Project 43


27
Aug 11

Upcycling a Cigar Box – Part 3

A long time ago, I started writing how I upcycled a cigar box for storage. Part 1 focused on prepping the box. Part 2 focused on decorating the papers I used to cover the box. And I’m just now getting around to showing you Part 3 which focuses on decopaging the papers onto the box.

You’ll need the papers, the gesso-primed cigar box, Modge Podge (I used the gloss coat version) and a brush.
The first step is to take all those lovely papers you painted and tear them up into strips.
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Start by covering a working area on the box with a coat of modge podge.
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Then paint some modge podge onto the back of the paper.
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And then put the paper on the cigar box and either use a brayer or your fingers to make sure it is throughly pasted down on the box. Keep doing this process until you have box covered like you want it.
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Note that on the inside of the box, you may need to let the modge podge dry before you continue.
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The paper on the inside came from the liners in the cigar box. I spread alcohol ink over the paper and let it dry. The spiderweb pattern popped as a result. It also looks cool when I layered it because the paper is sheer and the colors blend a bit as I layer them.
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Once you’ve gotten the sides of the box and the lid covered with your papers. Put at least one more coat of Modge Podge on it to seal it.
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For this box, I really liked the seal so I left it uncovered and made it a part of the design. You can label it however you want as well. If it’s a larger box you may want to put a label on the front or the side. If it’s a smaller box you may want to just label the end that’s going to be on the bookshelf.

While this is a two dimensional design, you could make it more textural with glass beads, 3D elements, and more. You’d probably have to use a stronger glue such as E-6000 to make sure the elements stay in place. You’d also not be able to stack the box, which was important to me since I use my cigar boxes for storage.


23
Jul 11

Curating My Home

A year ago, when I turned 43, I started a project centered around myself and the things I wanted for my life and wanted to explore. As a final step for the project, I’m in the process of curating my home. I’m looking at everything that is in the space of my home and figuring if its something that still serves me. IF I love it or use it, I’ll find a place for it. If it’s not something I love or use, it’s got to go. An object will go to a new home thru a variety of means – Goodwill, Half Price Book, or one of the local thrift/reuse stores. If it’s in bad shape, and I can recycle it, it’s going to the recycling center. If it can’t be disposed of any other way, then it will go in the trash.

I started the curation this afternoon by replacing my desk chair with a lovely tufted chair from Pier One Imports. When I bought the desk chair last year, it was because I couldn’t find a chair I love so I settled. Settling is never a good idea; you either end up with spending more money to get what you want, or you end up with a broken heart.

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I love the peacock pattern on the chair (a wonderful mix of turquoise, blue, biege and brown) because it matches the colors in my apartment well. I also like the fact that it’s comfortable.

I picked up some new sheets because my old sheets are getting ragged and stained. I was pleasantly surprised to find Organic Sheets at Target.

My reward for getting the curation done in the next week is some serious beach time just in time for my birthday!


30
May 11

A Little Garden Therapy

I spent much of this day dinking around, but I did accomplish a few things. I assembled my new compost bin for my apartment because I want to start improving the soil that’s a part of my back porch. I’d like to have a small shade garden. I’ve discovered my back porch is a very good environment for growing ginger. It also would be nice to have some of the more heat resistant lettuces available to go with all these tomatoes I’ve got coming in.

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I also loaded two chairs I needed to take over to Mrs. B’s into the car so they could be transported over. And I cleaned the tub so I could have a proper soak before I go to bed tonight. But probably the biggest thing I did was a little garden therapy. Fortunately early mornings and late afternoons/evenings are great times to be in my garden right now. There’s great breezes coming off the Gulf and there’s always birds flitting around in the evening.

Once I got over to the garden, I got the chairs out of the car and the bird bath I had acquired on the way over in to Mrs. B’s backyard. Then I spent some time hosing down the chairs and finding the right spot for the birdbath. The chosen place (for now anyway) is the hot pepper patch.

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Since it is so dry down right now, I’m hoping that by adding the birdbath to the garden, the birds will be attracted to the water and not my tomatoes. it’s rather disheartening to find a perfectly ripened tomato with a hole pecked into by a bird looking for water.

I spent a couple of hours picking veggies, doing some weeding and then deep watering everything. I’ve got a lot more work to do, but that can wait until later this week.

R. was also busy in the butterfly garden today. He got the water sprinkler set up so that Mrs. B can easily water the bed and fill her birdbath in one fell swoop.

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Now it’s time for bed so I can get up early for work and adventure in the evening with my friend Mary Beth.

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29
May 11

Sunday Sandcastles

Last night I sat quietly and tried to figure out where in my head I was at. A part of me wanted to go into Houston today and check out the Sunday markets, but a little voice inside my heart said that was not the right option. I needed to recharge my batteries and do something fun instead of potentially create another project. There’s been a lot of self realization lately that I’m working too damn hard and not taking a enough down time for me. So while I pondered all this, I realized that what I really wanted to do was get up and go to the beach this morning. The beach is my restorative place and is where I like to recharge my batteries. I went to bed, set my alarm and promptly overslept.

It was all good though and I still was on my way by 7. I ended up stopping near Omega Bay and rescueing two dogs on the 1-45 corridor. They had gotten loose from where their owners were staying and were checking out the freeway. Not good. But at least I found who they belonged to and told them where I found their dogs.

So after that little adventure, I made it to the beach around 8:20. I think what surprised me the most is how rough the surf was this morning. While it’s always windy along the coast, I wasn’t expecting the waves to be this rough. It was definitely not my normal floating for extended periods of time at the beach type morning.

