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May 30, 2008

wee drawings


wee drawing no. two
Originally uploaded by swallowfield

happy friday! the giant rhodedendron bush in my front yard is crazy in bloom all of the sudden, i've crossed a lot of things off a rather annoying to-do list this week, there's some fresh mint in the fridge that may make it into a mojito or two sometime this weekend, and i am in a very happy place.

i wanted to tell you that i started a little series of wee drawings on the pages of a few different vintage books, and i'm listing them in my etsy shop as i go. a lot of people email me about buying original drawings, which up to now i have not posted in the shop, so this is a new avenue for me. these are small and affordable and i'm having a lot of fun making them - i hope you like them too.

have a wonderful weekend!

May 29, 2008

butterfly garden

this is a collage i made a few days ago. it's loosely based on a photograph of the butterfly garden at the charlotte rhoades park in southwest harbor, maine. we went to a butterfly release there last summer and it was pretty special - i had never seen that many butterflies at once and i loved it. (while i was trying to take some pictures during the release my kids made a few visits to the sweets table of refreshments, spun out of control and we had to beat it out of there in a hurry, but but that's another story. and probably why i never posted any pictures from that day. it wasn't pretty.)
Butterfly_garden_collage
there are a lot of lovely flowers around right now. i can't stop taking pictures of them.
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some thanks:
i was honored to be a part of design for mankind's gorgeous e-zine this month. take a gander if you haven't seen it yet, it's chock full of great inspiration.
and i was flattered and really appreciated being written about on the hallmark magazine blog.

oh! and thanks for your nice comments on my last post - glad you loved the cake! i hope it turns out well for you if you make it.

ps: meg is so funny. this is part of the reason why i love her so.

May 27, 2008

first date chocolate cake

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we had some friends over for dinner for the first time the other night.  i felt all nervous, and tried to cook a yummy dinner +  set a nice table.  we even vacuumed. the dessert i made was a little bit showy, but hopefully didn't come off as trying too hard to make a nice impression. i decided it was first date cake - you know, the cake that whispers:

she doesn't make this for just anyone, you know...she usually gets thai takeout and stares despondently  at her guests whilst nursing a beer. she even vacuumed and washed her hair for you, folks. i guess she must like you or something.

it's not too hard to make - i love to do it when i'm in the right mood.
almost flourless bittersweet chocolate cake with ground almonds

first date cake:
3/4 cup sugar
4 eggs, separated
3/4 cup unsalted butter
6 oz good quality bittersweet chocolate
3 Tbsp ground almonds ( I grind them up in the cuisinart)
4 Tbsp flour

beat the sugar and egg yolks in an electric mixer on medium speed until  mixture is pale yellow and silky.   meanwhile, melt chocolate and butter  on low heat.  add egg mixture to  melted chocolate  mixture and let it cook slightly, for maybe two minutes, stirring gently over very low heat.   stir in almonds and flour; remove from heat.  beat egg whites with an electric mixer until stiff peaks form.  gently fold the egg whites  into the chocolate mixture until just combined - batter will be a lovely pale color + a bit fluffy.  pour the batter into a greased and floured 9 inch round cake pan. if there are lots of air bubbles, tap the pan against the counter to pop them. bake cake at 375 degrees for 25-30 minutes. cool.   once it's completely cooled, invert the cake onto a plate or cake stand.

frosting:
3 1/2 oz. bittersweet chocolate
3 Tbsp regular or decaf coffee
3 Tbsp unsalted butter

melt ingredients together over very low heat, stir until well combined.  immediately pour hot frosting over the cooled cake and spread it around a bit, letting it drip over the sides.  chill  in the fridge for a bit, then for extra oomph-factor, add  a bunch of fresh raspberries  (i used two pints) on the top and sides of the cake.  it's yummy and it looks really lovely, too.

ps: the dinner was fun. i think we'll do it again sometime. :)

May 23, 2008

blooms + and a little interview

i've got a serious love affair going on with lilacs right now. they smell so delicious!
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i also have a little bit of new art to show you:
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and a new interview on stephanie levy's blog (thank you so much for asking me, stephanie!):

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have a lovely weekend.

May 22, 2008

strong arm bindery :: interview + studio tour

if you live in portland, maine, and happen to have any kind of artistic inkling anywhere in your soul, you've probably come to appreciate what i'm about to tell you: diane toepher at ferdinand is kind of like mr. bacon himself  in the six degrees of kevin bacon game, only in the arty/crafty/music world. but portland is small, so i like to think of it more like the two degrees of diane

last winter, thanks to diane, i had the absolute pleasure to meet martha kearsley - proprietress of strong arm bindery and all around badass. martha is an old-school book binder, and she does antique book restorations, has a studio to die for (on the second floor...but we'll get to that in a minute), recently opened an etsy shop where she gets to display many of her other cool projects. i was happy to find that she also started a blog, which details some of her many adventures and processes.
Marthas_desk
i recently got to spend some time with martha in her studio, and she graciously indulged me taking some pictures and patiently answered the many questions i had about her various  tools, some of which are positively huge.  *she got an excellent smile on her face when she explained how a few things had come to land in her studio...something involving a trip to massachusetts with a flatbed truck, at least one sibling, friends, the removal of a window, and a crane. see why i call her a badass?

i asked her some questions that she was nice enough to answer for me so i could share them with you - i hope you enjoy! 

it looks like you've created your dream job. can you tell me how you got started?

