Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Dye Crystals

Navy Dye Crystals
I left some navy dye in a cup for several days, and it decided to grow crystals, right up the side of the plastic cup and out at the top.  Doesn't it look like cedar branches?  One of many mysteries of the dye studio.  Crystals are formed as the chemicals align at a molecular level.  If you make a pot of dye and it doesn't arrange its own molecules into crystals, chances are that you have either kept it too long or don't have the right chemistry going on.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Geocaching

Geocaching, Found It!

Geocaching is a fun sport, or activity, or lifestyle.  Did you know there are about one million hidden signature logs or little treasure boxes all over the world, which you can find using a Global Positioning Satellite receiver?  When you find one, you log your visit and sometimes (if the container is big enough) you take a trinket and leave a trinket.  Here I'm showing that geocaching will melt your hair if you do it at noon in the Summer in the woods.   Its good exercise and uses your creative sense, because these are often hidden in very good camoflaouge.    (Camo, as I like to say since it is hard to spell.  )  

Children especially love it.  Last week, we took a friend's daughter who is about 8, geocaching in downtown Tahlequah.  Several people wanted to know what we were looking for as we circled around and around a park bench downtown.  We were looking on the underneath side of the bench for a magnetic little micro-sized keyholder-type container.  But we guessed wrong about the size.  It turned out to be just a teensey lil bolt-sized magnetic log to sign, and we were off about the location too.

Some of the best geocaches are big hefty ammo boxes hidden deep in the woods, where you have to hike and there are no trails.  We call it bushwhacking.  We lunge thru the greenbriars, startle the deer, watch for the snakes, roll over the big rocks, climb the cliffs, and whatever else it takes to navigate the terrain.  We like the woods, and this gives a purpose to our trek.  We lap up the exercise and the activity away from our desks.  And as we go, we have a sense of adventure and accomplishment.  We've found about 175 geocaches and we have hidden about 15 geocaches in different places for others to find.  We've helped about a dozen people go geocaching for the very first time:  Gail Ross, Sara Cordle, Ed & Terri Fite, Ray Goldman, Katy & Josh Brinkley, Terra Bellamy & Family, and others.

About the treasure:  Sometimes the best geocaches are only published to premium members at geocaching.com because those are the more serious geocachers and they don't want "muggles" to stray upon their boxes and loot the treatures for trade.  When you take something from a box, you have a duty to put in something for trade which is of equal or greater value.  Some of our best trades have been for a picture from the grave of Jack Kerouac, gold coins, pretty feathers, and gear like caribiners, insect repellent wipes, coozies, bungee cords, etc.

Read some of our adventures by searching for "Fluffy & Friedrick" at http://www.geocaching.com/ .  We encounter snake dens, rock climbing tasks and more. 



Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Back From Hiatus

Zigmund Cadbury Snugglesworth

I've been on hiatus for a couple of days, but now I'm back.  If the weather clears up, I'll be posting some new art.  Just to keep things going, the next few days I apologize for the stifling indoor flash photos.  But I found this lovely pic from last week of our male British Shorthair, Ziggy.  He's such a doll to help me when I'm laying out a backdrop to take a picture.

And if you missed Cinco De Mayo, our little town of Stilwell had quite the hoedown.  Live music and fresh home made tamales and corn soup were just a few of the delights.  Thanks to Maria Maldonaldo at Cafe Mariachi who coordinated the event and made the paper flowers for the stage.



Monday, April 26, 2010

Cowboy Skirt Canvas

Cowboy Skirt Canvas
I just got this cool setup of stuff that lets me put a design on canvas.  I found spoonflower.com which is custom-printed fabric, so for a few days I've been working on a design for a yard of the (expensive) fabric for a skirt.  I don't know if I'll ever actually buy the fabric--- it would be about $50 just for the material.  But the thought of  wearing a skirt from my own graphics is thrilling!

So here is my first canvas project.  Would you wear a skirt of this fabric?  Here are some of the design elements:  swirl from a tiedye shirt; Easter picture of our grandson, Kai, digitally altered; pics of Elvis (an art card I made), my mother with a feather headdress, and an art card with Frieda Kahlo and Dia De Los Muertos images (which doubles as a $45 train ticket and reminds the ticketee not to leave their coat on the train); stretched tiedye and some photophop stripes; Cherokee Language Exam study sheet repurposed as a collage background with a tiedye dinner nap medallion.  Voila!  Pop it into a frame and you've got a wonderfully wierd piece of lil art, 8x10 inches.

The canvas process lends itself to more conventional (and more useful) applications.  Send me your biggest version of your fave pic and let me put it on canvas so you can frame it and put it on the wall.  My services:  $18 plus shipping (and this includes optimizing and balancing the image).  Now I want to put all my old antique pictures of ancestors and family groupings on canvas!