Sunday, May 5, 2013

The Language of Flowers

Hey Gang, I made this ATC for Alpha Stamps latest swap, The Language of Flowers. 
 
When I learned we would be doing a flower theme I decided it was time to pull some of my Waterhouse images, many featuring flowers, together.  I made two collage sheets, Waterhouse Beauties and Waterhouse Flowers, both on sale at Alpha Stamps so go check them out!
This ATC didn't turn out exactly how I wanted it to :(  I imagined a woman discovering a secret world of flowers but my colors are just off, oh well they can't all be beauties.  I used an image from my Waterhouse Beauties Collage sheet pictured above.
Please come join the fun swap!  It's easy and the pieces created are always gorgeous.  Click the image below for more information. 

 

Saturday, May 4, 2013

When in doubt, wear red ~ Paper Dress Shop

I ran across Manon's blog a few months ago and her bright happy style and love of paper houses inspired me to try my hand at creating my own. 
 
Welcome to
"When in doubt, wear red,"
a retro consignment shop with some very eclectic touches.
the brick work is made out of paperclay that I stamped into and then washed with brown ink. 
Gardens have grown wild all around the shop.
 
The windows are that old lovely thick glass with ripples in it. 
And out back hidden in the garden is where the magic happens.
I constructed a mini box to hold all the bits and pieces that make the shop light work. 
Yep, there is a working light inside the shop!
Stop by next week to see the inside.
 
I'm linking up to Paper Saturdays
come join us.
manonpopjes

Friday, May 3, 2013

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s third book, stands as the supreme achievement of his career. This exemplary novel of the Jazz Age has been acclaimed by generations of readers. The story of the fabulously wealthy Jay Gatsby and his love for the beautiful Daisy Buchanan, of lavish parties on Long Island at a time when The New York Times noted “gin was the national drink and sex the national obsession,” it is an exquisitely crafted tale of America in the 1920s.
 
The Great Gatsby is one of the great classics of twentieth-century literature.
 
I first read The Great Gatsby when I was seventeen and have good memories of reading it.  My book club decided that it would be a fun read because we could all go see the movie afterwards.  I was shocked at the number of members who had not ever read Fitzgerald.  Because it had been so many years I decided to re-read the book.  Get a new perspective of it now that I am older. 
The story is told from Nick Carraway's point of view who has broken from his mid western roots after WWI to sell bonds on the East Coast.  If I had one word to describe Nick it would be lonely, the entire book he clings to these horrible people.  At the end he even refers to his cousin Daisy and her husband Tom as "...careless people...they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they made..."
Mia Farrow as Daisy Buchanan 1974
 
Nick doesn't seem to have much of an opinion on his cousin, he portrays her as being shallow but Daisy seems desperate and sad more than anything else and the best line she has in the entire book shows that when she says, "All right...I'm glad it's a girl.  And I hope she'll be a fool-that's the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool." about her daughter.  The book takes place during the Women's suffrage movement, obviously Daisy is not sympathetic to their cause. 
 
Robert Redford as Gatsby 1974
 
Gatsby is an enigma wrapped inside of an enigma etc etc...that Nick becomes infatuated with.  Gatsby has made up an entirely fictional life for himself and you never really understand why because it seems that all he wants in the world is Daisy who met him many many years ago. 
 
I wonder if we as readers would feel empathy for Gatsby if the story was told from his point of view.  But I think Fitzgerald's entire point was to give an outsiders view of how destructive love and deceit can be. 
 
Sam Waterson as Nick Carraway 1974
 
Nick considers himself "...one of the few honest people..." Which makes it really hard to understand why he hangs out with these people.  They are all deceitful and dishonest.  It is the true mystery of the story and might very well be what makes The Great Gatsby so Great ;)

I am glad that I re-read the book.  After doing so I get the feeling I may have watched the movie more than reading the book as a teen and I am looking forward to seeing the updated version.  I hate to admit that the movie looks much more exciting than the book.
 

Ultimately the book is about missed opportunities, desperation, deceit and how these things destroy everything.  It is a classic and should be read by all no matter how much you think you hate it this is a book that you will talk about. 
 
I'm linking up with 
Come Join us!

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Creative Souls ATC Swap ~ Art Share

Last month's ATC swap at Creative Souls was so much fun. 
We were asked to use the bellow image.  My partner, Susan, of Lily & The Lotus - who is a very good friend - and I were paired up.  She ran with our friendship as her inspiration. 
She knows how much I love elegant things with glitter and she added just the right amount to the lovely ATC she made me.
Not only did she send me the gorgeous ATC but she also sent some fabulous goodies, the floral skinny paper I am using as a bookmark and I love DMC floss.  The white item is an absolutely stunning fairy scene stamped into clay. 
 
Thank you Susan I love it all!
You can see what I created for Susan HERE

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

April Art Giveaway Winners!