It took a while for it to bubble to the surface, but once I figured out I wanted to be a bookbinder I had the good fortune of getting in to the bookbinding program at North Bennet Street School in Boston. Short of finding a full-on apprenticeship --which would be pretty rare these days, much less back in the early 90s-- I don't think I would have found such a comprehensive, all-consuming level of training anywhere else. Another thing that happened early on, during my 2nd year at NBSS, was that I got a part-time position as a technician at Harvard's conservation lab (now the Weissman Preservation Center). That position, which I've maintained pretty much over the last 14 years, except when I was in Chicago, introduced me to the handwork and mind-set of conservation practices. Those two places (and people and things) have defined whatever trajectory I've been on ever since.

share a typical day in the studio.

Today was fairly typical. I started off with some vigorous list-making and then cooked up some wheat paste. I have three different projects that need printed spine labels, so I pared down pieces of calfskin and backed them with Japanese tissue--I left those on a board to dry and they'll be ready to print tomorrow. I finished a screw-post binding--drilled the holes and put in the posts--and a clam-shell box to house it(that's just waiting for a spine label to get printed and then that project's done). I did some blabbing on the phone with a distributor of bookcloth--he was actually asking my opinion about a finish on a cloth I'd used in the past before he went ahead and got the mill to make a bunch more (this is a really small crowd I'm working in). Towards the end of the day I started cutting, folding and pressing paper for blank text blocks. Those will wind up as journals on my Esty site. And I finished the day by cleaning up the joint; washing my brushes, clearing the benches and sweeping the floor.
Book_spine
you do a mix of work for libraries and institutions and some for yourself. does it feel like a good mix? can you tell me about any new projects you've got percolating?

So far it's been a great mix. The library and institutional work has been very challenging--a lot of it requires problem solving and researching materials. It's also been the work that's sustained the business so far, and I pay very close attention to that. The last few years I've been branching into my own stationery work, and I really want to build that up. More often than not, I find the materials I'm compelled to use in my own work are things I've leaned on for conservation and repair work---and these are usually materials produced on a small scale from traditional skills and handwork. A good example is the Cave Paper I use on the Rat Bastard books I make; it's also the same paper I just used to re-case an 18th Century account ledger. The fiber content, the dyes used, and the means of production are all appropriate for the ledger---they also happen to be a dream to work with and print beautifully in my shop with the tools I have.
Rat_bastards
Right now, big plans for my own work include designing the stationery pieces from the inside-out. We have a couple really great printing machines in the shop (offset and letterpress) and I want to start providing "content" for blank journals--say organizing the pages of a gardening journal, or a weather journal, or just a really kick-ass lined diary. And graph paper--I'll be making my own graph paper in the months to come and it will be mighty.

what are some of your favorite tools in your studio?

My absolute favorite tool has gone AWOL for a couple months---and actually, it was sitting on my bench my first day of school at North Bennet Street. It's a 15cm beautifully machined Starrett ruler--the thing measures like a champ; it's easy to read in both metric and the King's way. And I have to find another one soon. I'm also quite fond of my Vernier calipers, which will translate the width of a book spine any way you want. I love my knives--- there's one for edge paring leather, one for lifting paste downs, and one I made special for fights in the alley. And then there's big love--BIG LOVE--for the board shears.
Board_shears

what's it been like getting started on etsy? are you enjoying being there?

Etsy's been really interesting, and a very welcome tool. It's made the prospect of starting up a line of stationery pieces much more manageable, and it's provided a form of feedback--on a variety of fronts--that's been absolutely invaluable. The work I'm drawn to is, and probably always will be, pretty labor intensive. This seems to be happily accepted and encouraged by the Etsy community, and has diminished my concerns about producing material for a wholesale market. I'm working the Etsy site in an incubator fashion; seeing what gets a big response, what doesn't, what prices work, etc. And I think it's changed how I design my pieces. Rather than planning for one holiday sale or craft fair, and putting all my efforts into a couple things that I think/hope will be found appealing, I'm producing more items on a smaller scale, throwing them up there and seeing what kind of response they get. And it's all in real time---I think it's a very cool machine.
Marthas_tools
anything else you'd like to say?

