Monday, June 30, 2025

Pyrotechnics / April 8, 2025

Pyrotechnics

Today I am in my happy place, with my hands and heart having moved in a creative pas de deux, sparking little fireworks displays in every direction.

I’m reminded of my days of making art❤️artwarmers—inflow of information and inspiration, inward alchemy of intuition and discovery, outflow of art and whimsy.

INFLOW:
A few days ago, I received mail—actual physical mail in my mailbox at the curb! Long-time friend Anne had sent an artcard made from hand-crafted paper embellished with collage and a few delicate gone-to-seed clippings of dried flora.

INWARD:
The card evoked instant sensory memories of many a summer when I set up shop each morning and produced textured sheets of paper in beautiful colors that dried in the warmth of the sun, a process taught to me by Anne herself after I’d seen exquisite textured paper she’d made.

I was immediately energized to create a new card to send in return.

ALCHEMY:
I selected a sheet of handmade paper from my own still extant stash, folded it in half, began rummaging happily in my studio for elements with which to develop the card design.

My eyes lit up when they landed on a words-of-encouragement tag from MaryAnn.

Then, what to use to showcase that little tag? Rummage, rummage, aha! I cut a snippet from one of the sheets of collage fodder sent to me by Lola as part of her regular monthly draw-a-blog-reader’s-name-from-a-hat giveaways.

Next, I wanted an envelope that would fit my card as perfectly as Anne’s had fit the one she’d sent me. I have a collection of envelopes, but none the right size. So, I figured out how to gently painstakingly tease apart Anne’s envelope, turn it inside out, make adjustments, and glue it back together!

Finally, I cut a piece of good-on-one-side paper to size on which to write my message and tuck it inside, again following Anne’s model of having done just the same.

Bonus: It was then as I was moving bits and pieces around as I worked that I discovered on the back of the card from Anne that it was a card *I* had originally made, titled, and sent to her in 1996!!!

OUTFLOW:

Showing Up Heart-Bare
4.25 x 5.5″; collage tag tied to a scrap of oil painting on paper,
mounted on handmade paper
greeting card
2025


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11 responses to “Pyrotechnics”

  1. This sounds like the perfect project!

    >

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    1. I was so utterly contented and filled with fireworks of pleasure and IN flow with this creative venture—as you say, a perfect project! Thanks, Simone.

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  2. Oh….what a wonderful story! I was smitten right at the beginning just knowing you were in a creative happy place. Then came the card from the homemade paper with the bit of dried seed that came to your mailbox….then learning it was something YOU actually created. How fun! And I love that you still have a stash of the paper you made with Anne way back when and I love that you repurposed her envelope to mail a card back to her. Then I was tickled to see my little tag…as a splash of color and a call for community. YOU are creating community Dotty…and it’s fun to watch your ebb and flow….your inflow and outflow! It’s heartwarming….pun intended.Thank you for this lovely post. A good way to start my day.

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    1. MaryAnn, love that you were smitten with my story of being smitten with this recent creative undertaking of mine. So glad to provide a good way for you to start your day! You’ve brightened for me this otherwise yet-again-gray-and-chilly-and-drizzly/rainy morning with your specific bits of feedback, letting me see that each facet of my story set off tiny fireworks in you as well : )

      Thank you.

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  3. What a treasure! Shared between friends.

    Art, history, connection. Powerful creation!

    Bountiful blessings!

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    1. Sheila, thank you! What a perfect précis of my happy-place experience.

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  4. i so love what you created!!!! And am honored to have a collage snippet included! The exchange of friendship in the mail is such a sweet treasure…❤️😁

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    1. I auditioned a bunch of potential backdrops to showcase the little words-of-encouragement tag but had to turn them away, and THEN I was so excited when your collage fodder raised its hand energetically, saying, me me me I can do the job! And YES IT COULD!

      YES also to the sweet treasure of the exchange of friendship via the mail ❤️

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  5. Those papers seem to call out to me. Are they difficult to make? As if I need a project? I love your card ideas. Yes, great getting snail mail, a lost art!