It's that time, time to announce the lucky winners of my April Giveaway. 
So without further ado
 
The Winner of Giveaway #1
is
 

Your giveaways are always filled with wonderful items to use. Love the Mini Kit...love them all actually LOL!! Thank you so much for a change to win one.

Happy creating!
Take care,
Diane
 
Winner #2
is
Tabitha who said...
bath bombs...bath bombs!!!!
i wish i had time to read! you always read the most interesting stuff
hugs
 
Sorry Tabitha, maybe I'll offer the bath bombs again next month.  Hope you like the Mother's Day Supply Kit.
 
And Winner #3
is
Ally White Cat who said...
Wonderful give away. Please add my name to the drawing..your blog gets more beautiful every time I come.
hugs
            susan s
 
Congratulations to all and thank you all for entering.  Please e-mail me your address, click on the e-mail me button on the left hand bar, and I will have these goodies out to you this week.

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

My Happy List

As I stated a few weeks ago, I am trying to re-organize my life right now.  Putting what is really important first and I have to admit it is very hard.  But what I have seen more than anything is that I have a lot more to be happy about now. 

1.  One of the many struggles we as a family have been dealing with is how to help our oldest daughter.  She has an extreme anxiety disorder along with ADHD (just diagnosed).  All year she has been struggling with reading.  It got to the point that I couldn't help her so we decided to get outside help, and have her going to Sylvan now.  Well, after a month she has not only shown improvement she has blossomed.  Yesterday she came home so proud of herself, she had been on a level C book, and skipped over level D and went right on to level E.  It was such a joy to see how proud she was of herself. 
  

2.  My youngest child is a hand full, she has more energy than the energizer bunny of acid and keeps me on my feet.  It is fun and exhausting at the same time.  When she sets her mind to something she does it, no matter how much work it takes.  Right now her favorite movie is Mirror Mirror, she watches it over and over and she loves this song.  Believe it or not my 3 year old can almost sing the entire thing!  She sounds so sweet and innocent when she does. 
3.  Art is not my first hobby, believe it or not I have been writing fiction for years.  I write because I have stories in my head, but I also have punctuation, spelling and sentence structure issues so normally what I write isn't very good but it makes me happy.  This past weekend I found time to write for the first time in months and it felt great!
  

4.  My sister came to visit a few weeks ago, it was wonderful to see her and the girls love their Aunt so much I think they might have been even more excited to see her.  Anyway, The Host is one of my sister and I's favorite books and neither of us had seen the movie so we went.  It was fabulous!  Spending time with my sister and sharing our love of books and the movies that are made afterwards has always kind of been our thing.  I am so glad we got to do it for The Host. 
5.  Last but not least the girls and I went on a little road trip this weekend.  We listened to the Soundtrack from Alice in Wonderland, they sang and I talked them through what was happening when there was no singing.  When we got to our destination they played for hours at a huge park and then we all went for dinner and ice cream.  They had so much fun and it was a delight to have them all to myself for a few hours. 
 
So there it is, my happy list for this week. 
It seems to be getting easier for me to put these together now that I am focusing on the positives in my life, so please come join us. 
Click the image below to link up.
  photo ArtatHomeButton_zps18898da7.jpg

Friday, April 26, 2013

The Painted Girls by Cathy Marie Buchanan

Paris. 1878. Following their father’s sudden death, the van Goethem sisters find their lives upended. Without his wages, and with the small amount their laundress mother earns disappearing into the absinthe bottle, eviction from their lodgings seems imminent. With few options for work, Marie is dispatched to the Paris Opéra, where for a scant seventy francs a month, she will be trained to enter the famous ballet. Her older sister, Antoinette, finds work—and the love of a dangerous
young man—as an extra in a stage adaptation of Émile Zola’s naturalist masterpiece L’Assommoir.

Marie throws herself into dance and is soon modelling in the studio of Edgar Degas, where her
image will forever be immortalized as Little Dancer
Aged Fourteen. Antoinette, meanwhile, descends
lower and lower in society, and must make the choice between a life of honest labor and the more profitable avenues open to a young woman of the Parisian demimonde—that is, unless her love affair derails her completely.

Set at a moment of profound artistic, cultural,
and societal change, The Painted Girls is a tale of two remarkable sisters rendered uniquely vulnerable to the darker impulses of “civilized society.”
Buchanan opens her novel with a quote from Le Figaro, 1880 "-No social being is less protected than the young Parisian girl-by laws, regulations, and social customs."
 
Sounds like a great start, doesn't it!
 
I was so excited to read this book, I fell in love with the cover and the book jacket summary sounded exciting, but they are marketing trickery. 
Little Dancer aged Fourteen
The novel is written in first person multiple point of view.  One story told by Antoinette and the other Marie Van Goethem.  But the writing isn't strong enough to carry off two different persona's, if the two girls stories hadn't been so different it would have been difficult to tell which sister was telling her tale.
 
