My son and his girlfriend are visiting for two weeks - the first time we have seen him in four years! So understandably postings as well as my own visits to all your beautiful blogs will be fewer for a while ... Am still going to try and fit weekwords in though!
xxx Anairam
Monday, November 16, 2009
Friday, November 13, 2009
Weekword: Lesson
Bear School, where ....

... the Three Bears have to learn ...

... their lesson ...

What do you think point 3 should be?

Figure 24: The Three Bears' Lesson
For more Lessons in Life, see Alexandra's blog !
... the Three Bears have to learn ...
... their lesson ...
What do you think point 3 should be?

Figure 24: The Three Bears' Lesson
For more Lessons in Life, see Alexandra's blog !
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Zines on my Mind
Zines are still very much on my mind. (I am contemplating mine ... and planning to execute it before February 2010). In the meantime I ordered Anthony Zinonos's Le Dot zine - it arrived on Monday. It is perfect.



How cool is that? See more of Anthony's work here.
How cool is that? See more of Anthony's work here.
Labels:
art,
books,
design,
etsy,
inspiration
Monday, November 9, 2009
Some more Stuff
This Saturday was ... car boot sale! Yayyyyy!! This is what I bought:

A half-used starter felting kit. It included some coloured woolly bits, a felting needle and a rectangular sponge. I am not quite sure how to use it, but I have already made a wonky heart. Stab, stab, stab. Quite good for working off aggression, I can imagine ...

A set of pastel-coloured plastic mugs. Interestingly, not made in China as I imagined, but in Thailand.

These lettering manuals. Who cares that I don't own a Speedball pen? I just love letters!

And an old set of metal signwriter stencils - I used them this weekend to make a colourful garland for a lovely, sweet friend who celebrated her birthday on Sunday - we had the most divine lunch at La Colombe to celebrate!
A half-used starter felting kit. It included some coloured woolly bits, a felting needle and a rectangular sponge. I am not quite sure how to use it, but I have already made a wonky heart. Stab, stab, stab. Quite good for working off aggression, I can imagine ...
A set of pastel-coloured plastic mugs. Interestingly, not made in China as I imagined, but in Thailand.
These lettering manuals. Who cares that I don't own a Speedball pen? I just love letters!
And an old set of metal signwriter stencils - I used them this weekend to make a colourful garland for a lovely, sweet friend who celebrated her birthday on Sunday - we had the most divine lunch at La Colombe to celebrate!
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Friday, November 6, 2009
Weekword: Hole
Fig. 23a This is not Whole
After I made my weekword drawing above, I googled the two words (whole and hole), hoping to find a poem that cleverly combined the two (like I had) to flesh out my 2-minute effort. But what I found was even better - an interview with a very interesting man - Arthur M. Young (1905-1995), mathematician, engineer (he invented the Bell helicopter) and philosopher. Read more about him here.
Fig. 23b Arthur M. Young's Torus Whole (with an infinitely small Hole)
From an interview with Arthur M. Young:
MISHLOVE: It (the torus) looks like a donut, for people who may not know.
YOUNG: A donut, right. Now, suppose you had a sphere, and there was a cow on the sphere and you put a fence around him. He can't escape. It's the same as a field. If you put a fence around the cow, he couldn't escape. But if you did this on the donut, provided the fence included the hole in the donut, the cow could escape through the hole. In other words, he wouldn't have to climb over the fence, he just goes into the middle and through.
MISHLOVE: And comes around out the other side. Because the inside and the outside are the same.
YOUNG: Right. This is an image for our separation from the universe. I'm separated from you and you're separated from me, but if we were to go into our inner life, we would join up in the divine spark. That's the center of this whole thing.
MISHLOVE: That's very profound.
----------
So there you have it. For more interpretations of the weekword "hole" see Linda Sue's blog here.
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Tiny Portraits
A while ago Sarah (clever creator of dolls and beautiful drawings) of Circles of Rain sent me a little journal. A teeny journal - the pages measure 1 cm x 1.8 cm. I decided to fill it with portraits - some of people I know, others imaginary.


The first journal I've finished! So that is the secret - keep it small.


The first journal I've finished! So that is the secret - keep it small.
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