Saturday, January 1, 2022

Creative Play In Love and Light for a New Year


Happy New Year, Readers! 

To celebrate our trip around the sun, we're featuring a project that has been in the works this past year. If you follow this blog, you know what I'm referring to- Rainbow Ride is complete! This was a fascinating art project to watch evolve.


The final world represented on Rainbow Ride is violet, and though I had no clue what I wanted it to be, my mind followed the path to the most magical elements I could imagine. It brought me to a place from my childhood that held exactly what I was seeking- red dragonfly, thunderstorm, willow trees, swans, lake, woods, and rocks. 
The essence of true magic!

Dragonfly Lake

So sit back, take a breath, and relax into Rainbow Ride. All are the same on this ride, but each is very different. 

RAINBOW RIDE 

(best with headphones)


If you're interested, here's how this art project evolved-

It all started with Eleanor Skeleton, and she came to be for no reason at all. These are the kinds of things that happen if you allow yourself to just follow a tangent idea and flow with it. She came out awesome, I had fun, and as you know, she's a spooktacular hostess here on the blog. 

Eleanor Skeleton- October 2020

Once I had completed Elly, I had all those craft gems and glue left, and I did have fun working with them, so I made my friends and family these seasonal crystal creation cards, and one of them came out as the Enterprise! 

                                              December 2020

I adored making the cards. It really brought home the feeling of sending good vibes out there- plus, again, fun for me. This is when I started to like the style of art that was emerging. I've been drawing for so long, I felt like it was time to move to another level and see where my imagination would take me.

Creating the scene with the Enterprise (above Risa, btw :) was a blast. I wanted to see it in a more permanent state where I could imagine in orbit any time I want. I'm not sure how I decided on using the 12"x12" textured colored paper, but I did, and that decision set in motion my formula for making the Crystal Creation scenes in Rainbow Ride. 

Red alert! Alien Arachnoid invader! January 2021

The next world on Rainbow Ride, before it was Rainbow Ride, became Everything Beautiful. This scene came about from a story Stephanie told me about one of her students in the library. They asked her for a book that had all the beautiful things, like fairies, unicorns, mermaids. Stephanie knows tons of books with these elements included, but there wasn't one that had them all. I decided that would be a super fun scene to imagine, and so it was!

Everything Beautiful- February 2021

And then, Rainbow Ride came into view. I pulled out all the stops for this one. It is made with gems, copper wire, magnets, mirrors, even home grown crystals- the works! When the light hits this piece, it doesn't know where to go. It was a trip creating Rainbow Ride and thinking about how the whole project would come together in the end. 

=
Rainbow Ride- March 2021

Morning Glory Rose Garden Bliss arose from the feeling of wanting serenity in a garden. This scene was crafted in April, and my skeleton was longing for the sun and warmth. 

Morning Glory Rose Garden Bliss- April 2021

The next stop on Rainbow Ride took me to Piekne Place. This quaint street developed itself. I had so much fun finding out how the street would come together and what was happening in the moment I captured the scene. When I make Crystal Creations, I complete one element at a time, so the end picture is a surprise. It's very satisfying to finish, but the pressure is on when it gets close to completion. 

Pienke Place- April 2021

In the midst of all of this, a Rainbow Myxtress was born.

The most surprising world was Jungle Jewels. I have never drawn a jungle before, so this was new territory. A unique and brilliant world to imagine. I love how the colors came together in this scene. It was a complex, challenging, and wonderful piece of art to create! 

Jungle Jewels- August 2021

Under the Sea is a world close to my heart. As a pisces, I am part mermaid, and I imagine Atlantas would have felt like home. I am a fan of the creatures of the deep, particularly the octopus. Everyone loved Ariel, I liked Ursula- lol. 

Under the Sea- November 2021

And our final destination on Rainbow Ride is Dragonfly Lake. As I mentioned, I wanted this world to represent the most magical elements I could conjure- a really unique and satisfying scene. That path led my mind back to Lake Mamanasco in Ridgefield, CT- the place where my creativity bloomed as a child. It is also the location that inspired the Begonia House and Ruby Begonia. It's a special area that makes me feel just so in my heart. This scene was complex to build, but it was a delight. In this place there is a huge, twisted tree in a meadow that overlooks the lake. I used to play all sorts of games under the branches when I was a kid. Later on in life, I heard that the tree had been struck by lightning. I have a piece of a branch from the tree that cracked off in the storm in my garden and wild strawberries pop up around it.  

