spray bottles over the whole thing (I used a brown that was so diluted it’s hard to see). My third page:
Since we still had time, she showed us a fourth technique for making a background. Water soluble markers colored on a piece of foil, wet the page with water from a spray bottle, place the foil color side down onto the wet page and press it down transferring the color to the page. I intend to draw over it but time was up.
Sunday, we drove into the city for our friend Dick’s memorial gathering held in the event room in Kathy’s residential building. So many people we haven’t seen since the covid lockdown and the last open house, since Dick’s health started to fail and they worked in the studio less and less; the other artists who participated, other artists who worked in other media who always came, collectors who came every year to see what was new and to maybe buy, those who came who were neither artists nor collectors but friends and familiar faces. So many people we hadn’t seen in nearly six years and likely will never see again, too many other deaths reported of spouses and in one case a daughter, the community we had been a part of for 25 years. Dick and Kathy were the magnet that drew us all together.
And once again, more October skies, 13th - 15th, blue sky days.








I really like your pages and the different techniques you used. You explained it well, too. Makes me want to try it!
ReplyDeleteShe made it easy since she had every imaginable thing you could possibly want to use. Me? I have watercolors, watercolor pencils and crayons, and colored pencils so any further effort will be limited. I suppose I could add the crayons I have for Paisleigh.
DeleteCodex: She's teaching very basic for beginners but if you stick with it you'll make it your own anyway.
ReplyDeleteGreat handwriting by the way..
More importantly do you enjoy it?
Well, yes, of course, that's where you begin. I had fun and if she does the second workshop with more advanced techniques like she mentioned I'll sign up for it too. How much effort I put into it on my own, we'll see, not having the extensive materials she had available to us.
DeleteThat is a very interesting workshop. I recently bought a sketchbook that I'm sure would work for a similar project. Will I ever begin it?
ReplyDeleteI doubt it. I have so many notebooks and so rarely use any of them.
I like Paisleigh's skirt very much and I am sure she will too. I wonder if Maggie would like anything like that.
Grab your sketchbook, a pencil, markers, go sit on your porch and just draw what you see without judging what you draw. Kind of like how you enjoy playing the piano. WTF! It took me three tries to spell piano.
DeleteThe art journal workshop looks pretty fun!
ReplyDeleteIt was. The point for me is not only doing something art related but also trying to increase my socialization just a little.
DeleteThat art journal workshop looks fascinating. I love what you created. Wonderful photos and a beautiful fabric for the skirt.
ReplyDeleteThanks Mitchell. It was fun. My granddaughter helped me pick out the fabric. She was at a Joanne's going out of business and she had me on facetime showing me the cotton fabric that was available which she then bought and brought to me.
DeleteYour art projects are so inspiring. I used to sew for little girls and loved it. I could spend a whole weekend making a suit for work out of gabardine. Then I started going to thrift stores and stopped sewing for myself. My eyesight stopped all that even having every tool to thread the needle. I am also enjoying your comments about SHARE. I hope the future doesn't bring a hardship for people being fed, but I don't think the people in charge give a damn.
ReplyDeleteI loved sewing and used to make a lot of my clothes in highschool and the several years after but then life got busy with jobs and later babies. When my grandgirls were pre-teens/teens they wanted to learn to sew so we spent several summers making shorts and tops.
DeleteCodex: The first is called wet on wet. You can do sunsets that way by going sideways.
ReplyDeleteThe second like the color combo. Once you know the techniques you create your own. I personally don't like stencils, but some people make their own.
I find it oddly calming to just create crap.
We'll see where it goes (see my previous reply). I've never really been a spontaneous creator of art, you know, just a blank piece of paper and pen, pencil, or paint.
DeleteCodex: neither was I. Until I took art journaling and tried it then taught it.
DeleteLet me know in this post which technique you liked. I can give you a list of the basics. Keep in mind that you can illustrate these backgrounds with your own drawings. Favorite sayings.etc.
It seems to me that being out of the house by 9:00 am doesn’t qualify as early!
ReplyDeleteI like slow quiet mornings, coffee, a couple of hours before I even think about breakfast. I don't usually get to whatever I have planned for the day until about 11 so yeah, bright eyed and bushy tailed by 9 is early.
DeleteMy nurse at my doc appointment on Mon has a daughter named Paisleigh. I found out because she's due to birth a son in Dec. but has no name for him yet. I love Paisleigh for a girl's name. Great to make long skirts, and I only have a couple left myself.
ReplyDeleteI think her mother chose the name and my grandson chose the spelling. I've never understood why people want to add so many silent letters to Lee.
DeleteI love the art journal pages! Makes me want to try, but I know I probably won't because that would take away time from crocheting. Ha!
ReplyDeleteWe each have our talents and mediums. Yours is yarn.
DeleteAn art journal, what a great idea, so much potential.
ReplyDeleteAs always, looking at your big open sky is refreshing.
We'll see how much effort I put into it since I don't have the multitude of materials she provided in the class. I'll play with it for a little while anyway. I suppose I could go see what the Evil Empire around here has in the way of craft stuff.
Delete"Simple" and "gathered skirt" seem to me like oxymorons. When I think of the gathered skirt on a waistband I made in home ec at school, I still shudder. I can see that thing to this day. I liked the material -- a border print of long-legged, somewhat abstract chickens -- but the process was a horror. I'm especially fond of your third page. I really like that.
ReplyDeleteI'm wondering if you got some rain. We got about a half-inch this afternoon, and 'they' say there's more coming this weekend. I sure hope so.
Not even a single drop. Nice completely overcast sky today but it doesn't look heavily laden with rain.
DeleteWe had to make a skirt in home ec though I don't think it was gathered, more like pleated with a placket. I already knew how to sew so I spent a lot of time threading the other girls' machines and helping them.
Wow, I love the idea of an art journal workshop! I should look for one around here. Of course, ellen, you could teach that workshop yourself.
ReplyDeleteThe woman who taught it is a retired art teacher and professional artist in oils. I wouldn't even want to try teaching it. Spontaneity, which this calls for, is not my long suit.
Delete