Como siempre nos gusta ser agradecidos, en nuestro grupo de Facebook, mañana abriremos un sorteo para que tres suertudos o suertudas entre vosotros se lleven este set de regalo ;)
Tienda · Papeles digitales navideños
A partir del viernes 30, a la venta en la tienda TBCP. La promoción de papeles + postales durará solamente hasta el día 5 de diciembre. A partir de entonces, sólo los papeles estarán a la venta.
Como siempre nos gusta ser agradecidos, en nuestro grupo de Facebook, mañana abriremos un sorteo para que tres suertudos o suertudas entre vosotros se lleven este set de regalo ;)
Como siempre nos gusta ser agradecidos, en nuestro grupo de Facebook, mañana abriremos un sorteo para que tres suertudos o suertudas entre vosotros se lleven este set de regalo ;)
Lace Crosses and Stars of David
Lace Crosses: T (L-R): Ironstone, Vert Lustre; B (L-R): Indigo Float, Saturation Gold, Chun Plum |
I was raised Episcopalian, going to church at St. Columba Parish (now dissolved) in Detroit and was very involved in the church for some time, singing in the choir in participating in many of the youth activities. I developed a greater knowledge and awareness of Christian theology during my Art History Classes at Michigan State University - during specific periods of western art, the church was a significant patron of the arts and religious themes were an important part of the iconography. It was also at Michigan State that I became close friends with my friend Marilyn, whose Jewish family welcomed me like a youngest daughter. During my two years in Singapore, my husband's Buddhist family shared their religious traditions with me, as well was the Muslim and Hindu people with I worked and came to know as acquaintances and friends. As a result, although I may not "connect" with the specific observances of any or all of these faiths, I have found a kernel of truth, a thread that connects them all in my spiritual universe.
Lace Crosses: T (L-R): Textured Turquoise, Frosted Melon; B (L-R): Blue Rutile, Lustrous Jade, Pearl White |
Cross - Ironstone |
Stars of David: T (L-R): Indigo Float, Lustrous Jade; B (L-R): Pearl Blue, Saturation Gold, Chun Plum |
Stars of David: T (L-R): Textured Turquoise, Frosted Melon; B (L-R): Vert Lustre, Blue Rutile, Pearl White |
Once dry, the pieces are sanded to remove any rough edges (remembering that a sharp edge only becomes sharper when glazed) and bisque fired. After firing, I rinse to remove any dust, then wax the back of the cross, leaving a margin to take the glaze around the edge to the back. This leaves a space for engraving. Using glazing tongs to hold the pieces at the bottom, I pour glaze over the four arms and then place them squarely on a large stilt to dry.
Star of David, Pearl Blue |
Once glaze fired, I used leather lace, cut to nine inches, folded in half and with an overhand knot and then threaded through the hole with a lark's-head knot, so the pieces could hang. I know many artists make these sorts of pieces with a wire hanger in the back but I'm not comfortable with that on two counts: the piece cannot hang flat to the wall very well; and there is a higher risk of failure. The leather lace allows the piece to hang flat and can easily be replaced if something should happen to it.
Having had success with red stoneware Crosses finished with dramatic reactive glazes, I decided to make some in white stoneware with Pearl White, which would be appropriate for baptism, first communion or a wedding. Then I decided to to try some Stars of David, again, using the center of the lace for the center of the star. These were also very successful. All are available at several galleries throughout Michigan. I would like to investigate other motifs but I'm not certain they would adapt as successfully to the lace texture.
A Garden Visit
Brenda feeding the goldfish |
Back in August, I had the opportunity to visit my good friend Brenda Hershberger in Mason, Michigan. I had been planning a trip to the Lansing area in order to stop in at Wild Type Nursery, also in Mason, for one of the nursery's last public sale days of the season, hoping to fill some gaps in my garden and maybe discover some heretofore unknown botanical treasures.
Brenda and Allie, who has now been joined by Dom P |
I-96 West down to one lane on the same weekend that students were making their annual migration to East Lansing for the start of the school year, the anticipation of visiting a good friend's garden and selecting plants at one of my favorite nurseries kept me going.
Feeder goldfish are less expensive and seem less attractive to marauding Great Blue Herons |
In touring the gardens, the highlight is clearly Brenda's pond, stocked with feeder goldfish (Great Blue Herons were nabbing the more expensive Koi, so she opted for sustainable quantity), beautiful waterlilies and native and exotic plants by pond's edge. The pond - with a natural-looking stone waterfall and integrated plantings - has the lived-in look of the best designed larger garden features. Its "naturalness" is attested to by the abundance of native frogs, who bask on strategically-placed rocks and take cover in the lush plantings.
After our tour, we headed to the nursery separately (it was on the way home for me) and shopped the remaining native plants. I was able to purchase another Fragrant Sumac (Rhus aromatica) for the front yard and, especially, exciting, Orange-fruited Horse Gentian (Triosteum aurantiacum) and Pointed-leaf Ticktrefoil (Desmodium glutinosum), both of which went into a planting of Penn Sedge (Carex pensylvanica) in my tree lawn.
The drive home was less frustrating, as I took a detour to avoid the construction, which took me by a corn stand with the last of the season's harvest, which I enjoyed for dinner that night! What a great day!
Deluxe Sunflower: Spinning
In developing the various designs in the Deluxe Sunflower series, I had been able to come up with quite a few designs using a slip-filled pastry bag with various decorating tips. I had also found a couple of uses for Kemper Klay Kutters. I had created three designs - Pasta, String Theory and Starry Night - using the Kemper Klay Gun and various dies but wanted to explore the potential of this tool more fully.
