Humming Along

The last two months (August and September) have blown by, and here we are over a week into October. There’s been a lot going on. We took a week off to recharge in the mountains in August. I painted my first plein air watercolor there and finished the Lily of the West—more on those momentarily. 

There’s been event planning and a design of a field guide and flyer for the Four Mile Ranch program after one of my fellow volunteers did the leg work of taking photos and drafting the copy. This year looks a little different with families signing up to visit on Fridays for a self-guided hike.

Flyers and field guide pages, Audubon Rockies Four Mile Ranch Program

Finally finished formatting the Volunteer Manual for this program, too. It’s now a 180 page Word Doc for all of the activities we normally teach that’s given to new recruits, printed in a binder. There wasn’t any recruiting this year, but I was eager to complete this one so that the content can be reviewed and updated to meet new standards and expanding activities.

There are also all the regular work requests going on from designing new essential oil product packaging and advertising for the holidays to running updates and some minimal website maintenance.

Blog Post “Why Certified Organic?” for Red Silk Essentials

You better believe there is lots of crafting that has happened over the last few months, too.

Watercolor Updates

During our week long camping trip in the Southern San Juans, I continued my weekly practice of watercolor. This time was outdoors, en plein air. While the landscape wasn’t super inspiring, I was initially focused on the dark blue wildflowers and the jolly, fat spruce that sat near camp.

Back at home, I’d started the first in the Good Dogs Series. I’ve decided I wanted to create portraits of all of our dogs. All but one have passed away in the last eight years, and she’ll be 15 this year. I’ve read bios and advice from lots of artists and many talk about how much better their painting is when the artist loves the subject. This really seemed to be the case with my first dog portrait. I couldn’t get over the level of detail and realism, the love that I felt shine through when I started to paint.

My only criticism of this painting was in my choice of paint. I decided to try using my Crayola palette for its black paint and used that on the frame. For the rest of the blacks in the painting, I mixed them myself. The Crayola paint didn’t react the same way as my other paints. It seems to stay on top of the paper and re-wet and bleed much more easily. For a crisper detail, I should have gone with pen and ink. Oh well, I don’t think it ruins it. Maybe I’ll repaint it one day.

In the meantime there are six more dog portraits ahead, and they are being delayed as I have two other ideas in mind for paintings that I want to gift to people. I’ll come back and share more details once those are completed and gifted.

Detail of a hollyhock work in progress…

I also spent quite a bit of brainpower researching framing and portfolio ideas for protecting my finished artwork. Overall I’ve decided I don’t have the space to get the framing supplies and tools I’d like, so going forward I’ll plan paintings to fit pre-cut matts and standard frames. Eventually I’ll purchase some portfolios, but for now my art is sitting out on my desk. It’s not the best for its lifespan, but it brings me so much more joy seeing it every day—as art should—rather than hiding it away in a book.

Fiber Updates

This Percolator Koozy was first designed in 2016. I wrote about it back in February this year, and by our camping trip in August, I’d ended up crocheting a whole new one because I’m back on the tea drinking vibe. This one will match the color of our bus when we get it back on the road, or should I say back in the woods.

Percolator Koozy and wander mug from our friend Kim

I finished two different sweater patterns from Knitting for BreakfastFairy Tale (pictured at the beginning of this post) & Fiori di Loto or Lily of the West, documented them on Ravelry and had a few of my photos picked to be featured on the pattern designers’ pages!

Lily of the West

I’m now on a sock kick. I pulled out the Joy of Sox book and combed through the stash during a Virgo Sun transit and voila!

Virgo Sun Socks

I’m on to another design from the same book, but these are a gift so no photos till they’ve been gifted. Also on the upcoming list I want to make these gauntlets, and I have two more pairs of socks in mind to expand my hand knit sock collection:  another pair of the leaf socks pictured below in red and a blue pair of these Lotus socks.

Lily Pads

Dissent

This spring as the pandemic hit, I was inspired to knit Andrea Rangel’s Dissent Pullover. At the time, I didn’t blog much about the project or the thoughts on naming my version Frozen Tears.

‘Frozen’ because the color-way reminds me of Elsa. The ‘tears’ came from many passing thoughts from the color turquoise making me think of the plight of indigenous people, especially women; and thinking of tears of sorrow and joy shed as the Notorious RBG fought for civil liberties and gender equality.

How often have we been convinced to hide or hold back our tears?
Or how many of you feel like you’ve cried all the tears you have left?

As we descended into the unknown, I thought of all of the life events that people were missing or hardships they were encountering. …of how our lives were put on hold and how there wasn’t any time to mourn its loss. Frozen tears. Never did I think a few months later those tears would be welling in memory of the person who inspired the pattern’s design. 

Dissent Pullover, Frozen Tears

Society is like a stew. If you don’t stir it up every once in a while then a layer of scum floats to the top.

Edward Abbey