Tuesday, December 7, 2021

About Journal Spilling

This blog is dedicated to anyone who would like to try their hand at Art Journaling. It is a magical and powerful journey.




If you think “I can’t.” I am here to see you through. Because all you really need is “I want to.” You don’t need to be good at art. This isn’t about making art for sale or viewing. It’s about using art materials to make colorful, messy art journal pages. Was something revealed along the way? Or maybe it was just fun. 

And that’s fine.

Watch this space. 

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

New Blog Is UP!

Go Here! For my newly-designed, beautiful Typepad blog. Yeah! Everything is transferred, my first post is up and I'm drinkin' a beer! Get on over there and comment, link, favorite, share and help me spread the words. Thanks, loyal readers! sniff, sniff, I love you guys!

Friday, May 20, 2011

My Fabulous Sisters

Several years ago, I bought three journals. One for myself and each of my two sisters. We have been (with great pauses in between) writing in them and sending them on. They all just landed on my doorstep.
An inside look at them and us together. It is not something that has a deadline. It is just us being us. Together across the country.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Plenty of Time

Slowing down because I've decided to embrace the idea that time is plentiful and there is more than enough. While taking Jude Hill's class this winter, a need for a new bathroom curtain cropped up. An old linen tablecloth was found in the stash. Strips were ripped and woven into the tablecloth and now begins the pleasure of handstitching every strip into place. Doodling and mending with needle and thread, handling the cloth. Some may say laborious. It's all a matter of perspective.
 Teddy likes this.
I'm deep into cracking the code over on Typepad. I'll try to keep to my usual blogging schedule in the meantime. Soon, hopefully, I'll be moving.

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Tape! Nudge 28

Get out your tape! I found a page from a previous Nudge that had been gesso'd and portfolio'd and added some sketches I made with washi tape from Pretty Tape over at Etsy. The washi tape is translucent, so I added a couple of layers. You could use any kind of tape: masking, duct, paper, fabric. Glued-up strips of paper. Use it as a stencil or a fastener. Use it as a tab.
Have some sticky fun!

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Art Journaling This Saturday

Quick New Flash! I'll be teaching a 1 1/2 hour Art Journaling workshop at Abington Art Center, this Saturday, May 14, 10:30 am - 12 pm. Bring a journal, everything else will be supplied. This is such a great deal! $20 bucks! It doesn't get cheaper than that folks and we'll have plenty of fun.

Here's the link

Hope to see you there!

Monday, May 9, 2011

Business for Artists

You want to have make money from your artistic talents? Most of the time, folks will tell you (often right as you are graduating with that BFA in hand): "That a a couple bucks will buy you a cup of joe." Yeah, thanks a lot.

The words "business" and "plan" are not easily uttered by artists. I've done (partial) business plans at least twice. Ugh. Then I heard Jennifer Lee, author of The Right Brained Business Plan on a podcast. She said some of the big-bad business plan words like: demographics, target market and market size and then spoke about pulling off a plan using visual aids. Yeah, I'm all over that one.
I got Lee's book after looking it over really carefully. My first reaction was that the visuals were a bit cartoon-y but pretty quickly saw that this was a selling point for me, it opened me up. There are other good books on the market right now. The Creative Entrepreneur has gotten good reviews. Poke around on Amazon.
I got out my gel pens, my markers, scissors and glue stick and have actually made inroads in my plan. Forecasting? Yeah, baby! Jennifer actually explains to you how to do the research for finding your target market, etc. Oh Joy! I don't feel like an idiot.
Jennifer also suggested the Levenger Circa notebook. Levenger licenses the disc and hole punch technology from Rollabind and if you are a binder person, you will love it. Some of the tools (such as the hefty hole punch, which is all you REALLY need) are cheaper over at the Rollabind site. 

If you want to make money at your artwork, you want an art business and if you want an art business, you need a plan. Start slowly. Artists deserve to make a living; to make a life from their art. Dag-nab-it! You are not "selling out" if you do so.

Friday, May 6, 2011

June 2012, Italy!

Here is the video from Maggie's B and B where I stayed, just outside of Fabriano.

I spent some very happy moments on Maggie's terrace, sipping wine or cappucino (time appropriate) and making art or writing. I made my Italy-drenched paper here. The countryside was beautiful.

