Reflections and Decisions

It’s been a while!

Summer finished on a high note, and after a turbulent fall, I returned to the mountains proper for a new job in town. It was only supposed to be part time until I could move back to the city, but you know how things are… looks like I’m staying for the foreseeable future. This time though, I’m happy and have a place to go within the company in the future :)

That wasn’t the only change: I moved once this past fall, once to a new place in said mountain town, and just recently again. It was another big eye opener to what I could live with in good conscious, and although the rent was good, it wasn’t worth the worry. I’ve got a new place and I love it dearly :) in fact, I’m going to find some plants today to brighten up the space!

With all this change, it’s also made me realize that I want to bring some change to my artwork. As much as I really do love the style I’ve been working in the last three years, I do want to expand out. I’ve been feeling a bit caught, and I need some breathing room. Which is why I’m dedicating the rest of this year to trying new things and experimenting. The piece below is the first of this branching out, and I’m super excited to see where the summer will go :)

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Summertime... Madness??

Hey folks! 

We're in the thick of summer here, and I am back in Canada. I've been back for almost a month now (wow, that's insane), and have been trying to take it easy, but not entirely succeeding. For a good reason! I'm very pleased to say that I'm participating in some Farmers Markets and Art Walks this summer! If you are in the Edmonton area, I have a table at the Fort Saskatchewan Saturday market, a table at the Redwater market on Tuesdays, and I will be a part of the St Albert Art Walk next week (August 2nd) and on September 6th. It's been, so far, a REALLY cool experience, and I have to say, selling my work has been an experience I will never fully adjust to. It still blows my mind that people like my stuff enough to spend money on it. I'm EXTREMELY thankful and happy that they do, I just have really bad self esteem. But if it brings them joy or inspiration, then it makes my heart feel full. 

Because of all the markets, I've also been doing more work as a result, and I have some REALLY exciting stuff in the pipeline :) I can't wait to share it with you all! I'm finally finishing up some projects I started last year, and expanding on others. 

But it's definitely meant that, although I don't have a standard job, I'm busy more often than not! And it will continue for the rest of the summer, in what will hopefully remain an exciting and educational time.

Stay wild!

Ink of the Permanent Kind

Tattoos! Polarizing, beautiful, big, small, you name it, tattoos pretty much are it. I've been wanting one for years, but didn't know what to get, and I certainly didn't have the money. Those are pretty important, if you want something this permanent on your body for forever. Therefore, getting one wasn't high on my list of things to do or get for a very long time. 

But, as of today, that's changed! 

It all started last year, when I was wanting to get some ink before the summer, but I was at that point saving for a very large project, and I was still settling on ideas. I wanted an owl, and, I'd decided, I wanted my wolves as well. The owl I'm still not sure just where to put it, but Paavo, Eha, and Alver are now preserved in permanence on my right forearm. And they look beautiful

I'd gone back and forth on what I wanted them to look like; initially, I wanted them to be a geometric, simple design, but as time wore on and my dreams got a little bigger, the design evolved. In fact, I had to pull it back just so they'd be doable and wouldn't break the bank. I saved from March to October, drew and hemmed and hawed over what I wanted, and kept telling myself 'Okay, I'm going to go in on THIS DAY, and book my appointment!'

I was going to get this done back in October, so you can see how well that worked out. Finally, after an art class, and with my bestie at my side, I got up the nerve to go up and talk to the artist.

Except he wasn't there. But I wasn't foiled, as I got his business card, and I sent him a text over dinner (whilst internally freaking out). He got back to me, and he couldn't have been nicer. When we met a week later for my consult, he was open to ideas, enthusiastic, and just generally awesome. The seeds of excitement were planted. I gave him my marker drawing that I'd done the night before of the wolves, and he went from there. The wolves on my arm are his design, but he did them justice in a way I never dared hope. Two weeks from that meeting, I would be back and I'd be getting the ink done. 

I prepped like crazy for this, perusing all sorts of subs and sites that dealt with tattoo work, buying snacks, preparing sugary drinks, food, the whole shebang. When I walked in this afternoon, I was physically ready to go. My stomach was in knots, but not because I was worried about regretting it. No, sitting there today, I knew this was not going to be a regret in any way. My anxiety was over how much this was going to hurt. You hear the horror stories, you expect the worst, and then it happens, and you know what? It hurts, yeah, but it's not mind bogglingly awful . It felt like a wasp sting, but less painful. The needle going in feels like that initial sting, but unlike the sting, it doesn't linger. Right now, typing this, it fees a bit like a sunburn, and it's not really uncomfortable. I know it's there, but it's not bad. 

Now begins the healing, and the planning for the next ;)

If you happen to be in Canmore, the guys at New World Samurai will treat you right and give you some art you'll love. My artist was Ben, and I can't recommend him enough.

For now, my wolves will be with me forever. 

 

Enter Safari, nursery style

For all my painting supplies, I don't really paint a lot anymore. Ever since I finished at ACAD, all my finished work has been digital, and all traditional work has been in pencil, marker, and sometimes pen, so this was a wonderful return to the past! 

My friend, Jaylene, and I were approached by our mutual friends to paint their nursery; we said yes, rose glasses on, and thus began the journey into the proverbial wild. 

I'm embellishing for fun, this actually went very well! I had some reservations going into this, mostly based off of how I have reacted in group art situations in the past (I'm a stubborn, prickly human in those scenarios), but Jaylene and I were able to work through it. We had some arguments that got rather loud, but nothing that ever got heated. There may have been some paint fights though. 

The initial idea took some time, and Jaylene handled the first sketchings, which I then used to draw my rendition of the scene. We used my scene base for the initial drawing, and then combined our designs for the animals. It was pretty true to form, minus one male lion, whom we both ended up hating and cutting from the final painting. The piece works better without him! 

We used regular house paint for almost the entire painting (monkey was the exception), and it was the first time I'd used house paint as a fine art medium. As it was a latex base, it wasn't that different from normal acrylic craft paint, which was great; it behaved fairly similar to craft paint, although it wasn't as delicate in action. It certainly was pretty great for large areas, and most of it covered really well, but it wasn't that great for small areas or detail. Opacity issues became apparent when I started painting the details on the lion cub, and then again on the giraffe. Craft paint has, in my experience, been very good with its opacity, and had I had the budget for it, I honestly would have preferred this painted entirely with craft acrylic. However... it wasn't the end of the world, and we were able to make it work successfully. The lack of opacity did end up helping with the blending, and blending nicely. 

We tried to keep everything fairly flat, once we started into fine tuning and detailing, but that always wasn't successful (cough cough tree trunk, lion, cough cough); all the animals got a nice black outline, while the foliage and scenery remained blank. Finishing up ended up being very quick, and the end result was a mural everyone was happy with. 

I'm so happy we did this: the nursery looks awesome, friends are happy, and I remember how awesome painting is. I can't wait to do another :)