
Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts
Monday, May 10, 2010
Bird Nests
I've been inspired by new babies, dreams, and watching the birds in the courtyard at work as they have begun to build their nests. Happily for me, I've been playing with paint again. This is a first attempt at 'nesting' and I have another in the works as I play around with different techniques, figure out my color mixes, and think more about how I want to convey this sweet sign of spring.

Saturday, April 17, 2010
Freebies are Fun
I opened my mailbox the other day to find a surprise package in it. Sure, I knew it was coming because Ny told me I'd won, but the contents were a lovely surprise. Cloud-soft art yarn in cotton candy pink with a sample of her "coily Q" yarn. Ny, why don't you live closer so you can give me some spinning tips? This is sweet stuff. A little curly, just the right touch of shine, and a lot of soft. You can check out more of Ny's spinning and dyeing as well as new giveaways at ilash designs.

As for me, Marikio has been kind of lazy in the art and fiber department and a lot distracted by springtime. Today is rainy however, so I may try to finish a few projects that have been lying around for far too long. The garden is pretty much mud today but I don't mind at all. Rain.... it's one of my favorite things (raindrops on roses and all that) and so rare here in the high desert that it's good to simply watch the earth drink it up and unfurl all the green stuff. This past week has been amazing with pears, peaches, apples, lilacs, tulips and more racing to beat each other to the punch for most beautiful:

What I've been doing most is "art journaling". I've filled two or three little books but they like to stay hidden because it's mostly personal - collages and small paintings with observations on life and love and the people and places around me. Sometimes something grows from the small page into something larger and a little different. Here's one that did that:

If you're interested in art journaling yourself, I highly recommend Danny Gregory's books "An Illustrated Life" and "Everyday Matters". "Everyday Life" is his own book while "An Illustrated Life" is entirely made up of glimpses into other people's journals, some professional artists, many of the just like you and me. You'll want to try it yourself.... and maybe you should.
As for me, Marikio has been kind of lazy in the art and fiber department and a lot distracted by springtime. Today is rainy however, so I may try to finish a few projects that have been lying around for far too long. The garden is pretty much mud today but I don't mind at all. Rain.... it's one of my favorite things (raindrops on roses and all that) and so rare here in the high desert that it's good to simply watch the earth drink it up and unfurl all the green stuff. This past week has been amazing with pears, peaches, apples, lilacs, tulips and more racing to beat each other to the punch for most beautiful:
What I've been doing most is "art journaling". I've filled two or three little books but they like to stay hidden because it's mostly personal - collages and small paintings with observations on life and love and the people and places around me. Sometimes something grows from the small page into something larger and a little different. Here's one that did that:
If you're interested in art journaling yourself, I highly recommend Danny Gregory's books "An Illustrated Life" and "Everyday Matters". "Everyday Life" is his own book while "An Illustrated Life" is entirely made up of glimpses into other people's journals, some professional artists, many of the just like you and me. You'll want to try it yourself.... and maybe you should.
Labels:
art journaling,
etsy,
ilash designs,
journaling,
spring,
yarn
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Taking a break from all that
There is a breath of spring in the air this weekend and I am caught up in it all over again. Year after year its the same, though I have to say that it's more cyclical, and therefore there's more of a build up, a tension and an excitement about it here where there are four seasons than where I've come from. Winter hasn't been especially harsh here this year, but I am getting weary of waking up to the sound of my ancient furnace roaring and letting the dogs out to find that once again, the thermometer reads 20 degrees. That's been the 5:30 AM temp for what seems like forever at this point. I am longing for green, for spring, for buds unfurling and for flowers. Longing.
So today was a happy surprise. Days are generally tolerable here in Santa Fe. Even in the dead of winter with snow deep on the ground, you can find yourself too warm in the sun (though the wind can bite - and bite hard). Dressing at any season here is defined by the layers you wear, and I always wear layers. Like Shrek. Like an onion. But, today I peeled those layers off, baby. It was sweet and it was so beautifully warm. Little green things are poking up through the red clay and though that's a bit worrisome, what with the possibility of snow for another month yet and almost certainly of at least one killing frost, that bit of green is very welcome! I woke early and made a list of 'things to do today' and the first thing I did was go to the garden center to look at seeds. In light of the economy, our family's love of good food, and the joy of gardening in general, I am determined to have a vegetable garden this year. Now, I live in a townhouse with a pretty small yard frequented by two rowdy dogs, and New Mexico is known for the layer of rock hard caliche that lies waiting under the soil, so I've been struggling to get a grasp on how to make things grow here (other than sagebrush, tumbleweed, and juniper) for 4 years with only sporadic success. BUT! I have gone back to what served me well in Florida, which was also plagued - but with poor soil, oppressive humidity (wouldn't you know I move to the desert next?), and nematodes - and what worked is....container gardening.
I spent this afternoon sitting in my brown, twiggy, dry garden trying to remember the play of summer sun and shade in my back yard, reading The Bountiful Container, a wonderfully informative book about vegetable gardening in containers, and making lists of veggies I want to try. I have a plan, folks.
From there, I went on to begin reading a book by Wendy Johnson, who has had a long running column in Tricycle magazine on Zen and gardening and who helped found the organic garden at Green Gulch Farm Zen Center in Marin County, California back in 1975. It's a great read for any gardener: Gardening at the Dragon's Gate; at Work in the Wild and Cultivated World. Check it out if you haven't.
Now I am really psyched. Unfortunately, our last frost date is something like May 26 and it's only February.... but I can dream and I will plan and I tell ya folks, this year, I'm going to have a garden.
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