Saturday, May 31, 2008

What about writing?

This blog started out about art, design and writing. There's not much in it about writing, is there?

Well, I didn't realize back then that it may look like a mish-mash if I put everything in one place, so the writing part has been evolving separately, but quietly. Somehow my forays into drawing and painting began to take precedence on this blog, and the writing got nudged out. Something is happening with it, though, and if it takes reasonable shape it will be a whole new platform altogether.

For now, on to art!

This piece was done a couple of weeks ago, but I forgot all about it. Here it is now - take a seat, please!

Red Sofa with Lamp

(Geez - I need to get the tripod out or something!)

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Refinishing an old chair

Some days ago I had posted PhotoShop versions of a watercolor I had made, and I revisted them today and played around some more.
This is the result!


Monday, May 26, 2008

Yellow fields and a bit of sky

OK, so the fields are a strech, maybe, but the sky is for real!
(It's part of a picture I took a while ago driving to Niagara Falls.)

P.S.: No, I wasn't the one driving.

Friday, May 23, 2008

The traveling armchair

If there are armchair travelers, why not a traveling armchair? Continuing with my furniture series, this little chair is going everywhere!

Warm evening in the Blue Woods





Daydreaming on a Summer Day





Sweet Memories

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

New paintings

These are the new pieces I made for the exhibition. Mixed them up with some of my black and white drawings from before and the collection looked decent enough...

Waterfall 1


Waterfall 2


Waterfalll 3


They Grow in Bunches in Candyland


Spring and the White Sofa


Now Let's Check Out That Town!


They Can't Stop Dancing Coz They Got Their New Dots Today!


Spring-ing Chair


Spring and the Golden Chair


Red Sofa







Under The Sea


Plus my other three from before...





Sunday, May 18, 2008

Spring flowers

For a few more days our eyes get to feast on the deliciously pink trees that are overflowing with such incredible abundance. So juicy! So unbelievably beautiful!







And magnolias!

Saturday, May 10, 2008

The power of positive expectation

I was talking to my mom the other day about how unlikely it seemed that I'd be able to put up a decent amount of artwork for the Pelham Art Festival. She didn't think it was a big deal, though. "Just do your best," was her advice. She reminded me how it's been a juggling act every single year that I participated. It was always school and work and usually something else going on too right when I should have been preparing art work. I never once got to go for the opening night either. And yet, somehow or the other things came together and I put up work and heck, I even sold work every year. It's funny how I still forget and my mind veers towards the worst possibilities instead of focusing on the positive.

This year too, by the time DaddyBoy got home and we reached the festival site on the set-up day, we only had one and a half hour left to put everything up. I was already a teeny bit nervous by that time, but one step inside the arena and I wanted to just backtrack the way I'd come - all the stalls were already set up AND the work looked just fabulous. What in the world am I doing here with my crummy paintings, I thought, supposing I even got them up on time. This time DaddyBoy came to my rescue. "It's not a competition," he said. "You're here for the fun of it."

True enough. That's when we discovered the extension cord we had wasn't long enough, although we had the specified length. If that wasn't enough, we had also managed to get the wrong hooks for the pegboard. The situation looked so hopeless I just burst out laughing. There was nothing to do except bundle the HunnyBunny back into the car seat and look for a hardware store.

We did it, though. I'm not sure how, but we did it. At some point my brain went, "OK, whatever." And then I just put all my energy into making something out of the whole thing. So yeah, we got the lighting figured out, the hardware sorted out, the paintings up, the table set up, all the while making sure the Munchkin was safe and happy. AND we even went back for opening night a few hours later. And I got a lot of visitors to my stall, reconnected with artists I hadn't seen in a while, met new ones, and yes, sold a few paintings, two of which I had done only the very day before!

I guess it all comes down to this: How will you approach a situation, any situation, and how will that mindset facilitate your success?

That's the power of working the Rule of Positive Expectation: the more you focus on the hope of a good outcome, the more you work towards it, and the more that hope becomes reality.

P.S.: Sometimes, though, it REALLY helps to have someone by your side, or on the phone, like my mom was, although thousands of miles away, to pat your shoulder and say,"Don't sweat it; just do your best. Things will be fine."

Thursday, May 8, 2008

One day to go

The Pelham Art Festival starts tomorrow, and I'm still painting. After I'm done, I'll still have barely enough work to fill the space they will allot me. Even a couple of days ago I was thinking, " Can I possibly do this? Should I back out?" But I made a commitment, even if it means fewer pieces to display. I had about two weeks to put everything together - paintings, business cards, promo handouts. I painted with the baby InchWorm in one arm, cooked with a paintbrush clamped between my teeth, and smeared paint on canvas with my hands to speed things up. Somewhere in between I designed two different business cards and two different promo handouts and then printed the ones DaddyBoy gave his approval to, since I was too bug-eyed by then to tell the difference between "OK" and "Meh".

It's hard to explain how much my life has been impacted by tendinitis. It poses a constant challenge, every day, in the most mundane activities, and until a couple of months ago it was still too hard for me to do anything with a brush or a pen. Going to Houston was good for my hands because it gave me a break from my regular activities, but in a moment of reckless abandon I went and extended my stay. It was only when I got back to Canada that my brain went, "Whoa, what now?"

We'll find out tomorrow!

