Monthly Archives: January 2011

Road sign

Today was such a pretty winter day. Sunny and still. I forget how warm 28º can feel when there is no wind. It was also the kind of day known as a weather breeder. Today’s high pressure system is going to suck low pressure right into its place as it moves out of here tomorrow. That means snow and high winds for us. I’ve heard a range of predictions for snowfall ranging from 2″ to 12″.  On the islands we’ll be prepared for boat cancelations and power outages. We’ll just have to take what we get because, “What can you do eh? Not much I know.” (A little nod to my Canadian friends Angie and Marly, that.)

I finished writing my column for next month’s Working Waterfront newspaper and went off island on the 11:30 boat to get my hair cut and stock up on groceries. I pass this road sign every time I’m on my way out of Northeast Harbor and it just cracks me up. I can’t even tell you how many times I have thought I should stop and take a picture, but in seconds I’m past the sign and dealing with the suddenly rough pavement 30 yards beyond the sign.  Today I remembered.

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Beads on my mind…

…since early December.

That’s when I bought these beads at the Island Arts Association holiday fair in Bar Harbor. They’re made by Linda and Ken Perrin from Atlantic Art Glass, in Ellsworth. (It’s so cool to know they have their groovy  hot shop in humble little Ellsworth, the crossroads of downeast Maine!)

I haven’t been in the studio for a couple weeks, but my little winter break is about to end. I keep thinking of how I would like to combine these with some of my own PMC beads. Today I got them out for a fresh look. And I left them out on my bench. To call me back to the studio.

 

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More fun in the kitchen…

…because my life isn’t all about the jewelry.  After staying up late last night to watch football, I worked on the Sunday NYT crossword puzzle which was challenging but fun. It’s not really feasible to subscribe to the Sunday Times up here on the island. It’s very expensive and usually arrives a day late. I could have it sent over from the newspaper store in N.E. Harbor, by boat, but it wouldn’t get here until 4 p.m. on Sunday and by then the weekend is almost over. So, I subscribe to the NYT crossword puzzles on line. I download the Sunday puzzle on Saturday night and then stay up until I finish it. Woo Hoo! Wild fun on Islesford.

I had the most relaxing Sunday. I started work on my next column for the Working Waterfront, watched some football with my husband and took a long nap on the couch. After a brisk walk at sunset, we spontaneously invited our friends Henry and Donna over for pasta primavera. I am so fortunate to have a husband who likes to cook, especially at this time of year when his boat and lobster traps are out of the water. Bruce made the pasta dish and I made a little salad of avocado and pineapple, and we had fresh baked coconut chocolate chip cookies for dessert. At this time of year we do not feel rushed, and I love it.

I am not a fan of the single-use kitchen gadgets. I don’t mean disposable things like sponges or scrubbies, but those items that take up a lot of room in the drawer or cupboard and they only serve one purpose. So when Santa put a rather large pineapple-corer-slicer-thingy in my stocking a few weeks ago, I thought it was a candidate for the regift pile or the white elephant table at the Islesford Fair. Last week, with a pineapple about to rot beyond edibility on my counter, I took the pineapple-corer-slicer-thingy off of its cardboard sleeve and gave it a try. I’ll be damned. The thing actually worked! And it worked well. Well enough that I made sure to buy another pineapple the other day when I was off the island at the grocery store. I couldn’t wait to show my lobsterman chef husband what a useful gadget it was.

All you do is cut the top off the pineapple, place the pineapple-corer-slicer-thingy on the freshly cut surface, and twist. When you reach the bottom of the fruit, you pull up and out comes the inside of the pineapple, neatly sliced, with the outer shell intact. Good times with a one-hit wonder and no more pineapples rotting on the counter.

 

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5 necklaces added to Etsy.

Finally!

More to come soon.

 

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End of a long but productive day off the island

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Lunch with Sarah and Ashley

Sarah brought the soup, I provided bread, and Ashley provided all the rest.

How lucky I was to spend the afternoon with friends who feed my creative spirit. Ashley gave us a presentation of the beautiful new book he is working on. I am not able to show it here, but he will be showing it to his publishers in New York next week.

I checked out Ashley’s night blooming cereus plant, remembering midnight visits last summer, with other islanders, to see the once a year blossoms. I don’t know what it is about his studio, but that plant sure likes it. It flowered 7 different times last summer, and three of the times were with double blossoms!  Today, though, there were no buds in sight…until I turned around to look at the unassuming aloe plant.

 

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How do people do this daily?

Blog, I mean. I may have to change my mind on this resolution…It feels like there is nothing to write about today. With a little stomach bug, I spent the day on the couch, reading. Not much to say about that. Not much to photograph either.

