Entries Tagged as 'Inner-views'

maiL aRt fun

The Inner Eye
when someone purchases a journal or notebook from my etsy shop i usually wrap it in brown paper…love the simplicity of that wrapping.

last week i got an order in for the zine i created above
(read more about it here and here).

as i went to wrap the zine for posting, on the spur of the moment, i decided to step it up a notch create an art mailing envelope
a la roben-marie….thanks girlfriend!

instead of using a manila file folder (still wanna try that too) i tore a piece of the same brown paper i usually use, got out my stash of scrap papers, put some music on and went at it.

i gotta tell you……..it’s so way cool a project!

zine envelope 2(i even did a video of it but in my haste to record it i pressed the button to pause the recording [because of kiddus interruptus] thinking i was pressing to start recording.

zine envelope detail 2i’m sure you don’t want to here me talking to my kids with my hands just sitting idle on the table…or maybe you would huh?).

anyway when i went to the post office to mail it, the postmistress kept turning it over and over not believing i made it or that i wanted to send it through the mail…ha!

doesn’t she know know that we crazy folks mail all sorts of stuff.  just as long as they hand cancel it we are good to go!

i even had her hold it for a mailing labels pic before she whisked it away.

zine envelope detail 3to finish it off i stitched the sides, stamped, gessoed and added some lace i spray painted.

that’s my newest purchase…a rubber stamp with my company name. LoVE it!

toodles all,

G

New Zine News

The next issue of the iNNer EyE Zine is percolating away in my brain. The theme has been picked and little tidbits of inspiration and creativity are making their way to the surface.

For those of you who don’t know, a zine (pronounced “zeen”) is a self-published book of whatever your heart needs to express. It can be full of images, poetry, art…almost anything is game.

The cool thing about them is a that it’s a little bit of creativity that is instinctual and personal to the creator that YOU get to share in.


iNNer EyE Zine, Issue 1

In addition to ideas for the new zine, I’ve also been putting together a new list of artists to inner-view for this 2nd issue.

Here’s a call to you….if you can think of a fiber or mixed media artist you’d like me to inner-view, by all means, drop me a line and let me know. It’s so much fun getting to know a little more about our favorite artists or someone whose artwork or personality intrigues us.

On another note, Alma Stoller has a blog all about zines which is how I got started making them. She’s got a new zine swap that just got started. If you wanted to try your hand at it, this is a great place to jump right in.

Creating my first zine was loads of fun and a great challenge to myself. I didn’t even mind the hard work! Challenge yourself….sign up for the zine swap and consider making your own bundle of creativity.

Stay tuned….

Through Their Own Words

Another artist I inner-viewed for my zine, The iNNer Eye, was Sarah Ann Smith. I’ve been waiting to post about her until after I had finished reading her new book, Threadwork Unraveled.

I was itching to get to it but, in the end, wound up reading it on my daily bike ride (don’t worry..it’s a stationary bike, ha!). Reading it that way, taking it in — in little bits –  was excellent because it gave me a chance to absorb ALL the information she packed into it.

And what a fantastic book this is!!!!! As stated on Amazon, “Sarah Ann Smith unravels the secrets behind how it’s made, how to select the right thread for the right job, and how to use it to enhance your piecing, appliqué, and quilting”.

The book is filled with her “Sarah-isms” throughout that makes it such a fun and informative read. Sarah explains things in such a concise and direct way that gave me many Aha! moments. I now have a much better understanding of how important thread is to my artwork and how to effectively use them to enhance my pieces.

If you haven’t already purchased this book I HIGHLY recommend you add it to your bookshelf (check Sarah’s website below).

I met Sarah virtually, online a couple years ago. A comment on her website/blog probably made me laugh and I responded. That’s who she is, a wonderfully quirky, fun, helpful and endearing person and author.

Sarah is also a very accomplished art quilter. Her work has been featured in regional, national and international shows and exhibits, in galleries and has been published in local and national magazines.

My favorite piece of hers, Fields of Gold, recently won a 2nd place award in the IQA Art Quilt Miniature category. That’s the biggie Houston show people! I sometimes roared with laughter when reading her answers to my questions. Smile along with me and…

Enjoy this insightful look into a wonderful fiber artist, Sarah Ann Smith…


Marshall Point Light

Inner Eye: What informs your artwork?
Sarah Ann Smith: Everything and anything!  Ideas often appear fully (or nearly fully) formed in my head.  Other times it is as if the view is foggy and as the fog lifts and burns off, the images reveal themselves inside my head until there is a clear picture of what wants to be let out and put into cloth.

IE: Why fabric/thread/paint as a means of expression?
SAS: I have sewn for almost as long as I can remember.  In first grade, a neighbor-girl made me an apron for my Barbie doll. Why she did this (as she didn’t know me well), I don’t know but I still remember how amazed I was that she MADE the apron herself, AND that she gave it to me! I loved it! Obviously, the fiber bug was in that apron and there is no antidote.  Thank heavens!


Naiads

IE: Who continually inspires you?
SAS: My friend Kathy, whose textile art amazes me; my kids and hubby; my friend Marie, who explores EVERYTHING;  my mini-group, the Frayed Edges–I am blessed that we found each other; Mother Nature.

IE: What, if anything, precedes the full blow idea for a piece of art?
SAS: There is almost always a picture inside my head clamoring to be released into cloth–usually there are bunches of them jostling to be first out!  and not nearly enough time to make even a fraction of them.  It’s as if I need to try out the ideas inside my mind first to see if they are worth making, because I don’t have time to spend on something that’s gonna flop for sure!


Buoys #1

IE: What matters most to you about the work that you do?
SAS: All of it! And that it gets made….  I want the piece to work visually/creatively.  I want the workmanship to be flawless.  It’s nice when the image resonates with others, but some pieces are just personal and need to be made no matter what.

IE: What do you ask of yourself in terms of your art in the next 5 yrs?
SAS: Oh my gosh… that is SO precise and forward-looking and planned and demanding.  I don’t think I work that way… the pressure of failing to make a specific goal (or several) would just do me in!  All I want to do is keep making quilts and art and writing.  And I have to do it within the context of caring for my family, and maybe,  just maybe be lucky enough to win a second ribbon in Houston.


Fields of Gold

IE: If you could not pursue your art, what other way would you spend your time?
SAS: If I couldn’t make art, I think I’d be comatose or dead! I’d go stark raving mad if I couldn’t create!  Even if I were somehow incapacitated and couldn’t sew, I’d find some other way to make art…Think Frida Kahlo flat on her back, rigging up an easel above her bed so she could paint while flat on her back in a brace.  Where there is a will, there is a way!


Sarah Ann Smith

Website: http://www.sarahannsmith.com
Blog: http://www.sarahannsmith.com/weblog/
To read Inner-views of other artists click here and here.

To purchase a copy of my zine “The iNNer Eye” please check my Esty store.

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