Wednesday 30 November 2022

Wild Lights (photo heavy)

I do have just a couple of cards to share later this week. November was NOT a productive month. I seemed to be busy with work, not doing much creating and sick both at the end of October and again now. We did go to Wild Lights in the Zoo this year, after having given the previous two events a miss, so here are some photos from that. The theme was biodiversity, and it was so well done. We both thoroughly enjoyed it and would almost go back again. 
This is a selection. If you want the full length show (well, not quite. I've culled it down from about 300 to 166 photos), there is an album HERE. In view of the fact that I still haven't had time to edit and upload any French photos, I decided to upload these unedited). 



























Monday 31 October 2022

October Favourites

 Very thin on the ground. And it's not even as if I'm holding back on Christmas cards, I'll add one in here.







The first card is one of my Tyvek pieces - it was for a challenge to incorporate stitching, and I knew it would be easy enough to sew, even though I can't find my good thimble anywhere. 

I think the second one will go as a Christmas card to C's friend in Maine who isn't really into Christmas. C saw a woodpecker when he was there early this month, and though he didn't come back with a photo to prove it, he did come back with a couple of the tree where he had seen it, complete with multitudes of holes. 

The  third one was a variation on the salt technique for a watercolour background, calling for colouring the salt first. I think I probably made both my watercolour paper and the salt too wet, because the piece wasn't ready to use the next day. It had been intended for a Christmas card but my green got totally subsumed by the colours in the salt, and it more said "sea" to me. 


Assorted photos - the deer were the first morning it was cold enough for there to be a ground mist in the park. It was more visible on my side of the road, looking into the sun, but it was still worth stopping to take a shot of the deer. The rainbow is over Dublin. Thankfully there wasn't much rain that day, as I had about 22 miles to cycle each way, and really there was only a brief shower just as I was leaving my friend's house. A couple of weeks ago, on the other hand, we had amazing thunder and lightning and rain all one afternoon. I left the building in work thinking I didn't need my rain skirt, and I would just pack it so it would be accessible if I did. By the time I got to the bike sheds, the storm had started.  The mass of tiny mushrooms was also in the park. At first as I cycled past I thought someone had dropped some kind of textured bag, so I stopped to look. I've never seen them clustered together so closely like that before. They turned darker brown over time - I was going to take another photo the day after C got back from Maine, but it turned out to be the day they mowed the verges, so they were all gone. The day before I'd been rushing home to get some bread made and hadn't wanted to take any time to stop. My mistake...

I will have some photos from the little seaside town up in the North where C is getting his dental implants. With no Covid restrictions this time I was able to accompany him when he went for his extractions, and I took some good photos but life is busy. And the booster shot seemed to knock me sideways, I took my first sick days from work since some time in 2019, and still feel pretty wiped out. 




The header is some type of seed head, taken on a trip to Farmleigh last November. 

Sunday 2 October 2022

September Favourites

 I should have some photos soon. The nights are getting longer, so hopefully that will be more conducive to making a start on summer holiday photos. And last weekend we managed a visit to the Botanic Gardens before the outdoor sculpture exhibition ended. 

In the meantime, this month's header is a photo from Farmleigh last October, and I have a few cards worth sharing.

The panda card was a special request from C's friend who got the sailing ship card I shared last month - he wanted something with pandas for his granddaughter, and I thought the boxed format would be fun for her. And it made me use my  bamboo gel prints, which I have a tendency to hold onto as one can never reproduce the same thing twice. I shared a framed hummingbird back in July, which I made for C's birthday. He requested one in card format to bring to his friend in Maine, and I just about managed to fit it on a 7" x 5" card without it looking too squashed. 








Friday 23 September 2022

An Owly Birthday

 I made this card when I totally failed to find the fun fold I had been planning to use - either I didn't save it, or I just didn't look hard enough.  The video by Srushti Patil calls it a Magic Envelope Card. It's a combination of a waterfall card and I'm not even sure what the other fold is called, though I have seen it incorporated in cards before. After making the card, the theme dictated that my second Oswald Owl cushion flew out now with the card, rather than waiting for Christmas. The first Oswald is here.  I have one left to knit for Christmas, and then one for myself and I will have got great value from the purchased pattern. 






Waterfall panels

It was a good way of using up some long-hoarded paper. With more time and energy I would have put a little more effort into the magic folding panel, but settled for the contrast between the owls in the wood on the front and the toadstools and animals, which are glossy, on the inside. Being wider than 6", none of the plainer designs in the pack were wide enough to decorate the front of the envelope. There were quite a few decorative borders too, also not wide enough but at least I was able to use the little squirrel on the front, mounting on card to make it stiff enough to act as a closure. 


