Saturday, 5 October 2013

Photo Challenge

In March I introduced this monthly challenge.  Each month we take a photograph on the same day, at the same time, of the same place.  How are you getting on with this challenge?

You choose a day or date and a place to suit you.  It could be taken from your front door, your back door, a particular place on your journey to work or on the school run.  It could be where you walk the dog.  Wherever it is, it needs to be a place you are at or near regularly.

Each month we take a photo and over the year we will build up a picture of the changes in the seasons.   If you haven't already, I suggest you have a folder on your hard drive where you keep these photos so you can find them at the end of our 12 months together.

If you upload them to the Facebook group please add the photo to your album or if you are new please make an album with your name and a suitable title.  Thanks.

There's also a Flickr group if you don't have a blog or a Facebook account.

I've added a linky for you to add your photo or blog.

Thursday, 3 October 2013

Creative Date for October

Mixing it up a bit this month with this post coming earlier in the month. 

Julia Cameron in The Artists Way suggested the idea of making time for a regular creative date.   This idea is also picked up by Matt Tommey in Unlocking the Heart of the Artist.   

Judy shared this page with us: 101 Artist's Date Ideas.

I am suggesting that we should each make time for a creative date each month.  Ideally we will go out.  Go to a local museum, a local art gallery, go for a walk!  Whatever idea you have that will feed your creativity.

However sometimes it's not possible to physically visit those places.  So here's my idea for October.

Go to this blog at Elvie Studio and read the blog post.
Scroll down through the blog and you will come to a list of favourite places.  Click through to one of the blogs.  Do the same on that page - click through to another page.  If there isn't a list come back to the Elvie Studio blog and find another blog to look at, repeating this for as long as you wish.  Make notes of things that inspire you.  Make a list of the links to the blogs you went to and share them with the rest of us.

Of course blog surfing can use up time like nothing else can.  So you may want to set yourself a time limit - say an hour - or a number limit of blogs - say 6.  Choose what suits you best and 
have fun!



Tuesday, 1 October 2013

The month of October

October in the UK can be a really  dank and miserable month or occasionally we get an 'Indian Summer'.  There's some more information here about October.

There are some amazing bizarre celebrations listed for this month.  How about Virus Appreciation Day or National Mole Day - which isn't what you might think!   I think we should all celebrate Wear Something Gaudy Day on October 17th.

Our Flower of the Month is Cow Parsley or Queen Anne's Lace.  This is a change from the advertised flower.  I feel the seedheads give us more art opportunities.




This music in this video is quite haunting and melancholic with some beautiful photos.


Here are some extra Autumn items:
Printables      Pinterest Board

Here's your October checklist.

Art Challenge
Make a page inspired by the information or inspiration you have found here.

Don't forget to share your work with us all via the linky.

Sunday, 29 September 2013

October Calendar

I don't  know where the time is going.  Another month has flown past and it's time to make our October calendar.  If you want to know more about the idea behind the monthly calendar please look on Kate Crane's blog as the whole thing is her idea.

Here is my October calendar.

First layer was gesso.

Then Dylusions inks.

And circles cut using a punch.  The oak and maple leaves were also cut with a punch.

I'm looking forward to seeing your calendar.  Don't forget to use the linky.

Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Children's Book

I'm pleased to welcome Carolyn again with a blog post about children's books.


For the September book I really wanted to concentrate on school stories as a genre because above all September to me speaks of the new school year and all that brings with it; rows of coloured pencils, timetables, uniform, backing exercise books (with wallpaper in my day!) and lots and lots of stationary – oh how I always loved that aspect of it. My plan was to speak generally about the genre and then pick out one of my favourites, Elinor M Brent-Dyer’s Chalet School and look at in a little more detail.  However given that several people did not know about Enid Blyton and the Famous Five back in summer, I thought that the Chalet School would be too little known so I will concentrate mainly on the genre.


My own children’s book collection has as its main component a large section of what are known as ‘Girl’s Own’ books. That is books written for girls in their teens from around 1900 to around 1960 and mainly English (although some American and Australian books fall into this category) and a large section of these are set in schools, be it day schools or boarding schools. The school story became a subgenre of the Girlsown genre. There are more authors than I could possibly list who wrote this kind of book, but the ‘big 4’ are Elsie J Oxenham, Angela Brazil, Dorita Farlie-Bruce and the aforementioned Elinor M Brent-Dyer.

Apart from Brazil, they all wrote series of books (Brazil wrote stand-alone titles) with heroines who were loyal, honest, good at sports (but not good enough to become games prefect as the heroine had to become head girl!) leaders, hard workers, and of course middle class, or even verging on upper class in a few places. Oxenham especially was class conscious marrying one of her heroines to an Earl and sending her to live in a castle based on Arundel Castle.
Arundel Castle

School becomes a place where a community of girls can be established, living with their own rules, both those imposed by the school and those by their own community. A world apart is established and adults, like in many adventure stories, are side-lined or shown as living within their own parallel community (Such as the staff in Brent-Dyer’s Chalet School). We see mystery, feud, prank, adventure, and growing up, all in a setting which is both familiar and at the same time a step removed from the real world of the reader. Many of these books, because of the period in which they were written confront topics such as death and illness of friends and siblings or war, peace and patriotism and in all of them girls are shown as developing their own thoughts and opinions. Although very old fashioned and sexist in numerous ways, such as presuming girls will learn to cook and sew, focus on arts rather than science and most will want a family; they also present many role models of bright, intelligent girls who want to study at a university level, and/or have careers even if they do then expect to give them up when a family comes along. Those stories that also focus on the staff again show strong women who are satisfied with life and happy with their career and independence.


