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Meta
Monthly Archives: April 2015
Violet Violet …
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Tagged colors, flowers, Photographs
MATS Part A – Overview and Review
5 weeks of illustrating like crazy! |
1) A Review of the Make Art That Sells Course, Part A (from the heart)
MATS is a meeting place for people all around the world who are looking for their "tribe." I know that's a word that's flung around a lot these days, but I don't have a better word for it... I guess I could say like-minded or similar seekers. The community that is created after sharing our work, well, it's kind of intimate. When you're working so hard on a dream that you hold dear, and you share it with others who have a similar dream, it's not difficult to see why we come together and why the course begins to take on a deeper meaning. MATS has a following because we feel connected to one another.
What about the work? I can only speak for myself. I have grown a lot and I think you can see it most in my final two assignments. I used the five weeks of the course to try and discover a style within my work. I wrote in my pre-course planner, "I have invested in this course because I want to make marketable art that feels true to me in a style that rocks!" So, I experimented with various mediums and line and hoped a style would jump out at me. I can see a common thread running through all five pieces, mostly it's a color-based thread, but no obvious style jumped out at me. The biggest thing I learned is to stop being slap-dash about my work. I can see in my final piece a deliberateness that wasn't there before. I am taking the lesson of deliberate mark-making as my biggest achievement in these past 5 weeks. Did I achieve my original goal? I think I kind of did. I think all of my work feels true to me, but I don't think I'm far enough along in my illustration journey to say, "Yes! I love this style! You, oh thick line and wavy brush, you will be my style from this time henceforward!" or whatever. Not there yet...
2) A Review of the MATS Course, Part A by the numbers
Let me give you an idea of how dense this course is. I created an outline in order to keep track of all the materials after the final wrap-up post, and it took me 12 hours to do a cursory review and download the course materials. TWELVE HOURS!! If I were to collate all the pages and content of this course, it would amount to a very, very thick 3 ring binder. It would be somewhere between 200 and 300 pages of material. The first photo in this post is just a fraction of the content. I printed out only what I intended to fill out or jot notes on. And this is just Part A! There are several hours of videos including interviews with successful working illustrators and artists. There are written interviews with experts in the business. The course includes so many helpful tips, tricks, lists of possible clients, and a very large, supportive community (see part 1 of this review).
It is an intense course requiring the quick turnaround of 5 briefs from concept to layout/mock-up in five weeks. Each project is broken up into a mini assignment at the start of each week, and then the fleshed out brief is given mid-week with the deadline of Sunday. I loved the deadlines, and I happily met each one. I loved being given the assignments, too. It was nice having direction given to me. :)
And finally, many people who are reading this review are wondering about the reviews. I will be straight with you. My work never made it to the reviews. Each week, Lilla Rogers chose 9 to 13 pieces to talk about. There were over 150 people signed up for the course. Many of these people, I'll say 20% are professionals. Remember people take the course for all kinds of reasons including re-booting a career or refreshing a portfolio. Some of my peers taking the course had already done editorial work with big name magazines and others had illustrated entire children's books, others were total beginners. I was... in the middle. So, I wasn't surprised that my work was not chosen for review.
On one level, of course I was disappointed! I want to feel validated just as much as the next artist. But, after every single review without fail, I looked at the checklist Lilla used to discuss the merits and drawbacks of each piece and I saw that even though my work had some of the elements listed, there were always a few missing. The work reviewed often had a little something extra or something special about them that my work just didn't have (or doesn't have YET!).
It's also a matter of taste! I know my work runs a bit dark (see troll and mash-up creatures), and Lilla represents some really joyful and happy art. I'd like to make art that makes people feel joy, and I need to get back to that place. I was there once. Here's a throwback photo for you all. This photo is from the RISD Graduate Student Publication "Making Something with Some Things" from 2008...
It's my entry into our class book. I still haven't given up on that dream, I just got a little sidetracked is all.
So was it worth it? Hell, yeah!
If you have any questions about the course or are considering it, but aren't sure, just send me an e-mail and I'll answer the best I can. You can also write to the school itself, they're super helpful and friendly.
Go Bees!
The other day it was so sunny and warm that it seemed like a perfect excuse to open up the beehive and see how they were doing. I wanted to check for any indications of swarming (nothing this time) and see if i could find the queen, or, at the very least, signs that she is doing her job.