Dragonfly Lake- December 2021

When I work on art I like to listen to ambient sounds, like thunderstorm or crackling fireplace, but this past year I have been listening to a lot of philosophy and tiptoeing through the quantum realm. Exploring these subjects simultaneously helped develop the design of this project. The worlds are representative of not only their color frequency on the visible light spectrum, but also the quarks, which I have anthropomorphized (hence the faces in each bubble): red-Up, orange- Down, yellow- Charm, green, Strange, blue-Top, indigo- Bottom, violet- Tetra. Inner and outer worlds playing together with patterns of light sprinkled in colors. In one of the books by Carl Jung that I recently listened to, he talks about how important it is to visualize our own myth. I realized that was what I was doing with Rainbow Ride, capturing the essence of my own inner story. It was a mysterious, surprising, and engaging experience, and I am happy to be able to watch it shimmer on my art wall. 

Remember, colors aren't heavy. They love it when you play with them. 

Rainbow Ride on my art wall


Sending all of our readers love, light, and peace in 2022! 

Monday, November 15, 2021

Marvelous Middle Grade Monday # MMGM Book Review: The Backyard Secrets of Danny Wexler by Karen Pokras

Eleven-year-old Danny Wexler is growing up in a factory town during the late 1970s. His days are spent going to school, taking piano lessons, playing kickball, and hanging out with his friends. Danny has a Super-Secret Spy Notebook where he jots down mysteries he's trying to solve- like if his piano teacher is part tarantula. He's had a lot to add to his notebook recently, especially with all the reports of a white van approaching children in local towns. People are talking. Danny and his best friends, Frank and Nicholas, have a theory about the van and missing children. They know the Bermuda Triangle is involved. It has to be! They've read all about it in one of Frank's encyclopedias. Their investigation into the possible white van suspects leads them to theories about werewolves and aliens. Will they be able to solve the mystery of the white van? Is Danny's piano teacher part spider? Does the Bermuda Triangle have a role in what is happening? You'll have to try to piece together the clues with Danny to see how it all turns out!

I have read and enjoyed other books by Karen Pokras, so I was excited to get my hands on a brand new copy of The Backyard Secrets of Danny Wexler. I'm a big fan of historical fiction and mysteries, so this was a winning combination for me. Danny and his friends may have been growing up in the 1970s, but they were still easy to relate to, and I loved Danny's Super-Secret Spy Notebook. I definitely know how important it is to keep track of clues. It's amazing what you can notice when you keep a list of the facts. I liked the way aliens and the Bermuda Triangle were explained. I asked my mom about the Bermuda Triangle, and she told me when she was growing up she worried about the disappearances there. I definitely need to learn more about that area. I felt sorry for Danny as he dealt with struggles with friends. It's never easy to have problems with our friends, and watching the way some people were treating him because of his religion was really sad. I'd recommend this book to kids in third grade and up who like mysteries, realistic fiction, and history woven together. I look forward to reading more books by Karen Pokras and hopefully Danny and friends will have another mystery to solve.

Has anyone else read The Backyard Secrets of Danny Wexler? Or have you read another book by Karen Pokras? We'd love to hear your thoughts!

Happy Reading!
~L

For other MMGM posts, please visit Greg Pattridge's blog.

Sunday, November 14, 2021

Answer to Fairday's Riddle: Mysterious Triangle...

Excellent guessing, Riddlers! We'll be sailing into a mystery next week. Tune in Monday to find out how the answer ties into the story. See you all around the book block! ~ F

Troubled triangle.

Phantasmagorical pass.

Deep mystery dive. 

What am I referring to? Answer: Bermuda Triangle


Saturday, November 13, 2021

Fairday's Riddles: Vanished into the Abyss...

Hello, Riddlers! My haiku riddle was lost, but then found- this is against the odds in this infamous place. Tune in Sunday to find out the answer. ~ F

Troubled triangle.

Phantasmagorical pass.

Deep mystery dive. 

What am I referring to? Stop by Sunday for the answer.

I gave you a clue!