Wednesday, October 30, 2019
Step by Step How To: Garden Photos and Watercolor into Greeting Cards
Step 1. Make a pencil outline around the photo you want to use.
Step 2. Lay in some rose petal shapes with pink watercolor.
Step 3. Lay in leaf shapes in several shades of green.
Step 4. If You want more detail, add it with a permanent pen, starting by outlining the flowers and leaves and then adding individual petals and veins on the leaves.
Step 5. Now that your "frame" is complete, attach your photo to the center with double stick tape.
The front of your card is now complete. Have some fun decorating the inside of the card and the outside of the envelope.
Repeat the same steps you used for the front of the card on everything else.
Friday, October 25, 2019
Fall Color, Saving Marigold seed and Some of the best Marigold photos
The path between the driveway and wheelchair ramp
The playground across the street, the red orange of that tree is my favorite part of the view.
A bit of fall color in the backyard.
Gathering a bit of Marigold seed and enjoying the last of the garden together.
This was the last butterfly of the season, just last week, and here are a few earlier photos of the marigolds at their best.
Monday, October 21, 2019
Recycle Your Art
Sometimes as I'm working on a painting I'll use a heavy watercolor paper to lay my paints out on.
When It's covered I'll cut it apart and mount the pieces on blank greeting cards for fun and original stationery.
When It's covered I'll cut it apart and mount the pieces on blank greeting cards for fun and original stationery.
Monday, October 14, 2019
A New Post From an Old Friend
Today I'm featuring a post from my friend Jenny as I also include a link to her blog. She has too many fields of expertise to mention so I won't bother listing them here. The things that make me want to share her interests in this blog are that she's also an artist with an amazing background and skill set that I'm sure you'll find interesting.
The tables were also more elaborate in the beginning but with all the things people brought and a bit of snacking and visiting before we settled in it kind of got lost in the shuffle.
Julia
Here's what she had to say:
Whenever I visit
Julia’s painter’s garden, usually along with my friend Margaret, I always have
a great time. Everything always starts with a tea party. Julia provides the tea
and the rest of us, including her husband Doug, contribute goodies like cheese,
nuts, fruit, and sweet rolls.
One
of the things that makes the tea parties so special is Julia’s presentation of
the table. She has an eclectic collection of blue-figured ware, hand painted
china, and little extras that most of don’t bother with, like dishes
specifically designed to hold used teabags. Things may not always match but
they always achieve synchronicity. And then there are the cake stands, tea
cozies, decorative tablecloths and vintage flatware. I spend as much time
looking as I do eating.
There were 5 of us for tea but there was so much going on that we didn't get any group photos until the end.
The tables were also more elaborate in the beginning but with all the things people brought and a bit of snacking and visiting before we settled in it kind of got lost in the shuffle.
We
often do group arts and crafts projects together. One time the three of us each
painted one of the birds on her birdbath; it is now one of the many wildly
variegated ornaments in her yard. Last time I was there I watched a robin
splashing away happily in it.
We’ve
painted china and colored the line drawings of seashells I created as adult
coloring designs, made Christmas crackers, and countless other projects.
Margaret and Julia sewed a courier bag I designed to look like it was made of
spacesuit material, lined with a star field. I use it at all the science fiction
conventions I attend. It holds keys, money, badge, and up to 2 paperback books.
Julia
paints everything that doesn’t run away; the mailbox, the ramp railing, the
lawn furniture, whatever. Before she got into creating Dala horses, her
favorite subject was irises. She has them displayed on Zazzle as decorations
for note cards, phone cases, pillows, and anything else that can be worn,
written on, or used to cover something else. Here’s one of my favorites, a
sticker: https://www.zazzle.com/watercolor_iris_classic_round_sticker-217967621406143742
I
can hardly wait to go play at Julia’s house again. I think there’s a
Thanksgiving/Christmas visit in the future.
Jennifer
McDermott