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Beauty at a click of the mouse

One look at the kind of painting, drawing and craftwork there is online and you can be humbled for life. I see such an abundance of such amazing talent that I wonder how I could ever compete. People are making wonderful, wonderful, incredible things with their hands. They must all be so beautiful, these people, to have such beauty pour out of them.

I don't know what art is. Truly, I don't. I know what makes me happy to look at is art for me. But everybody has a different opinion on this. The Tate Gallery, for instance. Dead sheep would never make it to my list of must-see things. I don't like to see something that makes me go 'Ugh'.

So I'm happy to have this vast treasury of beautiful things right at my fingertips. Long live happy art!

Monday, May 5, 2008

The art of writing

Although science plays a big part, the heart of writing has got to be the art of writing. You can have all your verbs and tenses right, but if your words don't sing through the page, if they don't explode in your brain, if they don't astonish you, delight you, fill you with wonder then the heart, and the art, is lacking.

Sometimes I have struggled to find one word, just one, and other times words roar out of me so fast I can barely get them down. These are the moments when some glorious insight suddenly reveals itself and it's like a torrent of clear water tearing through a mist. Sadly, many epiphanies of this sort have lately happened when I couldn't possibly stop what I was doing and sit down and write the words. But they were there, and that gives me courage. At least they were there; at least I can hope that they will come again. And maybe then I will be able to capture them

Friday, May 2, 2008

Words fail me

I am sure this is perfectly normal and expected, or indeed meant to be this way.
What?
A mommy's love for her baby.
If I were to describe how I feel about the BabyDonut I couldn't.
Words fail me. It's a scary feeling, but there you are.

Which is probably why I can smile at what Leo J.Burke said - People who say they sleep like a baby usually don't have one.

This is where the love part comes into play. Or else I'd be a raving, sleep-deprived lunatic.

But I'm not.

Or at least not a raving one:)

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Adding bling to blah

Well, a teeny weeny amount of bling.

We moved into our first home last year and it needed a lot of painting, not because the walls were in bad shape but because they were so depressingly dull yellow and green everywhere.

We chose a soft blue called French Gray for the living room and it turned out quite well. One wall looked like it lacked a little something, though. What would be cheap and easy?

I got out some white pearl paint left over from another project. I mixed this with the wall latex about 1:1 in proportion and got a nice pearly blue.

Next, I quickly drew some donut shapes floating down from one corner and then just filled them in with my paint mixture. The result is subtle and classy and gets noticed without at all being in-your-face.

I like it!

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

How to sell your house for more money

Getting certified as a home stager has opened my eyes to how many properties are being sold without the least effort to make them desirable. "It was good enough for us all these years," sellers seem to think, "surely buyers can see it's a great place."

If only it worked that way.

Well, Spring is finally here! This is the time to renew and reassess. Do you have a house to sell? Is there a listing you’ve had for a while that is not going anywhere? In our neighbourhood a house has been on sale for months now. Curious, I went there one Sunday to see what could be deterring buyers. The answer was at once clear: no presentation. It was hard to see beyond the mediocre, uninviting exterior and the vaguely cluttered interior. The house actually had good ‘bones’ but I really had to make an effort to see that. No wonder no one wanted to buy it!

Now that good weather is here, you may want to step back and review what is working and what is not working in your sale process. Do you have a fabulous presentation?
If you have not yet considered staging your property for sale, this is the time. To stage a home simply means to present it in the best way possible. This maximizes the home’s benefits so that prospective buyers get a true picture of its potential.

Why stage? For starters, when you put your house up for sale you need to consider how it will be perceived by potential buyers. You need to showcase it as the best property within the buyer’s price range. This only makes sense. How will your market know your home’s worth if it’s hiding behind piles of clutter or personal knick-knacks? When prospective buyers arrive at your door they have already determined that the property suits their basic needs. Now they need that decision to be validated and reinforced. They need to walk in and say “We want to live here!”

Staging a home basically follows a three-pronged approach for each area of the house:

1) De-cluttering and organizing

2) Providing functionality and purpose

3) Creating focal points and accents

If you are planning to move anyway, why not do some advance packing? That itself will take care of the majority of your clutter. If you don’t use it, lose it. Either donate it, recycle it or throw it away, but let it go! Once that’s done, you’ll be able to give each room a clearer sense of purpose.

Does your office look like a spare bedroom? Maybe it needs more definition. Buyers like to see rooms performing a specific function, even if they may not use that same room for that same purpose. Professional stagers try to use furniture and accessories that the home owners already have, so the cost is usually minimal. The secret is to use the right things in the right way in the right room. You can do this yourself by browsing through home décor magazines. What works? How can you translate that to your situation?

Try to detach yourself and look at your home with the fresh eyes of a prospective buyer who has just stepped through the door. What do you see? Are your eyes drawn to a point of focus in the room?

Your home may even require painting or minor repair, but by investing some time and elbow grease, and usually not a whole deal of money, you can make your house shine. You can make the next prospective buyer who walks in go “Wow!”

Statistics from independent real estate studies show that staged homes sell about 50% faster, for 17% more money. Take advantage of the departure of snow and the arrival of new energy and vision with making a list of what could be done to sell your home in an easier, faster and more profitable way. And then work on it.

Just give it a shot!