Looking wider than the UK, other books that fit this genre include Susan Coolridge and ‘What Katy Did at School’, many of the Anne of Green Gables books by L M Mongomery have school as a focus, especially when Anne is training and then teaching. (And of course the famous scene with the young g Anne when she is called ‘Carrots’ by Gilbert and she hits him over the head with her slate!) Many of the Laura Ingals Wilder ‘Little House’ books have these elements as well, and all of the above books are certainly considered by enthusiasts to be ‘Girlsown’.  Clare Mallory in New Zealand also wrote books in this genre, most famous being her ‘Merry’ series, which despite being set in New Zealand has all the same features as the English counterparts.

Whilst this article focuses on my own early 20th century interests, the school story is still alive in modern forms.  Moving on into the later part of the century was Enid Blyton with Malory Towers and St Clares and then Antonia Forrest with her stories about the Marlowe family, 4 of which were traditional school stories. Then there was  Gene Kemp’s ‘The Turbulent Term of Tyke Tyler’ in the 1970’s, Witch Week by Diana Wynne Jones in 1982 and of course the Harry Potter books of modern times. Whilst these later two are fantasy books, they also sit very well within the School Story genre, with all the traditional aspects being seen.




Project

My project to go with this article is a covered exercise book. I wanted to keep to the idea of school, so I used a composition book and worked directly onto the cover.



I started with taking out two inside pages, ripping them up and then gluing onto the cover along with some other dictionary and tables pages. Over this was a light coat of gesso and then I used spray ink through letter and number stencils.




The final layer to be glued was made up of pictures and papers relevant to school and then I doodled on top of this in the way we used to doodle on the covers of our rough books when I was at school. (If you didn’t have them, a rough book was one we could use for notes, homework, drafts, revision, scribbles, writing spellings to learn them, and anything else that we needed to jot down but wasn’t to go into our exercise books. They were low quality paper and never collected by staff – only the office looked at them to make sure they were full before giving us a new one.) We could write all over these, but never on our exercise books.



The photographs show my book laid out flat so you can see both the front and back, as well as a couple of close ups.




Thanks Carolyn.  A great article and project.  

Don't forget to share what you do using the linky below. 


Friday, 20 September 2013

Art Challenge

Susan very kindly said she would provide a tutorial for this month's art challenge.


Create Decorative Papers with Everyday Items
A Tutorial by Susan Ernst

Using items found around the house and some craft paint, turn scrap paper into one of a kind decorative papers to use in collage, mixed media paintings, journals, cards and more.
I like to create decorative papers that have three layers:
 1st layer – print on the paper
2nd layer – paint
3rd layer – stamping or stenciled designs

Instructions
1. Gather paints of your choice (I used the autumn theme colors of orange, red, mustard and brown); scrap papers, book pages, black and white lightweight scrapbook paper, found papers, etc.

2.  Apply paint randomly to papers. Allow to dry.


3. Use loose leaf reinforcement sheets as a stencil or use hole punchers to create a stencil in cardstock or other heavy weight paper. Use a sponge to dab paint through the stencils.


4. Use bottle caps, corrugated cardboard strips, foam packing peanuts, corks, etc. as stamps.

5. Create a printing plate from a foam meat tray. Draw designs with a pencil or press objects into it to make an impression. Apply paint with a brush at a low angle so that paint does not get into the recessed areas. Place paper on top of this plate and rub the back with your fingers to transfer the design.



6. Continue to stamp, stencil and print until the papers are done to your liking.

7. Cut or tear the papers into small squares and rectangles ranging in size from approximately a half inch to two and a half inches. Glue to 4 x 6 index card or backing of your choice.


Notes:
1. In general, apply darker colors over lighter ones. Use 2 or 3 colors only on each sheet of paper to prevent muddiness.
2. Embellish as desired. I could have added the painted reinforcements but didn’t think these collages needed them. You can also add postage stamps, buttons, metal bottle caps, tea labels, etc.


Thank you so much Susan.  A fabulous technique.  I hope you all enjoy having a go at this.  Don't forget to add your work using the linky below.

Tuesday, 17 September 2013

Creative Date

Julia Cameron in The Artists Way suggested the idea of making time for a regular creative date.   This idea is also picked up by Matt Tommey in Unlocking the Heart of the Artist.   

Judy shared this page with us: 101 Artist's Date Ideas.

I am suggesting that we should each make time for a creative date each month.  Ideally we will go out.  Go to a local museum, a local art gallery, go for a walk!  Whatever idea you have that will feed your creativity.

However sometimes it's not possible to physically visit those places.  So here's my idea for July.  A dance trail.

Watch the video.
 

Then click on one of the video links on the right hand side of the YouTube screen.  When you've watched that video, click another one of the video links on the right hand side of that YouTube screen.  Keep repeating this for as long as you wish.  Make a list of the links to the videos you went to and share them with the rest of us in the Facebook group.  Please keep to dance videos although you don't have to stay with Ballet.

Of course surfing YouTube videos can use up time like nothing else can.  So you may want to set yourself a time limit - say an hour - or a number limit of videos - say 6.  Choose what suits you best and 
have fun!