Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Project Redecorate: Susan's Office



 
My friend Susan has always loomed larger than life in my head. She's a Leo and when I met her she had a platinum blonde mane and a sweet, feminine voice. She was like a lioness. Except cuter. With a hint of Marilyn Monroe sexiness. That's Susan. Or at least how she is in my head.
 
We were very close my freshman year of college. Both trying to navigate the theatre department and hoping we were making the right decisions. We had Acting 1 and costume construction and stagecraft together. The latter in which we discovered our uncanny ability to get away with a lot simply by being blonde at the same time.  No one expected much from us and we used it to our advantage. But in a cute way.

Susan has since received three(!) bachelor's degrees: Theatre, Art Education and Studio Art with an emphasis in ceramics. And she is now a super fancy Gallery Director!

But Susan has a problem. She needs help decorating her office. Her office which used to be a jail cell...
See the bars?

Susan's style is mid-century and India and bright gorgeous colors; a woman after my own heart! She is also a thrifter and has a good eye for vintage and antique pieces. So I decided to go bold and out there and let Susan be the one to pull it back. The design serves as inspiration for Susan to find her own great pieces and make the room her own. Although, I have a feeling if we could knock this out in a weekend, we'd be a lot happier. But creative people need to make it their own so...

When staring at the photos the first thing I wanted to do was paint the cabinetry on the back wall. But as I kept staring, I fell in love! And it became an inspiration for the room. The bookcase looks sort of mid-century and leans Danish Modern, so I started looking for authentic mid century color palettes.
Frank Lloyd Wright color palette?! Yes, please! Susan and I are both from Scottsdale, so Frank Lloyd Wright was an ever looming specter in our lives!
 
The inspiration is expanding!
 
From that impressive array of colors, I chose an olive and an aqua. Because I love them. But also because they are fresh and gorgeous and natural. Grass and Sky! Earth from above!

 
I wanted to paint the wall behind the bookcase the dark olive and the other three walls the aqua. This helps make the back display bookcase more of a focal point and let's the lighter walls serve as a backdrop for the incredible art a gallery director gets to hang on her walls.
 
And the beauty of aqua is that the back focal wall could be changed to a red-orange, or a rich yellow or a deep brown and still look great and fresh.
 
One of Susan's issues with her office is that there is too much furniture. Which is true. But also, all the furniture looks really heavy. Because everything is a giant blocky rectangle. To lighten up the space we could add a more open desk:
The beauty of this type of desk is that a dining table could serve the same purpose! Which are easy to find in thrift stores. And it's great for an artist to have a giant table to work on, if she needs it.
 
 
The other issue is the filing cabinet. It's sort of a necessary evil. But maybe a smaller one could be used and some of the files could be moved to cute file boxes that sit on a console table that runs perpendicular to the desk.
 
I did try to change the layout, but it puts Susan either looking into the hallway, which isn't very private, or it puts her back to the door, which isn't feng shui. So I kept the desk where it is with a console placed up against the wall creating an "L" shape with the desk.

 

 (amazon)
 
Above the console, was an empty wall. It is most likely used for displaying art, but I wanted to give Susan an idea of how to incorporate her office life into her art life. (If that makes any sense).
 
I found these metal wall mount magazine holders, that could also hold files! And because they're metal, cute  magnets!
 
Mix these magazine files with some small square cork boards, and you have an office art piece! One could pin postcards or small drawings to the boards, or memos and phone numbers!
 
Now, onto chairs. This was a tough one, because, really it's a matter of personal preference. But, right now, I'm the boss and I picked these gorgeous Wishbone chairs from World Market as the guest chairs for the office. Curvy and interesting without being obvious about it.
And for Susan's desk chair? A classic Chinese Chippendale chair. That's somehow modern and vintage at the same time. Because we are mixing styles like a boss.
Under the chairs, to kind of pull the office together, I added a rug. It will warm up the space and make it homier. I found this one that could work, but really, any great rug will add the warmth that will make an office feel less office-ie. I liked the oranges and the olive in this rug.
(world market but now it's gone. bummer.)
 
For other wall accessories, I added another cute plant to her plant ledge. A succulent that hangs down, the green looking pretty against the blue. And a chalkboard.  I thought the chalkboard could hang next to the door so fellow artists could leave their marks.

 
On Susan's desk, a sweet yellow lamp adds a kick of color that contrasts nicely but still blends in. I love a lamp on a desk. The light is prettier and it feels less institutional.
 
Susan also asked for a mirror for her office. I thought hanging it either on the back of the door or behind the door would leave room for art work on the walls, but she'd still be able to make sure she looks her best. But the mirror could also hang on the wall beneath the bars. Bouncing light around and still in a great place to glance at yourself before you head out the door.
 
The only thing left to explain are the task lamps from the design. Here is a better picture of the placement.
I found a similar bookcase to show the paint color and the function of the lamps. I wanted to use them to light the display case and let their shape add some fun lines to the wall. Since this wall will house ceramics and art pieces, I thought it would be fun to make it more like a mini gallery in her office!
 
Here's the full design one more time:
I had the best time with this design! I hope it inspires Susan as much as she inspired me!
 

How to Make Mediocre Art

Upon realizing I inadvertently created something with little to no practical purpose, I went in search of the reason...

1. Be inspired.
2. Have scathingly brilliant idea.
3. Work out how to successfully implement idea.

4. Have obsession with buying supplies.
5. Spend three days working on crazy idea.
6. Be excited about completing something, for once.

