Sunday, 2 June 2013

Dream a little dream

Yesterday morning I woke from an incredibly vivid dream of flying over a lush rainforest, towards a gorge. I flew over and into the gorge, under a natural bridge formation created by the collapse of a cave and down to land on the bank of the river below. But the bank was crowded with totem poles and huge wooden hands, the fingers of each having been carved and decorated like the totem poles. I clearly remember the feeling of being dwarfed as I sank down between the monumental wooden fingers and amazed by their scale and decoration. I also very clearly remember that there was a haziness and humidity down amongst all that carved wood; between evaporating river and a nearby waterfall, it was hard to see and hard to breathe.

The dream was so clear to me that I wanted to draw an image from it straight away, This was the result.
A gorge in a rain forest with totem poles and giant wooden hands on the banks of the river.
Image from a dream: Caran D'ache and pencil on cartridge paper.

The dream is still quite clear in my mind so I hope that there will be more sketches to come.

Saturday, 25 May 2013

What's for dinner?

We had a load of veg in which needed using. Living with an Italian, a minestrone was an obvious (and healthy) choice. We had half a head of sweetheart cabbage, a handful of new potatoes, some bedraggled french beans and plenty of shallots and mushrooms. We've pretty much always got carrots and celery in the fridge and peas and baby broad beans in the freezer. Add to that little lot, a packet of pancetta, a few bay leaves, a squeeze of tomato puree, a splash of white wine and a load of water, boil it for an hour or so and Bob's your uncle.

So, what goes with soup? Why, bread of course! I cheat a little when I make bread. I've a bread maker so I tend to let it make the dough for me. Today I made sesame and caraway rolls and pesto, sundried tomato and olive tear-and-share.

Grub's up!


How can a day off work mean I've no time for creativity?!

Yesterday was a bit frustrating. I'd taken the day off work because I had a few little jobs I wanted to get done. I had hoped that it would also allow me a little time to do some more crafty or creative stuff. But my failure to see exactly how many "little jobs" I had to do and how long they would take meant that I didn't get any time to do creative things at all!

So, this morning I was determined to get the creativity in good and early! I wanted to do a more permanent version of the Dessy Weather sketch I drew the other day. On opening my sketch book, I found a couple of cartoons I'd done a few months ago.

This first was an idea which came to me and I sketched very quickly, but never really developed (I really should one day).


And this one is another cat-themed one. (Um... I like cats quite a lot. In fact, I'm probably borderline crazy-cat-lady.)


And finally, here's the developed Dessy Weather cartoon.

Wednesday, 22 May 2013

Sketchy

Yesterday I bought myself an A5 sketching notepad and a mechanical pencil that I hope will be reasonably robust. The intention is to keep them with me at all times so that when inspiration hits, I can be ready to sketch. I've always wanted to do this, but for some reason never have. Incidentally, the pencil is very cool - the lead turns just a fraction each time you touch it to the paper so that it wears evenly to remain sharp; technology, huh?

Ryman A6 sketch book (80 pages) and Uni Kuru Toga 0.5 mechanical pencil
Ryman A6 sketch book (80 pages) and Uni Kuru Toga 0.5 mechanical pencil

I had fun with my new purchases straight away yesterday lunchtime, starting off with some inspiration from the tree at the junction of London Wall and Moorgate.

Sketch of a tree in spring
Number 9 - The Larch

Then very quickly I reprised some old friends from many years ago, the Inskip cow and sheep (the pig was added later and I've not drawn a pig before, hence it being a less well developed drawing).

Moo Baa Baa Oink
The crazy-eyed cow and grass-munching sheep were originally from a card I sent to friends many years ago when I stayed (very briefly) in an extremely small village in rural Lancashire

After work, I went into town and while waiting for a friend, I took some inspiration from the flowers in windowboxes and borders.

Lavender, foxglove, ivy, pansy, pink and some stylised flowers
Flowery

Later, on the tube home from a night out, I decided to develop yesterday's ice cream idea further, making the ice creams more individual.

More individual versions of yesterday's ice cream sketch
I Scream. Again.

Even this morning I've been busy. A toad on BBC Breakfast made me draw him.

