April 26, 2009

Spring colors in the Desert

The Nopal, prickly pear cactus are blooming in colors that seem so bright amidst all of the dusty Arizona landscape. I was playing with a Color Schemer to extract some colors from my photo for possible beading projects.
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I clipped small portions of the photo and uploaded them to Color Hunter. By selecting different areas of a photo you will get slightly different color choices, but they all seem to be of the whole cloth.
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You can also toggle between muted and vibrant as I did in the first two examples.





Those of you who know me will see some of my favorite colors in this last example. It's a fun way to see some color combinations that might not occur to me otherwise. How do you pick colors for a project?
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Time to Hit the Road East
Most of the beads are sorted out and packed in the trailer. I'm getting the house cleaned up, last of the laundry done and tomorrow the car will get packed ..... then we will be on the road for New Hampshire for the Summer. It'll be a quick trip, but I'm sure there will be at least one side trip (or two). I'll try and post a photo now and again if I see something interesting.

April 14, 2009

My Sister Owns a JAIL!

The grand kids think that's the neatest thing ever
....... I live in what was reputedly a boardinghouse/brothel and my Illinois High School room mate owns an old adobe stage stop across the street .... We don't aim to be boring during our winters in Tombstone, Arizona ....


(Tina, center, showing family some jail history)



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In 2006 the jail was in danger of folding back into the landscape, vandalized and graffiti defaced. Last year my sister, Tina had an opportunity to purchase the property. Since it was close to the edge of her land, she bought it and decided to restore it.
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The Gleeson Jail was built in 1910 when the town was a booming Arizona mining town.
Now it is a ghost town.
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Today the Jail looks much like it did in it's heyday, both inside and out.


...The Sheriff just stepped out....
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She even managed to track down and find the strap iron door from the second Gleeson Jail, just previous to this one.



Gleeson didn't have a newspaper, but neighboring Courtland did and it carried Gleeson news and happenings. You can read all the news from the area between 1910 and 1918 in the Arizonan. One of my ancestral relatives, Steve Bertoglio, was reported to have bought a brand new Reo in the pages of the paper.

There Comes a Time ....

...to take a sabbatical. I need to put the beads away for 6 to 8 months and concentrate on organizing the underpinnings of my life. I've just spent 3 months on a building project in Arizona and have an even larger building project waiting for me in New Hampshire. I like change and will like having my own house in NH again. However, I find that I'm just not as flexible at 65 as I was at 30 and have to admit that I can't do it all at once anymore. When I leave Arizona later this month I'll put my beads in storage until I have a finished studio in the new house. I do know that ideas will be percolating and show up here now and again, but I'll probably be writing about construction more than beading for a while.


International Easter:

We went to my sister's place for Easter dinner with 20 assorted friends and family. Afterwards I realized that the deserts I made sort of crossed a few international borders.


I found this great tin of large German circle cutters at the flea market and had to try them out.



I made a Chilean sweet that was a favorite childhood treat whenever we went to the beach. Dulces de La Liegua are sweet cracker rounds stuck together with cooked sweetened condensed milk and covered with meringue.



About half way through putting them together I was sure I had made way to many. What a production chore with meringue smeared all over me as well as the dulces.


They were just as good as I remembered them to be.


To round out my contribution I made Nanimo bars, a sinful Canadian Christmas sweet and Hot Cross Buns, a traditional British Easter food.


Wasn't too many leftovers, so I guess my choices for the desert were well chosen.

April 12, 2009

Proximity Award

Thank You JAX, it's an honour to be included.

Here is a description as to what this award means: "This blog invests and believes in the PROXIMITY-nearness in space, time and relationships. These blogs are exceedingly charming. These kind bloggers aim to find and be friends. They are not interested in prizes or self-aggrandizement! Our hope is that when the ribbons of these prizes are cut, even more friendships are propagated. Please give more attention to these writers" I have made some great friends through my blog and I have learned so much from others. I am thrilled to pass this award on to some of these people.The criteria for accepting the award is that you must post the picture and the meaning of the award on your blog (see above). The blog I picked is one that I follow and look forward to reading, that I learn something from, that makes me laugh and that inspires me.


April 10, 2009

Something Finished ...

I've managed to get a couple of projects finished. The flat spiral with 8 mm Czech fire polished crystals came out just great. It actually looks more like it was braided than woven. I used beads that I'd had laying around and didn't really like very much. What a surprise they were when they picked up the color from the permanent finish Toho galvanized beads.



I've been having fun with my Zulu variations. This one alternates dyed pearls with crystal clusters. It sort of gives the bracelet more interest. Now I'm wondering how effective it would be with each cluster being a different set of beads. Could be a bit too busy.




Here's the two latest bracelets together.

Something light and bright for Spring.

April 7, 2009

Spring in Tombstone

I know Spring is here in the desert when the Oriels migrate through and stay for a week or so. They have been raiding the hummingbird feeder along with the bees, ants, butterflies, hummingbird moths, woodpeckers and the hummingbirds! The Mesquites are leafing out, which the old timers say is a sign that the last frost is past.

I managed to find a few more 4 mm pink crystals and added another pass through the node beads on this bracelet. It looks a lot better with the puffs being fuller. This is something I just might wear as it is so early spring-looking. Now I'm thinking of a bracelet in Oriel colors with the fine spring colored Mesquite leaves.


I ordered some of the Toho permanent finish, galvanized seed beads. I'm still sceptical about just how permanent the finish really is, but so far they have out performed the old ones. I made a flat spiral bracelet with them and the finish didn't rub off on my acid skin as I was making it. I've always like the garish brightness of galvanized beads but had to give up using them for wearables as they just didn't hold up to any wear. Now I think I may order more of the colors. I've some ideas in my head of bright crayon colors and wondering how they would pair with matte opaque primary colors. Thinking very bright!

April 1, 2009

Payson Bead Cave

I spent a weekend in Payson AZ at a bead cave with some great beading friends. We ate, gabbed and beaded while looking out at the mountains. This year we were joined by our two newest members .... catz, Cleo & JJ, who chased moths on the night windows. They were an absolute delight to have around.





I've watched this art doll evolve over the past couple of years and last weekend saw her finished.
Julie's Roller Derby doll most certainly has attitude. Isn't she a beautiful work of art?

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Two of the projects that we worked on were a Zulu bracelet and a Flat Spiral bracelet:
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This is what Julie came up with;
Zulu, center, Flat Spiral, bottom.
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Jo gave her Zulu bracelet a South Western flavor with silver, coral and a flip of turquoise ends.



Lauren really went all out with an experimental Zulu design. She had come with a black & white palette of beads and then found these square orange/clear beads. It took several starts to get it to fit right as the square beads stand up and fill the inside circumference differently than round beads.
This is truly a fantastic Orange Explosion.
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I used the idea of the Zulu bracelet, but not the edge picots. I did a bracelet with graduated crystals between the node beads for a slightly different variation. Now I need to order a few more 4 mm pink crystals as I need at least one more pass to make a proper fullness.
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It's interesting to see how 6 people can take the same basic instructions and make finished items that are so totally different. The weekend was a lot of fun and re-charged my creative spirit. Beading and exchanging ideas with other highly creative people is something I wish I could do more often.