PIF ( Pay It Forward )

This  is my PIF.

I was the recipient of a full set of Rapidograph pens on Freecycle. I have given away fabric in the past when it became overwhelming.

When I moved things into my new studio space I knew I had way too much in the form of art supplies. I had kept extras for 2 reasons: one was to have a traveling set and the other was that I periodically gave free lessons to someone who wanted to learn painting basics.

A mom who home schools her teenage daughter posted on Freecycle for art supplies. After a couple of emails back and forth with her, I put together this beginning art kit. The table top easel, brushes, artist box and pan watercolors are lovingly used…the acrylic paints are a new student set. The book is an old one, but good for a beginner, too. The mom is picking this up today and is very excited!

If you have PIFed recently, I would love to hear about it in the comments.

Will the Magnolia ever bloom?

This was the what I woke up to again this morning. this is a rare sight where I live. I didn’t think I could capture the motion of the snow coming down. I thought I might get a photo of flakes like stop motion. I was completely surprised to see the torrent of snow in the image. 


It shows no sign of stopping soon. 


Guess it’s a great day to get into my studio and see what I can create. 

Fast Friday Fabric Challenge #53

I had just decided that I wanted to go in a totally abstract interpretation direction with my art and along came Chris’s challenge for photo realism. No way to abstract that one. I first thought of simply scanning a painting from the past, print it on fabric and pump up the volume with paints. After I gave it a lot of thought, I decided that the challenge really demanded my full attention. I have been striving to design some simple pieces. 

The result is one of my most favorite things in the world…a chocolate sundae dripping over the bowl and sweet maraschino cherries on top. I drew the sundae on white muslin with inktense pencils and then shaded the ink when I applied water. I applied fusible web, cut it out and applied it to the white table top. For the shadow, after I cut out the sundae , I held it over the white  background with a light source on the right. That gave me the correct shadow for the bowl. I quilted the wall in a wood grain to make it recede and the table and sundae come forward. The hard part was the foreshortened spoon. What was I thinking???  The table top was intentionally left without quilting since I felt it would make the piece too busy.
So here it is, I hope you like it. Comments  are always welcome and appreciated. 

Technical Pens

                                                                                 I purchased a set of Rapidograph technical pens on ebay. The seller said this was an unused set of pens. YIKES!  this was definitely a case of buyer beware. The pens were not only used, but frozen from dried ink. The ink contains a shellac and they are next to impossible to clean when that happens.  The box smelled like old stale cigar smoke. The entire thing was NOT a pretty picture. I could ask for my money back and instead I asked for half of my money back.

I will always go to great lengths to save a buck or two if the end result gets me what I want. The first photo shows how dirty the pen points were. The book it is laying on is “The Technical Pen”  by Gary Simmons. I didn’t know when I bought this book at our Salvation Army [new condition] that it is the bible for technical pens. I paid $3 for the book and I saw it on amazon for $55-$150. My mom always said I could fall into a pile horse manure and come out smelling like a rose.

The second photo shows what the inside cartridges looked like. This is actually a cleaner one.  The last photo shows the dried carbon pieces I was able to break out of the cartridges before I could even think about cleaning them.

It has been  2 days since I started the process. I soaked the pens in a 20% ammonia solution and all the refillable cartridges came clean along with the pen bodies. So far so good. I could hear the weight and wire moving around in only one pen.  I figured they weren’t going to be useable  unless I got them clean so my next step was to take a more radical approach.

I soaked them in straight ammonia overnight. This morning 4 pens are finally rattling. 3 pens are still frozen. They will go into a straight ammonia solution for another 24 hours and I’m hoping for the best.

I have a set of these pens that uses the capillary cartridge. I want to be able to fill these with acrylic inks to use on my fiber art. My dear husband Ron has asked if he may take over the cartridge set to do a little drawing and sketching. I want to encourage him to do that so I HAVE to get this other set clean and useable. He has done pyrography in the past and liked it. I think the pen drawing will be a more immediate source of gratification for him.  Wish me luck!