Saturday, January 28, 2023

My JIYA Journal

I bought Megan Quinlan's 
class Journal into Your Art in October last year and it re-inspired my monthly journal practice in November and December
See her video on Youtube about this class here. I had decided not to continue with a monthly journal practice in 2023, but I've been missing documenting and writing to support good self-care. My experiences in those last 2 monthly journals last year were trying out ideas on file folder bases. This time I've made a proper JIYA journal sticking more closely to the lesson plan. 
I am so excited to have started working in this journal. 
Megan provides some formulas so that you can create pages with enjoyment and freedom instead of wondering how to start. 
It's also a really freeing experience because she gives us permission to jump around in the journal instead of going from first page to last and I can just do the next thing I want to do and not have to finish a page until I feel moved to. I love this punched circle giving a glimpse into the page beyond.
I'm including focal images cut from old calendars and magazines 
and 
want to include more faces and female forms in my work so I've been thinking about how I've done that previously and I'm linking here to the relevant blog posts for my future reference : using magazine collage, silhouettes of figures and faces
and using stencils.
With gifted Christmas money I treated myself to these stencils by Leaca Young
I figured since I had to pay international postage I might as well make it worth my while. Not sure how long they will take to arrive from Alaska but I'm very excited for when they do! She has a cool technique where she uses her face stencils on the gelli plate and that also got me thinking about using the gelli plate to transfer magazine images. I'm sure this will be one of those journals where more ideas come as I work into it so I'll share more progress in my monthly reviews

Tuesday, January 10, 2023

January Fodder School : Part 1

Our January lessons for Fodder School are with Liz Constable of Book Art Studios. As always, the lessons released at the beginning of the month are to make the fodder, and the second (released mid-month on the 15th) are to use the fodder. Liz's focus is on using materials easily found and inexpensive and using your creativity to add the 'special sauce'. I took this advice and didn't buy anything new for this project - it's fitting in well with my quest to be more Sustainable this year. I hope you enjoy the photos. I just adore all the papers and fabrics and want to capture them here for later delight. Click on any photo to see the texture up close.
I don't think I'm giving anything away about this technique by letting you know the colour bases for the different effects. First coffee 
These are (expired) food colouring
I had to have another session trying some more delicate colours with Tsukineko inks I had been gifted a couple of years ago.
And then a third session from a bonus lesson with Ricki Midbrod...cos fabric! I used the same inks above combined with the coffee to grunge them up. 
And then we had another bonus lesson with Tiffany Sharpe where she shared more tips I had to try : different fabric play where you get dyed paper and fabric from one process
and I loved the delicate colour of the hibiscus tea. My teabags are a mix of hibiscus and blueberry - so many variations depending on the paper used 
...and then since I had everything out I had one final play before I decided I had more than enough for when the project lesson is delivered mid-month! 
It's great to have so many options with colours that co-ordinate and also have different values of light to dark. So lucky I've been on holiday and could get so deep into these techniques. 
Taking a photo of the tags reminded me of the tag project Liz shared in the Free Fodder challenge in July last year which I didn't have time for. I also modified the lesson from Karen Elaine to make a pocket fodder book that could work with larger tags. All those July lessons are also available if you join Fodder School 2.
Back views
And here's a video of the entire book - I love the sounds of the paper and tags

You may have seen that the title of this post is Part 1. I will share again when I use the piles of goodness to create the project - less than a week until those lessons drop. I'm sure you'll also see these elements appearing in my other work. You can still join us in Fodder School and/or Liz has a class and a book (available Feb 2023 - currently you can pre-order) where you can explore some of these techniques (although lessons in Fodder school had a unique spin I believe). What a fabulous way to start the year with so much inspiring colour and texture.

Sunday, January 1, 2023

Review of 2022 and plans for a creative 2023

I always like to do a creative review of my year. It's great to celebrate everything I've done and I loved gathering projects from around my studio to take this photo.
Check out my Instagram or FB artist page to see photos of all the projects and play I've had this year since I do give some of my creations away. What follows are my favourites in a bit more detail.
At the end of last year I was admiring the small monthly Daily Creative Practice journals I was seeing around (especially Willa's collected from 2021 HEREand decided to make my own version.I did manage to create a book a month for the whole yearBy October I was flagging creatively with doing the same format every month so joined Megan Whisner Quinlan's class Journal into your Art- it was fun to take a different approach to my November and December journals and I'm so happy I completed the year.
I love that each journal is a reflection of my month last year - the techniques from classes I was doing, the amount of creative time I had, the seasons and important events. You can see all my posts about the individual journals by clicking here
I decided to cover a box to house them and happily I was gifted the perfect size for a secret santa gift. Just shows you shouldn't plan too far ahead. I just cut the top flaps off, ran masking tape over the 2 raw upper edges and then went looking through my papers. As soon as I saw a leftover strip from my snippet rolls I knew that would be perfect. I added a few more centimetres of stitching and love how that looks glued to the sides.
I put a scrap of underpaper on the bottom so I could keep the details of this project (including my personalised stamp)
The inside measurements of the box is 12.5cm (a whisker deeper than the width of journals) x 13 cm across the front. The finished journals stand 18cm high.
I've done other journal projects in the past that last a whole year but I'm going to take a rest from that in the 2023. I've been really interested in Wendy Solganik's blog series about Finding your Artistic style. There have been some things that have really resonated there, the most recent being Tamara JonesWhen you are taking a class and you think, “Wow, I could make a 100 of those.”  Listen to that voice!  You just found YOUR style!  Something that is part of you!  When you take many classes and keep hearing that voice with multiple different types of art, they are ALL your style. 
I felt like this with many of the book projects I made this year - this one is truly an example of my style : 
And this is just the base but I adored this class and want to spend time on filling it in my holidays.
One of the things about Instagram that I love is that if I look at my page, I can see my style on display with the common colours and things I love to return to making over and over - books, including stitch and found words, paua colours, fabric and paper together, stencils. 
In my last project for 2022 which I shared here I was limited to not include as many layers and texture, but it's still a book form and it's still my colours and words. 
As I start 2023 I am continuing with Fodder School 2 but not signing up for anything else at present so I am free to try anything that feels inspiring to me as the year unfolds. The only exception is that I keep thinking it would be great to have a small stitching project to take to my Monday night quilt group (since you may have noticed I didn't do any quilting last year!). I did start a stitched roll in 2020 but it was too much for me alongside everything else that happened to me that year. I have recently seen Roxy's Journal of Stitchery for 2023 which is a themed large snippet roll called "Down the garden path". I have the base photoraphed here next to a mixed media roll I completed in 2018.
The project begins on the first Wednesday of January and there will be a new video each Wednesday from Rachel and Sarah with new prompts being announced every 2 weeks until June.  
See the project intro and gathering supplies videos on YouTube here. I'll share if this becomes a project that I love. 
You may have come across the Word of the Year concept. You can find yours with Susannah Conway's guidance free here (password delight) or through Ali Edwards who has developed a year-long course. My word since 2017 has been SHINE and I change the focus slightly each year as I use it as an acronym. 
As I continue to Shine in 2023, I am supplementing my definitions for my words of Self-care, Home, Intentional, Notice and Ease with the word Sustainable. So far it's led me to ask : Will I be able to keep up this weekly or monthly challenge or do I want more freedom? Do I need to buy that thing or do I already have something already in my cupboard that I can use or alter? I want to continue to find value in what I already have.
I'll keep sharing my main projects on this blog, and probably an end-of-month review, but please check out my Instagram or FB artist page for more regular updates of my projects in progress. What are your creative plans for 2023? I wish you creative joy and discovery in the year ahead.
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