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I spent the next couple of hours going in and out of the water, doing some writing, and taking a walk. I love walking along the beach because you never know what you’ll find.

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One of the finds on the walk was a set of plastic pails and tools to build sand castles with. A good chunk of this morning was actually spent digging out the moat and using that sand to build the castle

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I like the idea of a temporary piece of art on a Sunday morning. Building the sandcastle reminded me that we must make time for play in our life. Play is what gives us energy. Play is stress-relief. Play makes us laugh and smile.


23
May 11

Whilst Travelling

Although it might not have sounded like it in the last couple of posts, I do love to travel. When I travel, I have at least one book with me to read and a journal to capture my thoughts in.

The book of choice for this trip was The Artist in the Office: How to Creatively Survive and Thrive Seven Days a Week. A slim tome, this book is a must for anyone who is employed and creates art.

One thing I like about the book is the “Try this” questions. Each question ties into the section before and makes you to think about your life not only as how you wish it to be, but how it currently is. You have to find your blessings and be centered where you are before you can take the steps forward. I used my journal to write down some of the things that sprung to mind while I answered some of the following questions:

  • What does my job provide me with?
  • How am I living my ideal life already?
  • What are small steps that I can take every day to move even closer to my ideal life?

I still have more questions than answers, but I feel like getting out of my every day environment made me look at it and see that I am moving forward. And for that I am grateful.

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10
Apr 11

A little bit of boredom and some markers = AWESOME!!!!

Last week, Mrs. B.’s oldest Boxer, Durl, got hit by a hybrid SUV. Durl is doing fine, but the cone she’s been sportin’ so she wouldn’t lick her wounds to death needed decoratin’.

See even she was embarassed by her cone.
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So while I was babysitting the dogs this afternoon, I got busy and drew a flower on the cone and started decorating it.
Here’s the cone after the petals have been drawn and the I’ve started coloring in the center of the petals.
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And here it is after the yellow has been added but it hasn’t been installed on Durl yet.
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And here it is installed on Durl.
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One of the folks who rent Mrs. B’s pasture got a good chuckle out of decorated cone and my 3 year old self is very satisfied with her art project.

You can see the rest of her pictures with her decorated cone on Flickr.


4
Apr 11

Paper Weaving and Artist Trading Cards

Saturday night’s paper weaving experiment is still not really finished. I’m having issues with how tight the weave is. It’s causing me to rip the paper.

So here’s what it looked like as I was getting ready to start.
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I worked about half the picture and this is what I’ve got so far:
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I’m thinking about maybe gluing all this together, then trimming it, and incorporating it into another piece. But there’s also the stubborn part of me that wants to finish it to see what it looks like.

If I use this technique again, I’ll definitely make the strips bigger.

Tonight’s project is an artist trading card (ATC).

I started with a vintage black and white picture that I had scanned of a little girl in a dress holding a rose.
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I took Copic markers and colored the dress, the rose, and leaves.
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Here’s the end results before I trimmed off the excess around the little girl.
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And here’s the little girl on the ATC blank before I started working on it.
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I laid a base of Distress Ink in Broken China and then took some Distress Ink in Black Soot to soften three of the sides. Then I took some star-shaped sequin waste that I got from Gauche Alchemy’s Shoppe and pounced some Stewart-Gill Pearlise Paint in Clamshell through the waste. Then I printed out the words and toned them down using Distress Ink in Old Paper. I glued everything down and this is the end result!

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Techniques that were new to me on this one: Using Copic Markers to color an image.


6
Mar 11

The Green of Spring

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It is the time of year where the landscape is shifting from brown to the varied hues of green that only come with spring. Spring means renewal and growth. Spring means the world is waking up. Spring means everything is fresh and lovely as the old is replaced by new.

Spring also means working the garden, but it’s a work that I love. Cleaning out overgrown parts of the garden. Scratching through the dirt to break up clumps. Pushing seeds into the ground or sprinkling them over the surface, covering them with a thin layer of soil and gently patting them into the soil. Watering seeds so they come up through the soil covering them so the seedlings can begin the journey to either feed some of the native wildlife or end up on R’s and my plates.

But when the end of the day is near, I love taking a step back and looking at the garden. I love to see how the light plays with the leaves of the plants. I love to watch how the sunlight catches a water droplet on new plant and creates a mini sunburst. Sometimes its a time to rest, but more often than not, I find myself grabbing my camera and trying to capture what I see.

Surprises happen regularly when I shoot with the macro lens. I can’t see everything until I get it home and load it in to my computer. Thats when the stems and capillaries of the plants pop out at me. I notice the litte scallops along the edge of the lettuce plant. The bug I didn’t see when I was trying to get the macro lens to focus says “Hello” on the screen and I notice the details on its head and body. Or I see the flecks of dirt clinging to the lettuce leaf.

And all I want to do is share this wonderful, glorious world and what I find in it.

Image: Photographed in the garden with my Nikon D80 and AF Micro NIKKOR 60 mm lens. ISO 640 F4.0 Shutter speed 1/1600


5
Jan 11

A Honk Honk Here and a Honk Honk There

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I have to say that I’ve never seen as many flocks of Canadian Geese as I did on this trip home. Every night there were four or more flocks circling the skies. The picture above was taken at a rest area on I-35 just north of Kansas City, Missouri.

Taken Dec. 28, 2011


3
Jan 11

Sunset at Eagleville Missouri – January 3

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