Plans are in the works for holding a week long retreat in Fabriano next June (2012). Watch here for updates. OMG! This area of Italy is too beautiful not to share!

Here is a picture of Susan (who invited me to Paradise) and I on Maggie's terrace on my first night.
Enticing, isn't it? Start saving you pennies, euros or pounds!

Creating a Journal Page

New video up ... Sneak peak into Inner Circle Journal. Have a great weekend everyone! It is deliciously warm and sunny here.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Canio

Do you keep a pen and paper by your bed? It's very handy. I started doodling this thinking it was me in a fun hat and then ... it was Canio! Oh my gosh. Wait a minute ... am I CANIO? That big circle on the left is not supposed to be an ear, by the way.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Embroidery Journal, again

Here is the spine of the Embroidery Journal. I'm using buttons when I sew the signatures in. Yep. This might just take me the rest of my life and you know what? That's ok. It's like a perennial garden. You have to be patient till the plants take hold and start to grow.
I think the inspiration originally came from this book, Fabric Art Journals by Pam Sussman. It's an older book but good instruction and loads of ideas. Amazon isn't carrying it but you can get a used copy for about $18.00. Hedgehog pincushion not included. I'm generally not so frou-frou-y but there is good basic instruction in this book. Embellish as desired.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Embroidery Journal

A journal I made a couple of years ago from an old men's wool jacket (thrown in the washer on hot and felted up a bit.) Needle felted circles and some embroidery.
 The interior is (very) slowly being filled with samples and practice embroidery stitches.
Got stitch?

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Nudge 27, Stitch

Ok OK! I got the emails. Here's Nudge 27 ... Stitch. In your journal, on your pants, a tiny corner of a blanket, on your lawn chair. Take a few stitches. Don't know how? What!? Hate it? Aw, come on. When was the last time you sewed anything? You have a mending kit somewhere.

Capisco Niente is a handy all-purpose phrase I learned before I went to Italy. It means "I understand nothing." So true on so many levels. It made me laugh and most of the Italians I used it on laughed with me. I may embroider that on a t-shirt.

Something cool happens when you stitch in your journal:
Yeah. I often like the back of the page more than the front. But you could always glue something on top of it.

Use embroidery floss - all six strands - when stitching on paper. Poke your sewing holes first with an awl or thumbtack and make sure that your needle goes through the holes comfortably. It's way to hard on your hands to try to stitch without the holes.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

The Italian Clown

A story, more than a post. I needed to ramble and let this roll around in my mind. You may want a cuppa for this one.

I was finally on the last leg of my journey from Glenside, PA to Fabriano, Italy. The first gusts of Italy were just swaying my hair and I had a pizza margherita and grapes wrapped in paper for my train journey from Rome to Fabriano. Navigating Termini in Rome was not so hard for a city girl from Philly and the right train was waiting for me.

I found a seat, smiling and buon giorno-ing the older woman who sat opposite with her ticket on the small shelf under the window. Just as the train began to make its creaking sounds that assure you that shortly you'll be underway, the train door opened and striding on board was a young man. Tall and dark and untidy as young men can be. The burst stirred Madame's ticket which flew from it's perch and the young man, graceful as a dance, swooped down to retrieve it and settle it back with a gentle unhurried smile and pardone.

His backpack flew up to the rack above and he smiled and asked me, in English - how did he know? - if he could put mine up as well. Grazie. There was no way I could have gotten that bag to the rack without standing on my toes on the train seat after eating spinach, Pop-Eye style, for a couple of weeks. Up it went.

There were seven of us seated on the train.

Canio is the lead role in the Italian opera, Pagliaccio (The Clowsn)


The young man (I'll call him Canio) and older woman began speaking rapid Italian. Soon, the other four Italian passengers were engaged. I assumed that they were perhaps all from the same small town. I was smiling quite stupidly out the window, enjoying the lyrical sounds of their language, as they chatted and chortled, and the passing scenery.

A grove of cypress trees.

