Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Terrifyingly terrible joke card and tag envelope

I made this card and envelope duo when the kidlets were returning to school. Now, some kids love school... mine does not. To brighten his gloomy weekdays I sometimes put a terrible joke in his lunchbox. I’ve always just scribbled something on a post-it note but I decided that this year I might pull up my fancy pants and create a proper means of delivering those bits of hilarity.
  
So I created a sturdy envelope from a Graphic 45 Staples Large Tag Album along with a little card. It might seem a little strange to make a back to school card with the Steampunk Spells collection but what 10 year old boy doesn’t think returning to the desk is dreadful and truly horrific?

Want to create your own? Hop over to today's Graphic 45 blog post for a tutorial!

Here is the full supply list:
Steampunk Spells:
Graphic 45 Staples: Large Tag Album
May Arts Ribbon
Button
Sandpaper
Ink pad

Friday, November 22, 2013

Gooood Morning: It's all how you look at it


Sometimes I feel a lot like this raindrop.

Some may see it as representive of 'just hanging on' or something sad like a tear, or dreariness. That's not what I see at all.

I see the whole world reflected in a tiny drop of water. A seemingly impossible riddle solved with a drop.

Sometimes I feel a lot like this raindrop. Like I am one small thing, but inside a whole upside-down world exists.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Check your pants, cause they just got fancy! Your official invite...

I'll be installing this show next Friday (eek!) but the opening reception will be held December 7th, 5 to 7pm. Consider this your official personal invitation.


Please stop by and say 'hello' if you're nearby. If you're worried about your pants not being arty farty or fancy enough, Rebecca's shop is a lot of fun and you won't regret a visit. AND what better way to get some holiday shopping done than with a tipple in hand, sweet music playing and surrounded by fairy magic :)

Hope to see you there!

A big bright moon

This is the second shrine I've been working on for my December show. Like the other one it measures 16" x 28". The base of the piece is actually a drawer from a dresser we found at the side of the road. Another man's treasure as they say...


Originally I had made two moons from clay which I then pit fired but one broke (poo!) and the other was wayyyy too small. So I made this fellow from polymerclay. The houses and toadstools in this piece are fired clay which adds a bit of weight to the thing.


 The glittery stars are suspended by thread


And there is a spindly ladder reaching up to that bright moon. Which may or may not have a faerie thing climbing up it one day :)

P.S. I think it's funny how the angle of the photos totally affects the moons expression! he is rather serene at eye level, practically pleased when viewed from below, and... at exactly the right angle... looks as though he's sucking on a piece of hard candy.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

A very big shrine

Two posts in one day? I know. I've lost my marbles.

I wanted to quickly share another new project that I created for that show that you will be entirely fed of hearing about. *See below for details*

So here it is... a GIANT drawer shrine!


The piece measures 16" x 28" which is absolutely monstrous compared to my other work. I think it looks much better in person than in the photos. It looks far better proportioned in real life... you can get sort of submerged in the details.


All of the toadstools and little houses in this piece are the pit fired clay I was experimenting with. There's a lovely little twig ladder and a clothes peg 'tree fort' with tiny books and buttons. The nest you see at the top left is one of many we have found here over the past couple of windy years.

* Want to see this piece in person? "Sugar Plum & Other Faeries" will be running through December at Impresario Artisan Market in Cobourg. You are invited to the very fancy pants opening reception being held on December 7th 5pm - 7pm. Shhh, don't worry, it'll just be pretend fancy, not pretentious fancy.

Piling up

My studio where visitors visit is usually fairly disaster free but the work is piling up.


I'm showing my work at the gallery at Impresario Artisan Market in Cobourg this December and I'm happy to report that all of the work I've been doing seems to be coming together.

I'm even having a little opening reception which is very fancy indeed! Music, nibbles, faeries and quality holiday shopping on December 7th from 5pm to 7pm (37 King Street West, Cobourg, Ontario).  If you happen to be in the area, don't be shy! Come on out and have a peek. Even if you don't think you're an arty farty sort of person, the shop is amazing and you won't regret a visit :)

Fair warning, you'll be sick to death of hearing about this show because I'll be pushing it like crazy over the next two weeks!

Anywho, here's one of the new mixed media/collage pieces that will be included...


which matches nicely with this other piece I showed off a short while back...


I'm really rather thrilled to be combining my love of craft and art, and proving that the two can most certainly get along :)

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Cluckers, Eggs and Pixie Houses


Ok, first things first. Think these little pixie houses are super cute? Go over to Alpha Stamps immediately and learn how to make your own! I've put together a little 'how to' for this fun and easy project, perfect for gram-ma's and kidlets to make together (or crafters on the run).

P.S. The Gnomes & Birds Collage Sheet I used on this project is one of my faves. So stinkin' adorable!

Now, on to the chicken news...

We've had our hens (or 'the girls' as Mr. Pixie calls them) for around 3 years. Over the past year they have decided that it is time to retire from all this laying business and have been quite stingy with the eggs. Whittled down to one egg a day with Christmas baking looming?!?! Panic! So the mister brought these girls home last night.


These lovely ladies belonged to the Thai vineyard workers. They are leaving to do seasonal work elsewhere and so we greedily happily took them in. They seem to have settled quickly too because this morning 6 warm beautiful brown eggs were waiting in the nesting boxes.


There are very few things that can compare with holding a warm fresh laid egg in your hands. These are a wee bit smaller than our other girls were providing us with... but I think we'll manage :P

Finally, here are a few answers to the questions we are most commonly asked about our chickens.

Don't you need a rooster for eggs?
Nope. You need a rooster for fertilized eggs that will produce chicks. For plain old eating eggs, hens are all that are required.

How long do chickens lay eggs?
Most hens produce well for two years then their production begins to decline. Our hens each provided us with an egg every day for two years, then a little less over the past year, until finally we were only getting one egg a day from the whole bunch of them.

What do you feed them?
We buy chicken feed purchased at a farm supply shop. We also give our chickens treats like vegetable scraps and, their favourite, grapes. They will eat almost anything including bugs, mice and (if desperate) their own eggs!

What do you do with them in the winter?
Our hens live in a hen house for the winter. It is not heated (think of the birds you see in the winter months who do not have people caring for them) but inside there is loads of hay and they keep each other warm. They do come outside and sit in the snow. We toss a mix called 'scratch' in with them for them to... well... scratch and peck at.

How long do chickens live?
That depends. Some chickens can live up to 15 or 20 years! Chickens can (and do) get sick and are a tasty snacks for things like coyotes and foxes.  Being a chicken can be dangerous!

We keep the birds we raise for food for just 7-8 weeks. That may seem cruelly short but their breed, after that short period of time, have gone from being cute fluffy chicks to big white eating machines. They live in a pen that is moved daily so that they have access to fresh grass to scratch and peck at, but prefer to sit next to the feeder and eat. Their breed habits make them susceptible to certain health problems so it is important to 'harvest' them at the appropriate time.

What do you do with the hens that don't lay anymore?
Our hens that have decided it's time to 'retire' become soup chickens. They can be eaten but they do not provide as much meat and are generally tough and a bit stringy.

Don't you feel bad about eating them?
Our family eats meat and we appreciate that it comes from a living thing. Knowing that the food on our plate has had access to fresh grass, straw, clean water is important to us. While enclosed to protect them from predators, we like to know that the animal that gave it's life for our sustenance has had space to scratch and a place to roll in the dust. We do not feel badly about eating them but we do respect that they have given their life to provide us with food.