Wednesday, November 10, 2010

A Fun, Musically Green Ornament Craft Project

Every year I try something new and creative for our vertical yule log. The log is a post in our house that originally came from a tree in our back yard and it is now a part of the house. Our house is very small. About 700 square feet and it houses 3 people, a large dog and a cat. With so little space, we went with wrapping the log in garland and attaching ornaments to it.

We are musicians in this house and so we have a very musical theme to our tree. And, like a lot of people, we have in the last two or three years started downloading most of our music from itunes and listening to the ipod. We have TONS of cds that will literally never see the light of day again. What to do, what to do? Make the most of them! If you like something a little kitchy and flashy and music related, this is the craft project for you.

Get yourself 2 old cd's. I used 2 cds that had paper labels. Using household craft glue that dries clear, glue them together, label to label. Let dry four or more hours. Then, using the same glue or super glue (being VERY careful of placement because with superglue you can't change it once it's down) embellish your cd with, well, just about anything! Sequins, little jewels, flat sided beads, you name it. I went with guitar picks. But you get the picture. Let dry 4 to 6 hours, then do the other side. Let dry 4 to 6 more hours. Take a 6" length of ribbon, cord, string or beading line, run it through the hole in the middle then double knot it tightly right next to the edge of the cd. Then make another knot to tie the ends together.


Voila! You have a fun, recycled cd holiday ornament for your tree. Enjoy! See pics below.
For more ornaments, original watercolor painting of rockstars and musically related polymer clay jewelry, please visit my studio Adamsarts

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Holiday ornaments!

I created two new ornaments for the holidays this year. You can find them in my studio. Wendy Adams Arts




Tie Dye to Die For!

Recently, I got to spend some time asking some questions of Sara from Artfire.com's tiedyebysara
Sara creates beautiful tie dye clothing that is truly wearable art using 100% cotton. I know from experience that her work is beautiful because I am wearing my favorite piece of clothing right now and it is a custom dyed dress made by non other than Sara! Here is what Sara had to say.

          Artsytype-What is your biggest inspiration?

  Sara-  I think it’s the experiment of it all. With tie dye, you can do the same folds, with the bands in the same spots, using the exact same colors and still come out with two totally unique pieces.
  I’d love to be able to say that I don’t crave approval or want everyone to absolutely love my pieces, but I do. So, I guess you could say that plays into my inspiration. Even the ones my husband dyed from my designs and colors I chose, feel like a part of me, because it’s my heart in there. So, when someone loves it or hates it, it feels personal. Everyone tells me it shouldn’t, but if it didn’t, I don’t think it would turn out the same.

         Artsytype-  What, if anything, did your family do to foster your 
         creative spirit when you were a child?

  Sara--The funny part is that I was into creative writing as a child and was actually quite good at it. Working with “crafty” stuff was for suburbanite housewives, with their tole painting and potpourri sachets. Then, in the fourth grade, I went from a neurotic 4.0 GPA student, to an 11 year old with severe burn out and that changed everything about how I thought or did things. I ate Tums, ground my teeth and was hysterical if I got less than a perfect grade. So, on the advice of our MD, my parents pulled me out of public school and I was homeschooled for a couple of years, until we moved and I started a new school. My parents never pushed me to be perfect, they only wanted my best effort, but the school I had been at wanted nothing less than 100%, 100% of the time. I had a breakdown, just what the MD was hoping to prevent and just shut off about school. I suddenly became okay with just “getting by” and lost the ability to write creatively.
  My family helped me by being okay with who I was, not what my grades said I was.
  I can’t write a story anymore to save my life, but starting in my 20’s, I taught myself to tie dye and make earrings.

          Artsytype-  Why were you initially attracted to your preferred medium?

  Sara -I guess the best way to put it would be that it was the color and controlled chaos. Plus, I can’t draw or paint, so this lets me be artistic, without pulling my hair out as much.
  I started out just making stuff for my family, but then I got requests from perfect strangers for paying orders and it grew from there.

       Artsytype- How do you address those times when you are experiencing artist’s block?

  Sara -I just don’t work on it for a while. I find something else to do. Or, sometimes, since it is a period style, I watch more “hippie” movies and listen to my Grateful Dead, Three Dog Night, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, etc. It gets me in the groove a little easier. I just have to find that calm place.
  Sometimes, the time off makes it harder to get back into it, like this past summer (2010), when I had taken a year off to go back to school. I had done the dying on my own before then, but when I needed to get the lead out, so to speak, I couldn’t wait out the block, so I ended up teaching my husband how to tie dye and we knocked out about 100 pieces every weekend for the better part of 2 months. He is very production oriented and took on the larger stuff and special designs like hearts, while I stuck to the littler stuff and getting all of the other supplies like carbon receipt books, business cards, signs, advertising, ordering new racks, buying more lights, storage totes and generally getting stuff for our new, larger 10ft by 20ft booth together.
  I think we sold somewhere between 300 and 400 pieces between early June and the end of September, with five festivals.

Artsytype-Let’s say that the earth is going to be hit by a rogue meteor. And stretch your imagination to the point that you can even pretend for a moment that humans have their shit together well enough to find a way to evacuate the planet. But, each person can only take three items that must weigh in at less than 20 lbs. collectively. What three items would you take? 

Sara -
-I’m toast then, because I couldn’t leave our Golden Retriever, who weighs about 60-70 lbs, plus some dog food for him to start out with. I’d use the fact that we could use his fur to make blankets as a selling point, so we could take him. That fur is why he lives outside.
  If, aside from that dilemma, I had to choose 3 items; there is the stuffed bear that was in the delivery room when I was born, my pocket knife and a jumbo can of WD40 wrapped in a bunch of Duck tape. Wrapping the Duck tape around the can makes it one item.
  As you can see, I’m all for loopholes.
  There are 6 of us in our house, so I’m sure we’d have it covered for the family.




Here are some of Sara's beautiful pieces. She also dyes pieces out of bamboo fiber like the cute little socks, shown. The backgrounds in the photos are so beautiful. Makes me want to move to Oregon!
Please visit Sara's Artfire studio and have a look around. You are sure to find something for the tie dye lover in your life.

And while you are at it, take a look around my studio too!

Thanks, Sara!

Please join me next time when I interview another, fascinating, memorable, Artsytype!