Thursday, 31 May 2012

Housemoving card


An Englishman's home is his castle, isn't it?
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Brummie


Lettering on teeshirt. Some of my students have been doing lettering on fabrics and I used this to demonstrate the use of a freezer paper stencil with fabric paint.
[For readers of my earlier posting where I wrote with white gloss paint on a black teeshirt, to see what happened, it didn't work. The colour has sunk into the fibres and none remains on the surface. I am left with an unpleasantly-paint-smelling teeshirt with no lettering. So that answers that!]
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Comenius


28 x 20.5 A fairly pedestrian piece, with not a lot to recommend it. (Must do better!)
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Martha Graham


24 x 21 What a wonderful lady Martha Graham must have been. Great words. This is certainly not my finest work - I will probably re-visit it at some point. It deserves it.
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My haiku


22 x 9.2 I absolutely love this! Small, but (in my eyes) perfectly formed. My words. Mixed media. Nuf sed.
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Boethius


25.3 x 21.2 Photocopied crinkled background. Would probably have worked better with better paper.
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Only


25.6 x 12 Mixed media
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The evil that men do


32.1 x 13.8 One of my first goes at doing the scrunched cling-film background.
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Cricket


22.2 x 23.5 My Dad was always a cricket fan, and although I don't know the first thing about the game I remember as a child listening to the droning tones of John Arlott on the 'wireless' on hot summer afternoons. Although I hadn't the first clue as to what they were on about, I found the commentary strangely comforting and reassuring and didn't mind at all listening to it.
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Cardinal Newman


20.9 x 29.7 This is one of my all-time favourite quotes, which all calligraphers everywhere should take to heart. We, as artists, are always super-self-critical about our work. If someone, somewhere, thinks what we are doing is rubbish there is going to be someone, somewhere else, who thinks its wonderful. You can't please all of the people all of the time. The most important person to please is YOU! When you have just completed a piece of work you should put it away out of sight and forget about it. Several months later, when you have forgotten all about it, it turns up amongst your stuff, you will be able to evaluate it dispassionately. Sometimes you will think, "What a duff piece of work" and chuck it. Other times you will think, "This is quite nice - did I do that?" Go with your gut feeling.
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