Showing posts with label behind the scenes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label behind the scenes. Show all posts

Thursday

view from the rafters

Hello! Here's the newest pic from our shop building adventure, we're just about done with the end walls and those barge rafters (the ones that overhang on the ends). It's been tough motivating ourselves on these dang cold mornings.

We have some new kittens in the house so cats and coffee are much more appealing than frosty hammers. We've taken to working into the evenings quite bit, the rafters are a nice place to watch the sun set over our little country village.



Here's a link to our shop progress if anyone out there is interested ... we're hoping to be under roof for a New Year's Day move in. Then it can snow!

Monday

finito


Here are some final shots of a lovely custom order I made for a great customer I met at the PA Guild Show in Rittenhouse Square this spring. 

I've really excited to see this all finished up and ready to go.




I was especially excited to give my usual 2D pieces some curved features, I love how my customers can give me little insights into directions I always wanted to go but never did for some reason.


I also made up these cool little bags since these pieces didn't fit into the fun tins I usually use. Kudos to all of you stitchers out there, these bags nearly made my dyslexic brain explode.  The fabric had a cool swirly wave thing going on.




Here's some shots of the monster cloud cuff - can you guess how many hours it took to hand cut this gorgeous thing? I'm not telling ...



Saturday

in progress ...

Just popping in to show some in-progress shots for a few custom pieces I've been working on. I'm so happy to find a kindred design spirit - someone who loves my asian cloud pattern as much as I do.

Here's a nice biggy necklace to match the medallion hoops she purchased from me earlier. I'm loving the new little guys on the sides ... I need to find a way to use them in the future.



This pic isn't the best but this linked bracelet has curved clouds that match my single cloud necklace and earring set.  I guess this is my first bracelet! I'm loving the way the curves feel on my wrist, it's such a nice complement to a big pair of earrings when a necklace would be too much.  I'm going to have to incorporate some more bracelets into my line for sure.




And this in progress shot is for another bracelet - this time a very decorative cuff.  It's a heavier gauge and rather large so it's been a bear to hand cut, but I can't wait to see it all shined up and formed.




I really can't get enough of this pattern, I keep seeing it in historical patterns ...


From the Public Domain Review

but I'm really loving it's more modern interpretations ...

Photo by Ben Sloat


The erin adams collection for new ravenna and housefiftytwo.com

Awesome dresser do-over

Jason Wu Fall 2012

and come on?! cloudy pants? YES!

(I have a whole pinterest board dedicated to these floating babies if you are interested...)


Tuesday

new work!

I haven't posted new work on here in a while, I've been expanding a few of my designs -  so here's a little riff on my classic scales motif.


I'm still not sure what to call them, little scales? little scallops?  I'm really into the repetition of smaller works now. I love that they look a bit lacey.

I've been wanting to mess around with that quatrafoil pattern for awhile, it's nothing new but I love it when anything goth goes mainstream.




It's a staple in Gothic Architecture ...

Bury Parish Church



College Hall, University of Pennsylvania

but it's also really prominent in Morrocan tiles. I LOVE IT when cultures and patterns cross over.

Granada Tile

Here are some more great pics from the Bury Parish Church which has a slight Moorish feel to it due  to the incredible tiled floors.







On a super side note - check out that candle holder. It reminds me so much of those swinging incense burners they lit up on Vespers.  I actually did think of foiled swinging incense burners when I designed the earrings.

I grew up going to a pretty serious Catholic church and I loved that dang incense burning ceremony even though I had no idea what was going on.  It nearly sent me into asthmatic fits but holy heck do the Catholics know how to create a vibe ...



and my blog wouldn't be my blog if I didn't go into some super crazy historical tangent ...

Let me introduce you to the world's largest incense burner: the swinging Botafumeiro!


This incense burner is in the Santiago de Compostela Cathedral in Spain.  Imagine a 5 ft tall gorgeous brass and silver burner weighing over 180 pound swinging over your head at 40 mph! AWESOME!




and of course here's a video of it.  it's C-R-A-Z-Y.  Watch it just to see the poor monk who has to tackle the thing and goes spinning around to make it stop. SO FUN.



