Well, with the holidays here, I thought it was time to allow online ordering. I'm doing it via PayPal and you'll start seeing an "order now" button appearing on each post. Just click it to place an order. So, now you can buy my art from home, the office cubicle, the neighborhood coffeehouse or, well, you get the picture! Shipping will be first class via USPS. Now, back to creating those buttons ...
Monday, November 28, 2011
In honor of Cyber Monday, I've taken the plunge
Well, with the holidays here, I thought it was time to allow online ordering. I'm doing it via PayPal and you'll start seeing an "order now" button appearing on each post. Just click it to place an order. So, now you can buy my art from home, the office cubicle, the neighborhood coffeehouse or, well, you get the picture! Shipping will be first class via USPS. Now, back to creating those buttons ...
Out on a Limb: 11
I took a break from the Santa series to return to Out on A Limb, thinking I'd pick up where I left off. Ha! The piece ended up markedly different. I still was going with combining color and black-and-white images of birds but wanted to use an engraving of a robin I've had for some time. It's from a series published in The Chatterbox throughout 1871. The British children's magazine was big on nature and education, and there's no better proof than its beautiful engravings of flora and fauna. I scanned the original, below, in case I want to reproduce it some day. Luckily, I have two sets of the magazine from that year, so there's still another original to play with.
Some of the trellis is missing at the bottom of the collage, a casualty of the knife. I know that I probably shouldn't point that out. But, well, I was determined to cut out that intricate trellis at all costs to expose the background, which includes a piece of veneer from my friend Laura Chapman (I love that it's labeled veneer and wanted to show that) and a sliver of an 1877 map of Ohio from Harper's School Geography.
The vibrant robins were clipped from an antique Christmas postcard. Birds were a common holiday motif and the Christmas theme is carried out subtly in the holly and mistletoe on the trellis. 5" x 5" on claybord/hardwood panel. [SOLD]
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