In browsing through the dies which come with the Klay Gun, I thought I might be able to use one of the circle dies to make long coils, which I could then make into a spiral or spirals. I thought I would first try making a piece with a large spiral covering the entire center. The challenge was going to be marrying a series of long coils into one very long continuous coil to make the spiral.
I started out by fabricating the base of the sunflower, slumping a large slab over the ginormous sunflower mold, cutting it to size with a 1/2" flange at the base. I wanted to make sure the spiral would completely fill the center space so I opted to fabricate the center first and apply the petals afterwards. After scoring and slipping the entire surface, I attached the circle die to the Klay Gun and filled the barrel with clay and pushed out the first coil, forming it into the center of the spiral, starting at the center of the sunflower. It's important that the clay be fairly plastic for this process: if it's too stiff, you have to work really hard to get it to extrude and it will be more prone to cracking during fabrication. I added coils to the spiral until I felt fairly certain that the spiral would completely fill the desired space, carefully smoothing the joins between the coils.
After the coil was finished, I applied two rows of petals to the sunflower, making sure the surface was slipped to guarantee optimal adhesion. I allowed the sunflower to dry to leather hard, removed it from the mold, applied a clay fitting to take a copper fitting so the sunflower can go on a stake and put holes in to take a wire for hanging. After drying completely, the piece is fired to Cone 06.
I glazed the sunflower with Amaco's Potter's Choice Temmoku in the center, as I do for all my Deluxe and Fancy Sunflowers. For the petals, I used Starfire Brown, a glaze recipe I was given by my first pottery teacher, Gene Pluhar, which breaks and pools in almost a jasper-like manner. The glaze is reminiscent of the surfaces preferred about 30 years ago, so it contributes a nostalgic quality to the piece.
In browsing through the dies which come with the Klay Gun, I thought I might be able to use one of the circle dies to make long coils, which I could then make into a spiral or spirals. I thought I would first try making a piece with a large spiral covering the entire center. The challenge was going to be marrying a series of long coils into one very long continuous coil to make the spiral.
I started out by fabricating the base of the sunflower, slumping a large slab over the ginormous sunflower mold, cutting it to size with a 1/2" flange at the base. I wanted to make sure the spiral would completely fill the center space so I opted to fabricate the center first and apply the petals afterwards. After scoring and slipping the entire surface, I attached the circle die to the Klay Gun and filled the barrel with clay and pushed out the first coil, forming it into the center of the spiral, starting at the center of the sunflower. It's important that the clay be fairly plastic for this process: if it's too stiff, you have to work really hard to get it to extrude and it will be more prone to cracking during fabrication. I added coils to the spiral until I felt fairly certain that the spiral would completely fill the desired space, carefully smoothing the joins between the coils.
Kemper Klay Gun and Dies |
After the coil was finished, I applied two rows of petals to the sunflower, making sure the surface was slipped to guarantee optimal adhesion. I allowed the sunflower to dry to leather hard, removed it from the mold, applied a clay fitting to take a copper fitting so the sunflower can go on a stake and put holes in to take a wire for hanging. After drying completely, the piece is fired to Cone 06.
I glazed the sunflower with Amaco's Potter's Choice Temmoku in the center, as I do for all my Deluxe and Fancy Sunflowers. For the petals, I used Starfire Brown, a glaze recipe I was given by my first pottery teacher, Gene Pluhar, which breaks and pools in almost a jasper-like manner. The glaze is reminiscent of the surfaces preferred about 30 years ago, so it contributes a nostalgic quality to the piece.
Buttons: Lace
Assorted Lace Buttons in a Small Pearl Blue Lace Bowl |
Medium Diamonds (Deep Firebrick) |
Medium Crescents (Oil Spot) |
Medium Squares Albany Slip Brown |
Medium Trefoil Vert Lustre |
Small Triangles, Crescents and Six-Pointed Stars in Palladium, Metallic Black and Saturation Metallic. |
In terms of packaging, I purchased a quantity of small zip-bags, into which go each set of buttons. I punched a hole at the top to one side, threaded through a piece of jute and attached a tag with a description including the size, shape and glaze. By putting them in the bag, the customer can see the back and the front of the button(s) and can see the quality of manufacture. The buttons are available a couple places around the state; we're waiting to see how they do in the wider market.
Vintage & Retro · Octubre
Puede que el otoño no sea mi estación favorita del año. Puede que octubre sea uno de esos meses en los que ni fu ni fa. Simplemente me agazapo, me recojo, miro por la ventana, veo mis bulbos crecer y sueño con el comienzo de la primavera.
Este mes he hecho una selección especial de fotografias. No he examinado una a una las fotos que habéis subido al mural durante octubre (¡culpable!), pero que sirva de atenuante este ramillete de flores que os traigo fruto de mi paseo otoñal por Vintage & Retro.
Como siempre, bajo estas palabras y el collage, disponéis de los enlaces a las fotografías seleccionadas y a las galerías de sus autores.
Gracias por estar ahí conmigo, lanzándole flores al invierno.
1. magnolia, 2. "A room without books is like a body without a soul.", 3. may 20/31 - on Explore ♥, 4. Rosas silvestres, 5. Through miles of waste to cross upstream Risking all dreams for what the surface brings Free like a flow that pours from your hand Claiming its own new river, 6. lilacs from my garden - on Explore ♥, 7. ♥, 8. Milky White, 9. Foggy summer, 10. Tea, roses and memories...., 11. What to do?, 12. Lemon Verbena, 13. first steps towards the sun
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