In the end I wanted Marie's story to have been written by Susan Vreeland who wrote Clara and Mr. Tiffany, one of my all time favorite reads.  Buchanan and the book jacket write up lead me to believe there would be more interaction with Degas, and I wanted that, in fact there is very little.  I believe Susan Vreeland would have made this aspect stronger while maintaining the integrity of Marie's story. 
 
As for Antoinette I wanted her story to have been written by Emma Donoghue, she wrote Slammerkin, a gritty telling of a girl turned prostitute due to her love of clothing in the 1700's.  I believe that Donoghue would have pulled off Antoinette's decent into the gutter in a stronger manner. 
Rue de Douai, Paris
About 200 pages into the novel I wanted a better picture of how Marie viewed Lefebvre, her abonnes (a wealthy man who take ballerinas under their wing and pay, give gifts to and well you fill in the rest).  Buchanan doesn't even give a good physical description of him, how old is he, way too old or middle aged? (You find out much later) But since this portion of the story is told by Marie I expected to know how she felt about this man who was having such an impact on her life.
Antoinette was/is a character that I just don't understand and I chalk that up to an inability to empathise with her character.  Buchanan focuses so much on the characters flaws that you end up not liking anyone or really understanding their actions. 
Toward the end of the novel things get really unbelievable.  Antoinette has a complete reformation.  Up until now she has been a constant lier, even before her fall from grace, and fell so easily into Emiles hands. 
 
The final section of the novel is dated 1895 and to me was more of an Epilogue and should have been presented that way. 
New Caledonia, Paris
Normally I don't read the Author's notes but I was so disappointed with this book that I wondered what Buchanan had been thinking.  She talks about the below BBC Documentary influenced her writing.  I found the documentary much more interesting than the book and it took up a lot less time of my life. 
 

After reading the Author's note I wished there had been a Prologue.  Many of the things mentioned in the Author's note were not strong enough in her writing.  I am intrigued more by the author's note - Degas and the criminal mans anthropology connection-and possibly might have enjoyed the book more with this information being presented earlier.
Overall I was let down and feel that the title had a lot to do with that.  This book was not about Degas or the girls that posed for him.  It was about two sisters and how much their lives sucked. 
I give it 2 cupcakes.  
 
I am linking up with
come join us!
 

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Perfume Bottle Postcard Tutorial Part 2

Last week I shared with you Part 1 of how to create my Perfume Bottle. 
The first part of the tutorial covered up to this point, how to insert ice resin into a paper piece.  You can view the tutorial HERE
Today I will share with you how I finished up the project.
Step 1:
Prepare your embellishments by spray painting them with a white gloss paint..
The ones I used have been discontinued but a good substitute would be these
Step 2:
Print out Vintage French Ads digital collage sheet onto a clear sticker paper.
Step 3:
Cut out and place the label onto your Ice Resin Perfume Bottle.
Step 4:
Select a backing paper and trace an opening the size of the bottle onto it.
I used paper from the Lyric 6x6 Paper Pad
Step 5: 
Cover all edges with black ink.
 
Step 7:
Attach backing paper to chipboard using Rubber Cement.
 
Step 8:
By now the white paint should have almost completely dried. 
Using the same PearlEx powders I mixed into the Ice Resin,
I dusted the swirls with the powder.
And sealed them with a high gloss spray sealer/finisher.
Step 9:
Time to add some Dresden.
I used two, a gold (I would suggest
Baroque Gold Dresden Boarders to replace the gold I used which is no longer available) and the Half-Rounded Dresden Borders in pink
Cut them to size and glue them together.
Step 10:
Add some ribbon around the neck by poking holes to weave the ribbon through. 
Finish the ribbon off with some extra fibers and a pearl, see image below.
Step 11:
Attach Dresden on the front and back of the ice resin bottle. 
Step 12: 
Add your other embellishments,
 
You can stop here, but I wanted a back to write on, if you would like that too, continue on.
Step 13: 
Grab a piece of
Lightweight Chipboard Postcard and cover it with decorative paper.
My paper is from the Lyric 6x6 Paper Pad
Step 14:
Fold down a 1/4" to help the card sit like a triangle instead of with the back flush.  This will allow light in so your ice resin shows off.
Step 15:
Draw a pattern onto a template of your Ice Resin cut out. 
Step 16:
Poke holes through the chipboard to create the pattern. 
Doing this allows for a difference in light to show through the ice resin when the card is closed.
Step 17:
Sand the back of the card down smooth.
 Step 18:
Select a backing paper and attach using Rubber Cement.
I used a French inspired Post Card.
Here are your two piece separated.
 
Step 19:
Punch holes through the top, equal distance from one another, and reinforce with an eyelet. 
There are some really fun Heart Eyelets available through Alpha Stamps.
Step 20:
Weave the two pieces together with Strawberry Glaze Seam Binding.
And there you have it, 
all done!
This is what the card looks like open. 
And a view of the back, I added a Pink Rose from the Pink Roses Dresden Scraps and have room to write.
 I hope you enjoy!
Let me know if you have any questions and I look forward to seeing how you use all these wonderful products.