Thursday 1 September 2022

August favourites

 August felt like a long, tiring, busy month and I'm quite happy to say goodbye to it.

I do, at least, have a few cards to share even if I have got absolutely nowhere with holiday photos yet.

The header is a photo from our Shannon cruise last September. 

The metal tape art one was for the 500th MIXed media challenge on Splitcoast. I reckoned I could make a masculine birthday card for one of C's friends, and by incorporating all the other numbers, the 500 lost any significance. 







Here's hoping September will be a happier month. 


Sunday 31 July 2022

July Favourites

 Not too many.  Busy, hot (apparently we had a national record in the Phoenix Park on Monday 19th. It was 33°C, about 92°F). But I have a few cards I really liked.

The hummingbird was from a book of kirigami designs I bought in France. I didn't really have suitable paper, so I used watercolour paper and coloured it with Twinkling H2Os. It was slightly harder to contour, being thicker than ideal, but turned out well. I had planned to make it for C's birthday card, but by the time I added the flower it was too large for a card - I stuck it in a frame instead. With more time I'd have done a better job on the floor, but by then I was rushing to get it finished. The "thanks" card is a lot of offcuts from various backgrounds - gel prints, foiling and whatever else was in my box of saved strips; it's much prettier in real life. 










This month's blog header is a photo from the Botanic Gardens taken last August. 



Friday 1 July 2022

June Favourites

 ...are extremely thin on the ground, due to holidays.

The wreath card was made slightly earlier - once again I forgot that I already had an anniversary card ready for C, and made this as it was our coral anniversary. We didn't really mark it about from eating out, as we were on the boat and driving down to the Loire. And he forgot his card for me, along with the tablet which he had left charging and unplugged just before we left the house. 

I was keen to try brushstroke foiling, using the Deco Art gel painted onto die-cut letters with a foam brush and loved how it looked.

The "three things" was to mark 900 Ways To Use It challenges. The theme was arrows, and I used a verse which my primary school teacher wrote in my autograph book when I was about 9 or 10. Thanks to our new printers I am no longer limited to regular printer paper, and was able to print even after smooshing and stencilling the background panel.




Edited post to add angled shot of the foiling. I had mis-filed it, it was still in June 22 instead of Cards.





The blog header for this month is one of my photos from our trip to Waterford last July - an oystercatcher on the beach. 

Tuesday 28 June 2022

Holiday bookends

We are just back from a three week camping holiday in France - finally. It will take time to initially cull and then refine my selection of photos, but the theme seemed to be rivers and gardens. We started with a stopover in the Loire valley to visit Villandry, which we first visited back in '95.


The knot garden in the left foreground is typical hedging, but the nine main squares are all laid out with assorted vegetables supplemented by some bedding.

No gardens as such in the Pyrenees - that was mountains, but rivers everywhere including just across the road from our tent.

Then we moved to the Cevennes - rivers everywhere, including bracketing the campsite. We chose a pitch about half way up the slope to the top of the hill, and felt as if we were camped in our own woodland glade. This was during the heatwave, with a couple of days around the 40C (over 100F) mark, so we were glad to have planned another return visit - this time to the Bambouseraie (bamboo garden). Ideal on a hot sunny day - the only really open space was Dragon Valley.

Here is one of the bamboo alleys. The following photo is, I think, the same alley taken a few days later from the steam train trip we took. The bamboos are tall when you are under them, but the giant redwoods tower over them. And I think that if you didn't know that they were bamboos, one would think that all the foliage in that photo was just regular trees.




We had a single night stopover in the Auvergne, alongside yet another river. This was the day of torrential storms, and the campsite manager let us stay in a permanent marquee-type tent which he had configured as accommodation for visiting musicians. But by the time we had unpacked what we needed from the car, it turned into a drier evening and we enjoyed walking along the river. Not having a tent to take down also allowed us to make an early departure the next morning; after looking at the weather forecast for both Friday and Saturday, we reckoned we should move our visit to Giverny to Friday afternoon. There was a torrential downpour about half an hour before the time on our admission ticket, which we very enjoyably spent in a museum of old industrial engines and such-like. A Miele predecessor to modern washing machines, and a totally fascinating one for making wooden clogs were the ones I most enjoyed. And after that, the garden looked beautiful and fresh in the sunshine with water drops on all the flowers.



We were staying not far away, just beside the Seine, so that was our last river. And we certainly had made the right decision about Giverny. Saturday was dull and grey and rained for much of the day. We did visit the ruins of a nearby castle, built by Richard Lionheart.