7. Post in various places online.

8. Wait for delighted response.

9. (cricket, cricket)

10.. Realize that you have somehow created something that is both perfectly high and low art...simultaneously. 

11. Realize also that you straddle high and low art, e.g. foie gras and easy cheese, Honey Boo Boo and BBC's Sherlock,  Cher and...Cher.

12. Start all over again.

1. Be inspired.

Transparency Art!

BHG Do It Yourself magazine* featured an art project using transparencies and a printer.  Which gave me an idea for a large scale art project for my house.  But first! I had to test it...
Here's what I used:

Regular Gel Matte Gel Medium
inkjet printable transparencies (amazon!)
printer
paintbrush
spoon (for burnishing)
canvas (I used an 8x10 simply because it's photo-sized)

I found a photo with enough color, but not too many details that I thought could work for this project.  I adjusted the color, making it really saturated with a high contrast. That helped keep the colors from blending together.
Before:
After:
Then I printed it on a transparency sheet using the "highest quality" and "photo on matte photo paper" selections.  This helps get a lot of ink on the transparency. (If you have words on your photo, you'll need to reverse print it. I did this simply because I know the photo and don't want to view it backwards forever).

Once the photo has printed, spread some gel medium on the canvas where you want the photo to stick. I covered the entire surface, but it might be neat to leave brushed edges or change the shape. Use a thin, even layer. My first try, the gel was too thick, resulting in this:
Yuck! It smeared Hartwell's face and some of the transparency ink didn't stay on the canvas. You want this:
Nice, even application.
Place the transparency ink side down on the wet gel and sort of finger press to get both surfaces touching. (It doesn't move around once it's stuck down. It comes up a little as you rub, but lays back down in the same place).

Now use your spoon to burnish the ink to the canvas. Just rub in circles with medium pressure. Since my canvas was already wrapped on a frame, I placed a book underneath inside the frame so I could press without the canvas pushing in too much.

Once you've covered the whole surface, peel back a corner and see if it's working. You can kind of see what's sticking as you burnish, because it's transparent.

Keep going until you have the look you want. Since mine included people, I really wanted the faces to look normal. 
Here is my bad canvas:
And the good one:
 This video at metacafe really helped. Except for the thin layer part. I messed that part up to help you.


*I'd link to them, but they told me they had plans for a raised garden bed on their website and it wasn't there and the website acted like I was all crazy. So no link to you, Do It Yourself Magazine, if that is indeed your name...


O Banksy! My Banksy!

Things you can learn about my family from this photo:

1. We don't watch our kids as closely as we should.
2. Bee likes to draw.
3. We need to keep more paper around.
4. We recycle.
5. We shop at Big Lots.
6. Bee needs a bath.

Surprise! A book cover!

When I was enlisted to make the class art project, Miss Shelley told me that a lot of the parents made a little photo book to go with it. So I took my camera, along with my markers and fabric squares, and proceeded to record the crap out of my project. And then my battery died.

I borrowed the school camera, but it was set on "no preview" so I was snapping away hoping I was gettin' the good stuff and occasionally scrolling through to see if I succeeded. So old fashioned!

The photos were okay, but there were not nearly as many as I would've liked.

So, photos I had. Book? Not so much. I wanted some crazy origami folded paper photo thing that was super excellent. And non-existent. I emailed muses, (that's you, Blazer), and molested the internet looking for the perfect thing.

Then, Captain Cough-ie woke me up. With my allergies, if I'm up, I sneeze. And can't get back to sleep. So I grabbed my iPod and searched for something to do for the photo book. At 2 am.

I found this tutorial at kirin notebook. Pretty amazing. A reversible note book cover. I got a book and some photo corners at Target and got busy with my cover.

Here is the quilt top:
 
The inside and my feet:
 
 The inside/reversible part:

 
And the back:

I did a photo of each kid holding up their artwork.Here's a photo of my guy:
  
I think it turned out pretty cute. I was a little worried because the tutorial is the kind where you just do what they say and then turn it right side out and see if you succeeded. Which I did!

(I don't know who put Vaseline on my camera, but they need to stop. It looks like a Moonlighting episode up in here).

Table scape

 
John got me this table from an old job. It was a cast-off set dressing piece that was headed for
the trash. He knew I would like something like this if only for the possibilities. It's been sitting in my living room for almost three years untouched. I usually just throw a tapestry over it. 

But now I'm waiting for escrow to close before I can do anything to my new/old house and I'm bored! So I took it to the barn for a redo.

I have lots of ideas including rosemaling, decoupaging (again!), and tiling. The rosemaling was actually going to involve decoupaging and the decoupaging was going to include Ukrainian folk art. I have a Cost Plus World Market vibe goin' in my living room, so those seemed to fit in.

Any ideas? I could use some. Here it is after I sanded the crap out of it and applied a thin coat of primer:
Please help! I've been staring at it for three years and could use some fresh perspective!



Check out more at A Soft Place to Land!
And Between Naps on the Porch!

Holiday Embroidery?


I am obsessed with "dolls" and have been trying to find a way to work them into a project.

Alternate title:

Santa's Little Helpers


Dia De Los Morty



 I made this, and soon to be many more, to be like, extra gifts for people. I want to make them into ornaments, we'll see what I have time for. (I just found out my sewing machine is ready to be picked up. Seems someone decided to fill the inside with pins).

I also learned a new technique. The fancy whipped backstitch. I found a bunch of great tutorials here.

And I'm STILL trying to figure this out. Mine keep turning out too messy.

Oh, stitchery, whatever will become...of me.


Why can't I make stuff this nice for myself?