tisdag 26 oktober 2010

private lessons

It's happened again, hasn't it? That resolution to blogg every day has already fallen by the wayside...
My excuse is that last week was packed with stuff. Lots to do at work, courses, things to prepare for Saturday when I spoke at a Womens' breakfast in the Missionshuset chapel in Krokek, and so on..
Amongst other things I had a visit from Lena and Kerstin, two sisters who are wonderful artists and who came to my home for private lessons in oil-painting. Lena came all the way from Stockholm and Kerstin lives here in Norrköping. I took some photos of their work which I was given permission to put up here on my blog. Lena's picture is painted from an old black and white photo of herself when she was dressed as a wood anenome (vitsippa in Swedish) for a dance class. Her daddy took a photo of her in the corner of the garden where the flowers were growing - isn't it precious? I've never met anyone as careful a painter as Lena - but then she used to be a dentist so maybe that helps!
Kerstin has a completely different style, just as lovely but less detailed. She's painting a picture of herself standing on a little bridge over a stream - gorgeous colours! Thanks for a lovely couple of days, dear friends! / Jacqui

söndag 17 oktober 2010

more autumnal colours

Last weekend Heidi and I were on a course in Falkenberg with one of our scrapbooking distributors, and we brought back a couple of Sizzix Big Shot machines and some Alteration dies by Tim Holtz. I've been making "grunge roses", and tattered flowers all week in different colours and papers - I'm addicted! Love trying out different materials like newspaper for example. I made this card for Gabbie's fiancée's grandparents who they are visiting this weekend and the colours made me think of the colours out in the forest again...just love this season, I know I keep going on about it....I went for a walk with Peter and King earlier and just had to take my camera/ Jacqui

fredag 15 oktober 2010

watercolour on a new surface

During the very hot summer, I sat in my cool basement and painted, trying out some new techniques.

I'd watched a film on internet with a fantastic artist called Carla O'Connor who worked with watermedia - mostly gouache, on a gesso surface. She painted gesso (which is an acrylic and chalk mixture) onto hot-pressed watercolour paper to give herself a water resistant surface to paint on. The advantage of this was that she could easily wipe off, and even lift out, areas of her watercolour painting. The paint just sat on the surface and dried, it didn't soak in like on ordinary watercolour paper. I was intrigued and tried it out, and even tried some other grounds - like matte gel medium. This was my favourite. I painted a sheet of hot-pressed Saunders Waterford watercolour paper and then started sketching up a picture of a woman with water-soluble pencils. Then I began painting. At first I was a bit frustrated as the watercolour lifts off if you work too hard over it, the friction of the brush causes it to dissolve, so layering different glazes has to be done quite carefully - but then I got used to working in this way and even tried stamping onto the surface with some of my own stamps (florals) using watercolour paint. It was fun!!! I decided to draw the face in with watercolour pencils. Here's the result - can you notice in the detail pictures how I could lift out highlights along the left side of her sleeve and socks? Am definitely going to try more of these techniques! /Jacqui

torsdag 14 oktober 2010

autumn

When I was a little girl, Christmas 1965 (I was 8) I received a big illustrated book of poems and rhymes from my daddy's Cousin Joe. I loved that book, and every time I was home from school and ill in bed, I used to gather a pile of books around me to read through and this one was one of my favourites. Just looking at it now gives me a warm, fuzzy, nostalgic feeling. My favourite page was a double page spread with pictures from the four seasons and rhymes to go with them. I loved autumn's picture because the sky was a yellowy, greeny grey - just the right colour for an autumn sky.
Here's the picture with the poems and rhymes. It makes me think back to coming home from school having kicked through the fallen leaves (they were thick along College Road in Epsom where I lived because of the chestnut trees that lined the road), to a warm fire where we actually toasted crumpets on a toasting fork. The evenings got darker and in the mornings when we went off to school it was often foggy and a little bit exciting because the world seemed like a different place. I love autumn. / Jacqui

I'm back...

I 've finally taken the time to sit down and do a blogpost. After suggestions from all of my two followers, to update the blog, I felt I really should make the effort. Actually I love my blog, it's just that time FLIES...and there are more important things in the pipeline THE WHOLETIME. But I'm going to try and blog everyday now (please don't hold me to it...).
Yesterday evening, after my drawing class, I stopped outside the shop window where I work as I left to go to the car, and took some photos of my latest window displays. I love doing the windows at Gredelin, Especially when I have a theme, whether it be colour, style, season or technique.
One window is Autumn. I chose colours appropriately and some apples, checked and striped "country" fabrics, and lots of real leaves and rose-hips which I picked from the little wood opposite my house.

The other window is in stone colours and navy blue. The inspiration came from a little photo sent to me by my niece in England - it's a picture of her husband collecting shells on the beach with their two little girls, Ceski and Alyx. I did a scrapbooking page using one of the new papers we have in the shop with a map on, the colours went really well with the girls' pale pink fleeces. Then I distressed around the outside, mounted the map paper on a navy blue cardstock, and started to decorate it. I still have shells which my kiddies collected during our many English seaside holidays when they were little. Beautiful blue mussel shells and little pieces of broken china, washed overboard from ships and bufferted by the sea to be made smooth and shabby. Perfect for glueing onto the layout. Then I stamped into some pieces of Cernite clay which I had flattened to look like pebbles and cloured them with watercolour paint once they were baked.
Cut out the letters "Shell collectors" in Swedish and glued them on.
The rest of the window is full of powdered pigments, tissue paper and scrapbooking papers from Bo Bunny in wonderful grungey patterns...