Canio's hair is shoulder length, a mass of curls, a rich nearly-coffee, brown, pulled back with a navy blue hairband. His mother's heart would brim at the sight of her beautiful boy. And that is what he is. Not handsome, not "hot." He is beautiful in the same non-sexual way that a painting or the Italian countryside might be. His eyes, slanting downward at the outside edges, are almost black. Despite the mournful shape, they are not sad. They are deep and you can see his soul there. His skin-tone is Mid-Eastern dark. His face is a long oval, full lower lip and sharp points on the upper lip. His nose is long and straight but in no way sharp. There is a soft roundness at the end of his nose, though his nostrils flare out. There are no angles at all to him. Rather a gentle bulkiness. 


In between, Canio translated some of what was being said for my benefit and seamlessly brought me into the circle. I made friends. The older woman wanted to know where I was going and where I was from. And, of course, I wanted the same. We shared and, I think, that my appreciation of what was passing out the window and through our part of the train was indeed "Bella Italia." Beautiful Italy. It translates nicely. Sometimes, you don't need language.

There is something magical about that young man. He is from Milano. He is a clown. He works at the hospital and saves his euro so that he can travel and work with needy children. He'd just returned from Africa where he clowned and before that, India. His eyes and posture reveal a soul filled with magic and kindness. He created a small community there on our train. Not focused on himself but focused on community.

I drew him later, quickly, in my sketchbook. My sketchbook was in the bag that blew up on the rack. I wouldn't have drawn him anyway right then. I was too much in the moment and that moment was given to a kind of gentle crackling that involved my concentration fiercely. Better to draw later - my impression of that moment.

Canio got off the train before me and, as promised, delivered my bag effortlessly at my feet and then, with another gust, was gone. The moment over. The new friends I'd met made certain that I got off at the correct stop and wish me a safe and happy visit.

Yes, the trip certainly started on a magical note. I need to explore Canio's face further, so will probably make more sketches and watercolors along the line. But this is a good beginning

So much of what I saw and experienced in Italy was quickly captured in my sketchbook. I feel it may be months before I've extracted all of it.

Thank you for your well wishes on my tendonitis. It feels somewhat better. I recommend a brace!

Monday, April 25, 2011

Congratulations and Thank You

Congratulations to Connie (of Colorada) and Hannah (in the UK) for winning the birthday giveaway. Thank you all so much for you comments and good wishes. It was so nice to hear from so many of you! You really made my day.

The tendonitis (always present) in my elbow has just exploded over the last couple of days. I'll be resting it up a bit and keeping a low-ish :) profile while I let it heal. Dang, this drives me nuts! But am holed up with good books: A Visit from the Goon Squad; Jennifer Egan and Creative Time and Space; Rice Zachary Freeman. Also lurking around is The New Crewel by Katherine Shaughnessy - but it is perhaps filled with too much inspiration and would make me yearn to stitch!

In the meantime ... I love this photo:
An olive grove near Assissi. Doesn't it look like a beautiful ballet?

Off to ice and ibuprofen.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Evidence

Beautiful found paper. I was caught in the act of peeling old posters from a wall. 
 Exotic ephemera opened my eyes again.
And the olive crackers were very delicious.

Congratulations to Connie of Colorado and Hannah in the UK for the Birthday Giveaway!

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Italy Journal, A Pear Shaped House

My watercolor moleskine journal came back nearly full of sketches, ideas and words. Working with it to further develop the fertile seeds of ideas is part of the fun.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Double Nickels Birthday Giveaway!

Dear Readers, It is time for
the double nickels Birthday GIVEAWAY

As a big thank you! to all of you for reading, commenting and making art, and in view of my 55th birthday (April 18, 1956 - yikes), it is just the right time for a giveaway. In fact a double giveaway.


Here's the what ... I an giving away one copy of each
Journal Spilling and Playful Paper Backgrounds (the DVD)
I love you guys, sniff-sniff

Here's the how ... Leave a comment and tell me which you'd like: the book or the DVD. I'll pick two folks: one for each.

I was pretty durned excited the other night to be tagged on Facebook by Jenny Doh of Crescendoh. She  reviewed Journal Spilling! Here is the review (and I wouldn't be sharing if it was unfavorable). When I posted this fab bit of news on Facebook, someone commented that she had just returned from teaching her first art journaling class and that Journal Spilling was her inspiration. It doesn't get any better than that. Really. So thank you. Comment away.


I love you guys, sniff-sniff
Edit: I closed comments on April 19. Will pick the winners on the weekend!