A toad
Toad out of the hole

And then my Gosh!, one of our cats, came and sat on the back of the sofa with her back to me. The sheen of her coat and the shape of her shoulders and hips really called to me. I'm particularly proud of this sketch (although if I were to be critical, I'd say that her top lip is just a little too long in this sketch and her tail a little floofier than IRL).

Sketch of a cat with her back to me
Gosh! pretending she isn't keeping an eye on me

Tuesday, 21 May 2013

Oh summer, where art thou?

I'm feeling the need for summery designs at the moment. So on the train into work this morning I doodled this.

It might end up as a linocut print; maybe even on a t-shirt!

Oops, I dropped my ice cream
I Scream

Monday, 20 May 2013

The fabric of creativity

I'm inordinately excited to have found out about the existence of fabric painting media. Until yesterday, I had thought that painting on fabric required specialist fabric paints or crayons like those I had as a kid. They did the trick, but they really gave quite a basic result.

As a result of the lino printing workshop yesterday, I have discovered, however, that it's possible to buy media that you mix with standard acrylic paint which allows you to paint or print onto fabric to provide a result which will resist washing even in a washing machine. I've always liked using acrylic paint, not least because it's affordable and quite easy to find even in the most basic arts and crafts shops.

Today's research has also enlightened me to products which you can use to create screen printing stencils. Again, I did a bit of screen printing when I was a kid, but it involved cutting a stencil out of paper which had a great many limitations (not least that it would apply ink to the thickness of the paper used).

I sense a whole world of fabric printing opportunities opening up in front of me. My life may never be quite the same ever again!

Sunday, 19 May 2013

Owly Towel

Sounds like a Fawlty Towers anagram, doesn't it? But in fact, it's what I've been making today!

Thanks to the lovely Craft Guerrilla's expert guidance, I've spent three hours this afternoon carving a design out of lino and then printing it onto a tea towel. I've had so much fun and - as is always the case when I learn a new craft or technique - my mind is now buzzing with possibilities. Let's just say that if you're on my Christmas card list, I'm already thinking up the design you'll be seeing in seven months.

The workshop was at the Knit With Attitude shop at 127 Stoke Newington High Street and there were four of us participating in the workshop including Louise (Crafty Guider) and Jean-Mary (Meanyjar).

As I wrote yesterday, I'd had an idea in mind for a while, of a little owly chap sitting on a branch. When I got to the workshop, I realised that in fact for a repeated design, the owl would be better on its own, without the branch.

So, I started out by drawing my li'l owl onto the lino block.
The starting point is th draw the design onto the lino block.
Owly. HB pencil on lino.

Then I set about carving! It was lots of fun gouging out chunks from the lino. I loved that the different blades of the tool had different influences, not only the shape and weight of the line, but also the direction; I'd intended that the eye sockets would be tooled from the outside edge, inwards, but the blade I was using gave the line a natural curve to the left, so they ended up with a spiral design which I love.
The half-finished design.
Shavings of lino ended up all over the place; this is not a hobby for those who don't like mess.

Once I'd finished the design, it was time to ink it up and print a trial run on a scrap of fabric. I'm very into teal at the moment, so I decided on a good, strong teal colour, which I used by mixing a lot of blue, with some yellow and white. The 'ink' was actually acrylic paint with some Daler Rowney System 3 Acrylic Medium mixed into it; the ratio was imprecise, but it seemed to be about 10-20% medium to paint. The medium means that the paint doesn't dry quite so quickly as acrylic paint normally would, allowing you more time to work.
The first trial print.
No negativity here!

The first trial print helped me to realise that I needed to shave away a little of the material around the design. In fact, in the end I cut it all away, because I wanted a nice clean edge to the design. Once I was happy with the design, it was time to commit to printing my tea towel. I measured the towel and my design and worked out I that I could fit a row of four owls along each short edge of the towel.
The finished towel.
Four in a row.

I had great fun creating my owly towel and it was inspiring to see the designs my fellow workshoppers came up with.
All of us, with our printed towels.
From left to right, Craft Guerrilla, Alison, me, Crafty Guider and Meanyjar.