Decided we needed new walls for the upcoming season. Getting a much later start on them than we hoped, (a blizzard at end of April was NOT helpful!) but I guess later is better than never eh? The peg board we used the last two years was getting a little beat up and warped. It also didn't make for a pretty booth shot, we got denied to a show based purely on that. At least they were kind of enough to tell us why. For the bigger more prestigious shows, the littlest things make a big difference. So new walls it is. Hopefully they turn out....
Road Trip
Took a road trip with friend and fellow artist Jan of Woolyfrog Arts. We were part of the 'Crow Show' at Arts Illiana in Terra Haute, Indiana and went to attend the closing reception and pick up our piece 'Rook'. We were able to stay with Jan's brother for a couple days and see the country side in southern Indiana. I expected it to be flat, but it was quite beautiful and hilly. Things I learned while there, many Indiana back roads have no shoulders, which makes the twisty, turny roads even more exciting! (gulp). Limestone was prevalent in that area, so most driveways are white. Yup, I bet you are thinking that's pretty interesting too. O.K., so I like boring facts like that. Anyway, one of the highlights of the trip was finding GRASS! So exciting especially just coming out of a blizzard the weekend before and leaving home with about 10" of snow on the ground. Seeing grass was pretty neato.
The Season begins...
Starting work on frames for the upcoming 2018 Art Show season. Zero done, 100 to go!
Check the Events page to stay up-to-date with our 2018 schedule!
Today...
was a this kinda day...
And a desperate attempt to find spring. Nope, no real signs just yet. But the creek was awfully peaceful and the sunshine much welcomed.
Wax On, Wax Off
Today was a work at home day. I was supposed to be working at the ski resort but an unfortunate February rainstorm changed those plans. Part of my at home work involved balancing the checkbook and depositing checks. Answering some emails. Repricing some pieces. Making arrangements to meet with a gallery owner this week (fingers crossed!) and covering some photos in encaustic wax so Randy can get them mounted and framed.
We use a lot of encaustic in our work and I thought I would take the time to explain a little about it. The encaustic process when used in photography refers to applying hot beeswax over a photographic image. This wax can be pigmented with color or remain white or creamy beige and it can give the image an intriguing surface and density, adding depth to the photo. Generally we use no pigment in our mixture, just the beeswax itself. The wax we use however does have an added component. Beeswax on its own will remain soft; the addition of damar resin raises the melting temperature and will allow the beeswax to cure and harden over time creating a glasslike finish. Encaustic has been around for thousands of years in the form of painting. You can read more about that here; Encaustic Painting.
Is it hard to care for? No. For more info on how to transport and care for encaustic work, you can read about it here; Caring for Encaustic.
Unfortunately today I had some issues and out of the approximate 5 hours I attempted to work on applying encaustic medium to the 10 or 12ish pieces I have backing up for me, I only finished one. The wax I made ended up being too yellow. We used some unbleached natural wax that was just too dark in color for what we need it for. I made some more of the clearer wax and mixed it together and it was still too dark. Growl. I ended up melting the wax I already applied off of three pictures and then spilled hot wax all over the kitchen counter. Double growl!! Not happy. A lot of work for not much to show for it. Sigh....let me sing some rainy day working at home blues.