It has had some accidents, it went flying through a window when Catharine of Aragorn passed through on her way to infamously marry Henry VIII in 1499 (love her!)  She also apparently has a thing for little monkeys (love her more!)



well, there's your random fact for the day, if you win a million bucks on a quiz show you owe me.

the power of craiglist & a library card


I have to admit, things have been pretty slow here in the studio - I'm dealing with the struggle of the juggle.  I seemed to have lost my flow in the last few months. I'm working on getting it going again, but first we have to wrap up some major projects.  The main one being this giant workshop!

To be honest, this has been tough.  We lost most of our project savings in the big "stock crash" of 2008 (ouch!) so in order to keep the dream alive we had to resort to doing every single aspect of it ourselves and doing it on the cheap.  It certainly helps that my husband is one of those mechanical engineering / woodworking / photographic memory guys.

We craiglisted everything from the concrete block to the timbers, and schooled ourselves at the local library.  To be honest, I was mostly on cooking duty for this project but now I can say without a doubt I know exactly what you need to do to excavate a site for a radiant heat concrete pad, and maybe by the end of the month I'll know how to put up rafters.  (please note, I am not physically capable of doing any of these things, just good at talking about them.)


so here comes the slide show ...

Day 1, scraping the yard flat

RIP miss greta, the best project supervisor ever!

Ben having fun on his little rolling machine, making a mess

digging the ditch to the house for water and electric
finally got to pour the footer after many monsoons and many evenings of bailing out the ditches. not fun.
Laying the corners out - I seem to remember talk of the Pythagorean Theorem. You actually do need that in real life!
this pic is a million moons later, laying block TOOK FOREVER. enough time for grass to grow inside the building!
At this point we accepted the help of some college kids next door to flatten out the crushed stone. Remember those 100 degree days this summer? that was this day.
laying out the vapor barrier getting ready for the insulation and radiant heat tubes.

those pretty red radiant heat tubes. dreaming of cozy snowy nights.
FINALLY pouring the floor, that was a good day. we enlisted the help of our awesome neighbors.
the virginville crew kicks ass! 
ben using yet another fun machine to get the floor smooth. 
I don't think you can measure the happiness we felt being out of the mud and onto the fun stuff. wall building!
again, our neighborhood crew gets together for a wall raising. amish style!
this is where we are today, another wall up, another one in the works. 


We hope to under roof by Thanksgiving - and I hope to be back to designing and making shiny things by the holidays ... anyone out there doing any big fun projects? 





Thursday

lovely monster

just checking in to give you some out takes from the office job : this big lovely floating island has kind of taken over my life for the moment ...


It's a site specific installation where I work at the Miller Gallery in Kutztown by Onishi Yasuaki ... hot glue, fishing line line and some plastic sheeting.



I love that everyone's first instinct is to go underneath it, what's that about?  everybody loves a tent? it is kind of reminiscent of being under one of those play parachutes ... 






Here are some fun little townie kids rolling around underneath pretending to be underwater.  

and then the students pretty much come in and fall asleep! classic college move!

Friday

hibernation begins




I'm entering into hibernation mode - getting ready to tackle a new year with a bunch of new selling venues, also looking forward to adding a few new pieces to my collections.  We're also in the middle of an epic building project for our new studio space - tackling monsoon rains, freezing temperatures and some serious first timer mistakes.

In my dreams, it will end up looking like this:



Realistically the only thing we will have in common with this barn is the fact that ours will also have four walls and a roof.   But, it's what you do within those four walls that counts right?

Thursday

this is not a classic rock tribute I swear

So I'm making up some small little things for the show this weekend. It started off with this little guy ...




I know triangles are all the rage right now but I swear I was thinking a little more along the lines of this.


Hipster Triangles


Then along came these guys ...



so it's starting to look a little like this ...



NOT INTENTIONAL.  Although I must say I'm not upset by this, I will always be a classic rock queen in my heart.  Did you know that each member of Led Zeppelin created symbols for themselves? (Something about runes and possible occult (!) references ... here's more if you need to know.)

I was one of those little sisters that raided my older brother's room all the time - borrowing his Dungeons & Dragons manuals to sketch from, wearing his soccer jerseys,  stealing his Jethro Tull and Rush tapes.  I became a Zeppelin freak at the ripe old age of 12.  We also only had 2 radio stations in town, classic rock and the Debbie Gibson one. ugh.

So I will wear these in tribute, to some seriously geeky rock gods (who apparently like to be shirtless) and to the millions of bad tattoos inspired by them...




If only my brother had listened to Adam Ant, my life could have been so different ...