Art

For Sale

I’m getting ready to sell off a bunch of my work. Mostly unframed pieces on paper. Larger pieces are approximately 11 x 15 inches, and I’m thinking $30-$50 for most of them. Smaller pieces would be less, obviously. I’ve got some little pieces that will be around $10, so there will be a broad range of prices.

Most of these are mixed media, with a combination of paint (oils or acrylics), oil pastels, collage, and found objects. All are one of a kind. Most are on really good paper, but some are on recycled paper. The recycled paper is good quality art paper, but I think it would be fair to reduce the price on those a bit.

I’m also thinking of letting go of some handmade books, mostly blanks, but there are a couple of finished books, too. Finished books are more labor intensive than paintings, though, so I’m not sure what to charge for them yet. I’ll have to think about that. Blank books will probably be in the $25-30 range, depending on what they’re made of. Smaller ones will be a little less–the materials are less costly, but making them is every bit as labor intensive as making larger books.

My plan is to put everything up on Etsy and get a PayPal account sorted out at the end of the week (Friday, if I can manage it). Until then, if anyone here would like to purchase anything by check, let me know by e-mail. I’ll pre-sell things here for a little less than I will through Etsy. Feel free to make me an offer! For pre-sales, I’m willing to mail things out as soon as I have a check in my hands.

Pretty much anything that is not a journal and is not super big or on canvas is for sale. If you live locally and there are pieces that are big or are on canvas that you are interested in, let me know, and we can definitely work something out. I just don’t want to try to ship large stuff, because of the packing and cost involved.

Art, Artist Books, Bookarts, Collage

Balancing Equations Journal

Balancing Equations Journal (front)
Balancing Equations Journal, front
9 1/2 x 6 inches
collage (altered Polaroid, fragments from algebra book and dictionary, anatomical illustration, old dress patterns)

The paper bag journal has a name, now. Also, a front cover. The covers were made from recycled backs from old spiral-bound notebooks. On one of them, I’d written a bunch of figures while balancing my checkbook. I glued dress patterns over most of the numbers, partially obscuring them, but I kept the “Balance.

I really like the way the hemp cord looks, woven through the holes in the covers. I’ve left the ends long and dangling for now, and will probably attach something to the ends. Little brass or copper cow bells, maybe, but that’ll have to wait until I’m finished filling the book, because the noise might drive me nuts.

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Top and Spine Detail
9 1/4 x 6 inches
brown paper grocery bags Coptic bound with waxed linen thread, 10 signatures of 2 leaves (40 pages)

Art, Artist Books, Collage

Working

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Working

Balancing Equations:  Mending Bone
Mending Bone
9 1/4 x 11 3/4 inches
collage (dress pattern, buttons, linen tape, acrylic paint on baby wipe, film strip, gesso, dictionary fragments, and anatomical illustration) on paper bag

Balancing Equations:  Then I Shall Be
Then I Shall Be
9 1/4 x 11 3/4 inches
collage (altered Polaroid, sandpaper, anatomical illustration, dictionary fragment, poplar leaf, brass brads, and wick anchors) with gold and copper leaf, tissue paper, India ink, and acrylic paint on paper bag

Art

Card Catalog

Catalog Card

Y’all have seen the card catalog generator that’s been making the rounds? It’s cute, but it got me thinking that I would love to have a small supply of the real thing. We got rid of our card catalog a few years ago, but librarians being what they are, I was sure someone had stashed a few away, so I asked around. Sure enough, there was a stack of a couple hundred cards with my name on them. Yay. And they’re lovely cards, too, with a nice patina, lots of notations, and excellent titles for collage work.

I think I’m going to try to figure out how to bind some of them into a book. Somehow, the idea of a book made out of catalog cards is extremely amusing to me.

Bookarts

Packing Paper Book

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Packing Paper Book
packing paper Coptic bound with silk thread
4 1/2 x 6 inches, 10 signatures of 5 leaves each (50 pages)

I got an e-mail from someone on Friday, asking me about the Coptic stitch tutorial I wrote. She wanted to know if there was any way to make the outer rows into full knots instead of half knots. If you’ve gone through the tutorial, you’ll have noticed that in the end rows, the needle enters the next signature, instead of going back into the same hole it came out of. That makes the end rows of stitches look a little less than pretty. It’s something that\’s bugged me, from an aesthetic viewpoint, but it’s inherent in the binding, and I wasn’t bothered enough to try to find a different method. The binding, as it is, is nice and easy and sturdy, which is my main concern. I toss these books into my bag and carry them with me for months at a time, so I know this binding method is strong and durable.

However, I’m all for improvement! So, I had another go at trying to think up an easy way to make all the rows of stitches identical. Usually, you would use one long, uncut piece of thread for the whole binding, working up and down the spine. This time, I treated each signature as a separate entity. The first signature is attached to the cover in the usual manner, but when you get to the end of the first signature, you wrap the thread around the stitch above it, then re-enter the end hole. Tie off the thread. Re-start the next signature, from scratch, etc., etc., etc. This way, the first and last rows of stitches are making a full pass around the stitches above them and are re-entered into the hole they originated from, forming a full, pretty knot instead of a half, ugly knot.

So, this was just a quickie experiment to test out how feasible this flavor of binding would be. The photos are not great, because the light was going and the wind kept blowing the pages around. At some point, I’ll give the binding another try, and get better pictures. I’m not sure how much I’ll use this binding method, though, because the extra knots at the beginning and end of each signature are a little unappealing. It also takes more time than my usual method, because of all the extra knotting. Maybe using something less slippery next time would help. Silk was a bad, bad choice for a lot of reasons.

Also, I found my iron! Of which I actually have two, because I temporarily lost my old one and had to replace it. Not that I iron very often. I don’t even own an ironing board. The only thing I use it for seems to be paper. It came in handy today, for flattening the packing paper I used in this book. Reduce, reuse, recycle, right? I can’t stand throwing away brown kraft paper, even though it’s not archival. I adore the stuff. And this stash of it is extra nice. It’s very thin and strong, with a hard, smooth texture (like sandwich bags, not grocery bags).