But I recently bought some lighted branches to put in my bathroom for a nightlight and they make me happy every time it gets dark.  I think I could put these in every room of my house and still not get tired of them.

 

 

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Photography slows me down

It would be nice to have my own personal photographer to take 5 really good photos of each piece of jewelry I want to put up on Etsy. Yes, one of my resolutions is to have professional photos taken of my work, and I will do it for some specific pieces, but the cost just not feasible for all of the  jewelry I have ready to list. The answer is to continue doing it myself; knowing that I am moving along, albeit slowly, on the learning curve of digital photography. (I would rather spend my time making jewelry!)  Today, I dedicated some time to taking lots of images, so I could dedicate more time to editing and cropping them and then resizing them for Etsy. It’s not my favorite thing to do, but the more I do, the more I’ll learn, and I might actually start to get it done more quickly. And maybe I’ll even get to like it.

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Yesterday felt like April…

…with lots of fog and rain. Somewhat unusual for January. But today, winter was back to work, just like most of us after the holidays.

Among other things, I grew carrots last summer, and left some of them in the ground covered with an extra layer of dirt. It seemed like a good place to store them as long as I could still dig them up before the ground froze. We had a fairly mild December, and even with the blizzard last week the temperatures were still pretty moderate. My carrots were well insulated under their snowy blanket. The forecast this week is for much colder weather. Today was my last chance for a first time experience: harvesting carrots in January.

The top inch of soil was already frozen, so I was not a moment too soon in my efforts.

3 pounds of organic carrots, fresh picked from my front yard on January 3. You can’t get food more local than that. They taste pretty darn good too!

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I welcome the new year with resolutions and a monthly ritual

It’s time again to set some goals I hope to accomplish with the fresh start of a new year.  I looked back at the resolutions I made last year and realized that I have actually incorporated many of them in my work. I have a much cleaner space for working with metal clay, I fire my pieces at 1650º for 2 hours to achieve the greatest density and strength, and I work harden them as part of the finishing process whenever possible. While I sometimes use commercial clasps, I also make and use many of my own design. I did not do any oil painting last winter, but I did take a second workshop with Henry Isaacs and Ashley Bryan in September. I also got my Etsy shop up and running before the end of January. So, making creative resolutions works for me. (More exercise, less sugar, more sleep, less stress, those are all a given. Doesn’t everyone say they are going to do those? )

My creative goals for 2011 include:

1. Get some professional photographs of my work, and have a consultation with a professional on how to best  store and maximize my own photographs.

2. Take better care of my Etsy shop; add items to it on a regular basis. (Which means taking more photographs.)

3. Add to blog daily.

4. Take a lampworking class to see if making glass beads is a feasible addition to my silver work. (I sure like to buy them!)

5. Learn to make and use rivets for cold connections. (A goal I forgot to add last year. Maybe that’s why I didn’t do it?)

6. Drill more rocks, and make many more silver and beach rock necklaces. Below are two of my recent favorites.

A custom order for a Christmas present for someone who’s work I greatly admire. (It was an honor to make this!)

One of my favorite necklaces, that I would have loved to have kept for myself. Though, I know who received it as a present and I’m really glad she has it!

The necklace has 3 beads, made by another metal clay artist, Kate McKinnon. These were the only PMC beads I had that I did not make myself. I bought them from Kate’s site last spring or summer, and they were exactly what I needed for this necklace when I made it in November.

They are solid fine silver, not hollow. Made in the days before the price of precious metal clay went through the roof.

Lucky me. I live on an island  so small that the beach is never far away, and rocks are plentiful. Not every beach is sandy, though, like the one where we go for Dip of the Month! (The ritual I mentioned.)

First dip of the year on New Year’s Day. Islesford 2011. The four of us have been running into the Atlantic waters off the Maine coast, once a month, every month, for 8 years. At this point, no one wants to be the first to give it up and break the dipping streak. We figure it’s a life sport. Other people figure we are nuts. 1-1-11 was a particularly nice day. Air temperature around 42º and no wind. Rare for this time of year.

Stefanie’s hat is from Australia. The corks are supposed to keep mosquitos away. It was working. (Joy’s dog, Bella, wearing a lovely handknit sweater, looks worried that she will have to become a member of the club.)

Stef handed out Mardi Gras beads to wear.

Cindy suggested we swing them around our necks like hula hoops to warm up.

I LOVE this group!

Are you kidding?? The water is never this calm in January.  But it was.

Where’s Joy?        (submerged on the right)

Getting out and just starting to feel the “spa effect” on our skin. Ahhhh………

Water temperature 44º.  Photos by Emily Thomas. Next dip: sometime in February.

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