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    1. The papermaking process and the papers themselves are wonderful! For many years in a row, some time ago now, I’d go into production each summer, heading to my back deck before breakfast in the early freshness of the day, with my supplies and tools of the trade, to savor the light of the day, the air on my skin, the steps in the process, the happy familiar movements of my hands and the materials. I’d press out about 10-12 sheets of newly shaped pulp onto a drying board using my mold and deckle, wick up excess water with a chamois cloth, and leave the batch to dry in the great outdoors. It’s a calming, soothing, engaging, and gently addictive process. Not difficult but not something you can just pick up and undertake at a moment’s notice. Let me know if you’d like to know specifics.

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  6. Sounds like it’s a bit much for me right now! Special equipment!

 

Shelfies / April 1, 2025

Shelfies

I have little experience or skill with selfies, but I’m a big fan of shelfies.

Shelfies, you ask? Shelfies are tiny pieces of art—in my case tiny paintings—that can be displayed in an arrangement on a shelf, perched on a console table or dresser, propped atop the frame of a large mirror, or tucked into all manner of little nooks and crannies around a home.

Once I took up painting, I delighted in placing my small paintings in various locations throughout our home, and then went on to take even greater delight in the ease and visual novelty of switching the location of a given painting or having a collection of as many as a dozen paintings at the ready for swapping out in a single location.

For example, I’ve painted numerous tiny-art renderings for Dave—to celebrate his birthday (more than once), Valentine’s Day (more than once), our anniversary (more than once), or a change of season (more than once). I keep the collection in a drawer in our master bedroom and rotate through the individual shelfies regularly, setting the current selection in a small easel stand on Dave’s dresser where it catches our eye each time we enter the room.

Show and tell:

shelfie on top of Dave’s dresser
shelfie on the master bath vanity countertop
shelfie on my desk, creating a seaside backdrop for my parents’ bench-sitting
shelfie propped on a 3-hole punch “easel” on my desk
a place to feature a different shelfie each week for my tutorial students
shelfie on the console table in the front entry
shelfie on the glass-and-metal unit in our family room


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16 responses to “Shelfies”

  1. Oh Dotty….I couldn’t love this more! First of all I love shelves in general because I have so much fun curating a collection of things that tell a story. And your idea of adding your small shelfies is brilliant adding so much to your shelf stories. And having your art sprinkled all over your home makes me smile from ear to ear. I think I will consider something like this myself.

    I love them all…but am particularly drawn to that first one with the dots…and everything you paired it with!

    Pure JOY!

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    1. MaryAnn, thank you for jumping with joy in your comments. You are a queen of curated collections on shelves, which includes exactly the kind of swapping in and out of various bits of art and whimsy I refer to.

      The first shelfie featured above was my bday card to Dave a year ago, with the title “It Occurs to Him That He Thought He Would Always Be … Oh, Thirty Two.” It was a fun one to create and went through many layers before arriving at its current iteration.

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  2. These are just great! I just love little paintings that catch your eye when least expected. As MaryAnn said, they are “Pure JOY” ! Thank you for sharing these.

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    1. Thank you for commenting—it’s a delight to get your input and know that you, too, love little paintings that catch your eye when least expected. You “get it”!

      Do you create similar items?

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      1. I do and have many small paintings and collages that pop into view as I move around my house!!

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  3. Do you have a blog or website? You’ve got me wanting to see your paintings and collages!

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  4. I love them all! Pure Joy is right!

    Thanks so much for the shelfie tour, Dotty! xoxo

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    1. Sheila, thanks for coming along on the Pure-Joy Shelfie Tour! Happy to have you along!

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  5. This is a great idea, Dotty. I, too, scatter my pieces here and there but hadn’t thought to swap them out occasionally. Perfect. 💚

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    1. Roseanne, the swapping out part is the really fun part for me!

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  6. shelfies!!!!!! Omg I love love love your tiny painted worlds and this idea entirely!!! Xo

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    1. Totally fun, don’tcha think?! Thanks for your enthusiasm, Lola!

      Do you rotate art around your home?

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      1. We totally DO rotate. As a household with two artists in it who daily create art and also collect it, we have “shelfies” in a lot of places…except ours are generally larger and are surrounded by bones and agates. 🙂

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  7. I need to see a few photos!

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  8. You are the master of small pieces. Each tells it’s own story! Since my last workshop I have appreciated smaller formats.

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    1. I think I found my way to small pieces about a year after I first took up painting when I bumped into Carol Marine’s Daily Painting book and committed myself to a painting a day for about a year; I did mostly 6×6″ and through that experience began to discover experientially how ‘big’ a small piece can be. Thanks for your affirming feedback, Carol!