Now, when you crack open a hive and start pulling frames to check everything, you want to be as quick and efficient as you can, so as not to disturb the bees more than necessary. This has been a challenge for me, because I just love looking at their work, and I think I move quite a bit slower than I should. By the time I get to the last box to check, they are pretty pissed at me!
But how can you not stop and marvel at their work!
The good news is that although I didn’t spot the queen, I did see plenty of eggs and larvae (if you look close in the pic above, you can see the blurry white in the bottom left cells – larvae!), which means she is there, and she is active.
I also spotted many, many bees returning to the hive laden with bright pollen. With all the spring flowers in bloom, it’s a honeybee smorgasbord! I’ll be adding a queen excluder soon as their production of honey kicks into high gear.
In the meantime I’m keeping an eye out for possible swarm activity. If it happens, I have a whole empty hive waiting to become a second colony.
After checking the bees and putting my gear away, a neighbor stopped by to talk about llamas 9she knows someone trying to re-home three….so very tempting!), and as she was leaving she told me how much she loves our place, and that it’s everything she wants. It was such an amazing compliment, and all I could say was “me, too”.
Here’s to a beautiful spring and summer to come!
Tagged: Farm
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Tagged Farm, Uncategorized
Flowering Tree …
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Tagged flowers, New Jersey, Photographs, trees
A different kind of lambing season…
For the past ten years of my life, early Spring time has been about waiting. Waiting for the pastures to turn green again. Waiting for the mud to dry up. Waiting for shearing time.
But mostly waiting for lambs. I’ve probably spent a hundred nights or more waiting for ewes to give birth, sleeping in my truck or in the barn, or in my bed with a baby monitor propped up on my pillow. Year after year, I experienced the same excitement and anticipation waiting for the very first lamb or kid of the season to be born. Sometimes it felt like it was never going to happen and then, suddenly we were up to our elbows in knobbly knees and pink noses.
I am happy to say that lambing never lost it’s magic for me. No matter how many babies I saw born, no matter how many sleepless nights, no matter how many moments-old lambs I saw take their first wobbly steps, it never stopped being an amazing miracle.
Last year, we decided not to breed the ewes for lambs this spring. Mostly because our flock was at capacity and we didn’t want to have to make any tough decisions about any of the older ewes. When you have a no-kill flock, there is always a trade-off to be made between the old animals and the new.
We also held off lambing because I knew that this year, I would be awaiting a lamb of my very own during lambing season. I am 37 weeks pregnant today, eagerly anticipating the arrival of my very own knobby-kneed miracle.
I am feeling all the things you might expect a very pregnant first time mom to be feeling. Excitement. Anticipation. Trepidation. Discomfort (my empathy for the ewes has increased greatly!). I can honestly say that I have never been so happy– or so content– in my entire life as I am right now.
But in spite of that, I will miss the lambs this year. I just keep reminding myself how incredibly lucky I was to have that experience so many times.
No one in this world has ever been luckier than me, that’s for sure.
Review: Faux Taxidermy Knits
First, the facts:
Title: Faux Taxidermy Knits: 15 Wild Animal Knitting Patterns
Author: Louise Walker
Published by: Interweave Press, 2015
Pages: 127
Type: Patterns, mostly accessories (wearable and home furnishings)
Chapters:
1. Wearables
2. Habitat
3. Techniques
The In-Depth Look:
It must be hard, being a taxidermist in 2015. As a rule, people just aren’t as interested in decorating themselves or their houses in animal pelts, no matter how beautiful or finely treated. Fur just isn’t what it used to be, what with all this political correctness about animal rights floating around.
So what are you to do if you love the look of a fur wrap, or long to hang a moose head on your wall?
Well, if you’re a knitter … you make one yourself. Problem solved! A perfectly, politically correct solution with nothing harmed outside a sheep’s momentary dignity during its haircut.
There are things in this collection that I think are adorable. The Hedgehog slippers, for example or the Raccoon Hat. The Owl tea cozy is one that I wouldn’t mind having, either, and the Tiger Skin Rug looks quite comfy. I do question the dead pheasants, though, which seem in questionable taste, and thought the knitted Rabbit’s Foot just odd.
