I had an old pair of pants that didn’t fit me anymore, but were way too sentimental to give up. These old, faded cotton pants were one of the three pairs of pants in my backpack during my 8 month trip to South America in 1999. You can imagine how I got sort of got attached to them.
A few days ago my daughter drew me a picture of a cupcake that I just love:
The first thing I thought of was to turn it into a fabric, so I did, using Spoonflower.
First I tried it with a pink background, like this. Then I tried it out with a green background here. Now I need to figure out what I might want to make with it!
With one week left to work on the preschool website before it’s launch to the school, I’ve been working steadily, some days more than others. This is what my ‘to do’ list looks like:
Looking at that hot mess, I think its time to redo my to-do! But, progress is being made. . .
If you’re interested in the url of the site to take a look (and I know you), leave a comment or email me and I’ll send it to you.
The view up Calle Santa Ana from in front of our house |
The next morning I was alone in the house – it was one of the maid’s off days and Alvaro had gone in to work already. We lived on a quiet, cobbled street in Barrio Las Carmelitas, a neighborhood named for the order of Carmelite nuns who maintained a cloistered convent and a tiny jewel box of a chapel there. Our house was the oldest on the block, one of the original homes, and as such it was a bit more open to the street than the other houses. Most of those were completely walled off, fronted by gated garages and 15 foot walls. By comparison, ours was protected by a solid 6 foot wall along the sidewalk, with a metal door for entry. Behind the wall sat our garden – a concrete path led the forty feet to the front door. The yard was shaded by lime and guava trees, and by the walls of the houses on either side, which stood over us along the property lines. The weather in Asuncion that fall was hot, and we kept the doors and windows open all day to catch the breeze. The lapacho trees were just beginning to bloom, and their small pink flowers floated down through the streets and dusted our patio and lawn.
I’ve seen various takes on this on the Internet recently – using embroidery hoops as a frame to screen print fabrics. Here’s one good tutorial I just scouted out via Pinterest: “Easy Silkscreen Tutorial” from sweet things(s).
The short version is that you create your artwork, transfer it with pencil to sheer material stretched in an embroidery hoop, block out the negative space with Mod Podge (decoupage medium), and use fabric ink or paint to transfer your design. Since I guess I don’t always like to do things the easy way I’m going to try it, but using three colors instead of one.
Here’s the artwork – I will use green for the leaves and two different colors of blue/purple for the flowers. I still haven’t decided what to print onto yet.
I worked on a beaded friendship bracelet again tonight, but I cut my strings too short at the beginning so I ended up with something much shorter than a bracelet. It could be a bookmark, it could be a key fob, or just a learning experience.
friendship beaded whatever in process |
I was trying different techniques, so it is kind of a mish-mash, but I do like the four beads down the center – I’m going to try that again with one solid color and no other beading.
So it turns out I now have a deadline to complete (mostly) the preschool website: two weeks! That means that there might be many posts like this one coming up, since my uninterrupted web development time overlaps completely with my creativity time (after bedtime, basically). I am definitely using my creative self on this project, its just not all that interesting to read about – especially without pictures! Sorry!