Just my heart-felt thanks for your curiosity and your great questions.

thanks so much, martha!
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May 20, 2008

girls weekend

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last weekend i got the chance to head to brimfield with meg and betsy for 33 hours (who's counting?) of totally fun grownup girl time. we had some excellent thrifting adventures, happily poking around until we were tired and sunburned and ready to go back to the hotel + grab some dinner. i couldn't figure out why my back was aching so much by the end of the day...turns out i had accidently carried a bunch of rocks around in my shoulder bag all day - they'd been in there since the kids handed them to me on a recent beach trip. d'oh!
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after a sound night's sleep (rare around here, since most nights one or both kids seem to wiggle their way in with me before morning) we headed back to brimfield on sunday morning for a few more hours...and we landed on a flurry of good finds all at once. meg makes a super-cute high-pitched humming sound when she finds something excellent, and we heard that sound several times on sunday.  brimfield is absolutely huge and overwhelming, but so much fun. i enjoyed carrying my newly lighter, rock-free bag as well. :)
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all in all, a perfect time. ((and you can see meg and betsy's great finds here and here.))

from top to bottom, my finds:
::  a nice white round planter, filled with assorted vintage trims and a lifesaving patch (and you can see a bit of a celadon green homer laughlin bowl in the backround)
::  a west german vintage vase, which i LOVE, and two white divided dishes (we eat a lot of carrots and hummus around here, so they'll be perfect)
:: a rad set of vera pillowcases
:: assorted ephemera for art-making
:: four patterned and nicely sized glasses
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May 14, 2008

unexpectedly good stuff all around

Img_4582 my painting class was great fun last weekend. i got to do 16 hours of encaustic painting over two days, and i loved it! i have long been drawn to encaustic work, and had tried at one point to figure out the technical stuff on my own so i could give it a whirl, but it was too much for my little brain.  i'm glad i waited - the instructor was terrific , and  i learned proper safety precautions to boot, which is probably a very good thing. it is not very often that i love the smell of art supplies (i don't share the love some friends have for eau d'permanent markers - you know who you are) but the wax used in encaustic painting has a delicious aroma. plus, all of the  steps involved in the process and tools i learned to use made me feel kind of cool - i admit it. i wasn't a girl who was super handy with a paint stripping heat gun before, but now...you should see me. :) i think i might need a holster for it or something.

here are some experiments from the weekend:
Mosaic7967492

being at the art school all weekend reminded me of how much i love school, and the occasional chance to step out of my everyday life from time to time to try something new.  it made me feel kind of totally giddy. and when the class was over i had an excellent  mothers day sushi dinner with my family, who even got dressed up for the occasion. i can't get chase to take off his sweatband to wash it (it's totally gross + crusty, but he loves it,) but the rest of him was unusually clean + dressed in completely random clothes that he thought i would like.  my heart melted into a puddle on the floor, joining the miso soup that was also spilled under there. 

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other things:

  • my art space(s) are on modish this week. thanks jena! things aren't currently looking so tidy. you're not invited into my basement until i do a little cleaning, okay?
  • i've recently noticed that waxed handlebar moustaches are back in fashion. who knew? 
  • my friend betsy brought me back some stumptown coffee from her trip to that other portland. my favorite!  and while she was out there, she happened to meet one of my favorite bloggers. i love small world stuff like that!
  • i planted some seeds today. what do you think the chances are i can nurture their little souls into something + not kill them? time will tell.
  • my good friend nicole's funny + excellent parenting zine, hausfrau*, was adapted into a one-woman show by another very talented friend who performed it for the first time last night at portland stage company as part of their little festival of the unexpected. i got to go, and it was incredible. local people, i highly recommend you go and see it on saturday if you can.  (*and did i tell you she has a hausfrau book coming out next year? i can't wait.)

May 11, 2008

mothers day

Mommewishing a very happy mothers day to my own dear sweet mom today.
xoxo

May 09, 2008

old sap

it's been a busy week. does may feel crazy busy to everyone else, too?  i'm heading into a full weekend, as well - i'll be taking a weekend-long painting class i've been waiting a long time for, and i'm really excited about it. (more on that next week, especially if i like as much as i think i will.) 

the kids are super jazzed about mothers day all of the sudden, which is just about killing me. it might be my "woman-time" right now (did you watch 30 rock last night? so funny) but i suddenly find myself getting all teary at the mothers day commercials that are meant to make you all teary. i used to give myself more credit, but not anymore. i'm turning in to sappypants-mccheesymom. i loved this post over at angry chicken about mothers day, too. an early happy mothers day to all of you mothers out there - you have a hard-ass job and you deserve a little something special that will make you feel happy and loved.

this is new today. i woke up with it in my head, and felt happy that i had the chance to sit and make it come to life. i love it when that happens! 
Tempo_70_etsy

have a wonderful weekend.

May 07, 2008

::

thanks to grace for writing about my laptop skin on design*sponge!  that was cool.
Design_sponge
i'm feeling kind of quiet + bored with myself this week, but have been busy making things... so i'll share those with you instead.
Steamer
i've been thinking a lot about wanting to pair old iconic images with modern design elements. this is a loose interpretation of an old steamer ship coming into port in bar harbor around the turn of the century.  it's my first attempt at drawing a steamer ship.

Pollinate_etsy
this is my representation/loose interpretation of pollinating. or something. it's design-y, and i had fun making it. :)

enjoy the beautiful spring weather...we're off to little league.  +  black flies...