The fact remains, though, that the patterns are clever and creative and (mostly) full of a whimsical sense of fun. (Again, the dead pheasants totally threw me.)
You can get your copy at your local shop or by clicking here for Amazon.com.
Want to see bigger pictures? Click here.
This review copy was kindly donated by Interweave Press. Thank you!
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Tagged louise walker, Pattern Books
Whispering Sweet Nothings …
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Tagged animals, farms, goats, Photographs
An Easter Lamb Miracle
Hopefully you are all having a lovely and relaxing Sunday. The weather here is beautiful, if windy, and the kids are about due to crash from their sugar largesse left by the bunny.
I am enjoying the newly blooming flowers and the pea plants which have begun to sprout.
But the BIG news we are happy to share is that Wembley the wonderlamb has made a full and complete recovery.
When I found her downed several weeks back with a thiamine deficiency, we were pretty worried. When we brought her home from the vet that evening, we were unsure how she’d do through the night.
She lived in my tub for two weeks before I felt like I could move her out to the sheltered front porch. But after a few days I was still pretty worried. She was still crooked, and could barely stand on her own. When the nearly three week mark hit and she was walking sideways, unable to lift her head completely, I was really worried. But then, suddenly one day, she decided she’d had enough, and walked around the gate and off the porch. I took her down to the other lambs (lots of bleating was to be had) and worried yet again how she’d do through the night.
But now? Holding her own at the feed trough and hay bale. Walking straight, no head tilting or any indication of illness other than being a bit skinny still.
The only difference between her pre-illness self and now is that she got used to us being her food-bearers, and consequently is very friendly and cuddly now.
I’m pretty comfortable calling this turn around nothing short of miraculous.
Tagged: Farm
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Tagged Farm, Uncategorized
An Easter Lamb Miracle
Hopefully you are all having a lovely and relaxing Sunday. The weather here is beautiful, if windy, and the kids are about due to crash from their sugar largesse left by the bunny.
I am enjoying the newly blooming flowers and the pea plants which have begun to sprout.
But the BIG news we are happy to share is that Wembley the wonderlamb has made a full and complete recovery.
When I found her downed several weeks back with a thiamine deficiency, we were pretty worried. When we brought her home from the vet that evening, we were unsure how she’d do through the night.
She lived in my tub for two weeks before I felt like I could move her out to the sheltered front porch. But after a few days I was still pretty worried. She was still crooked, and could barely stand on her own. When the nearly three week mark hit and she was walking sideways, unable to lift her head completely, I was really worried. But then, suddenly one day, she decided she’d had enough, and walked around the gate and off the porch. I took her down to the other lambs (lots of bleating was to be had) and worried yet again how she’d do through the night.
But now? Holding her own at the feed trough and hay bale. Walking straight, no head tilting or any indication of illness other than being a bit skinny still.
The only difference between her pre-illness self and now is that she got used to us being her food-bearers, and consequently is very friendly and cuddly now.
I’m pretty comfortable calling this turn around nothing short of miraculous.
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Tagged lambs
Spa Cloths!
These lovely spa cloths make a wonderful gift! (Hint: Mother’s Day is coming up soon!) Buy them individually (links below) on Ravelry or as an e-Book.
If you choose to make them the same color, 2 skeins is enough for all three.
The 4/5/2015 issue of the newsletter has a code that will either get you Spa Cloth 1, Spa Cloth 2 or Spa Cloth 3, or $2.50 off the e-Book price, as a thank you to newsletter subscribers. (Please note the codes expire 4/15/15!)
Finished Measurements
Approx 11in / 28cm square
Yarn
Blue Sky Alpacas Worsted Cotton, cotton (150 yds / 137m per 3.53oz / 100g), in the following amounts:
Spa Cloth 1 95yds/ 85m
Spa Cloth 2 90 yds/ 80m
Spa Cloth 3 90 yds/ 80m
Spa Cloths 1 and 2 shown in color #603. Spa Cloth 3 shown in color #81.
Needles
US5 / 3.75mm needles, or size to obtain gauge
Gauge
approx 18 sts and 27 rows per 4in / 10cm in pattern
Precise gauge is not necessary, but alterations in gauge will affect yarn requirements.
Notions
yarn needle, stitch markers as desired, cable needle
Skills
lace, cabling
both charts and line by line instructions are included
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Tagged Knitting