https://getpocket.com/explore/item/why-a-medieval-woman-had-lapis-lazuli-hidden-in-her-teeth
Photo from the Heidelberg University Library / Cod. Sal. X,16 / page 2r.
https://getpocket.com/explore/item/why-a-medieval-woman-had-lapis-lazuli-hidden-in-her-teeth
Photo from the Heidelberg University Library / Cod. Sal. X,16 / page 2r.
None of these people (animals?) are on the Wiki list - maybe they are animals -- and there are many characters on Wiki that I've never heard of - including Peggy Jean - "Charlie's girlfriend in later years" -- which caused me to have another caffeine induced idea -- some kind of book/film/play - with all those characters (grown up and aging) stuck in the same retirement facility.
I just spent an hour on YouTube watching videos about *jelly gouache.* It would be impossible to direct you to any specific video. In a weird way, my favorite one was by a very meticulous person showing how they cleaned up their palette. Many of the people who make these videos seem a bit quirky - she said - as if she was unaware that she's a quirk-meister herself.
Regular gouache is opaque watercolor and comes in a tube. You may thin it with water and make it look like watercolor, but it is usually applied in thicker coats and reminds some people of poster paints because of the consistency and coverage, but it is a higher quality paint.
Regular gouache has to be thinned before you use it. The more expensive brands are definitely better. Apparently, someone thought it would be fun to try a version that is already thinned to a consistency where you could just dip your brush and paint - without having to thin it first.
They called this new consistency - jelly gouache - because it comes in little containers that look exactly like the individual servings of jelly used in restaurants. You can get sets of 18, 24 or 56 colors
Several of the people in the YouTube videos mention how cheap it is - which make me suspicious. They don't always like it at first, but it seems to grow on them after they get used to the consistency and ease of dipping. Obviously, it is easy to contaminate the colors if you accidentally dip a brush with one color on it - into another color.
I also saw some large containers that looked like a fruit drink pouch (Capri Sun) with a screw top on the corner. You can refill your small tubs from these large containers.
I will not be sampling this product - but if any of you are art supply junkies - I bet you could have a ton of fun. If anyone tries it - I would welcome a review for the blog.
*** 2 minutes later.
I'm glad I looked. Three of my all-time favorite stamps were 20-cents.
A fun mail opportunity came up a couple weeks ago. My granddaughter was a week away from leaving for her first time at sleep-away camp. My daughter alerted me that the camp would hand out mail, if parents brought it with the kids. Everyone realizes that it's not logical to mail things from home that might arrive after the camper has gone home. I was thrilled to find out about this in time to prepare some mail and send it to Chicago before she left for camp.
While I had only one day to get it done and in the mail - I had to decide how much to send. The looney part of me wanted to send about 20 things -- but, I decided to just sent 5 - and labeled them Day 1, etc. I don't know how they hand out mail. Maybe they just give everyone all their mail on Wednesday. I'll be curious to find out.
In one letter, I asked my granddaughter if she was interested in going to Penmanship Camp with Nanna - next year. I'm pondering the idea of taking her to IAMPETH with me. I suppose it will depend on where it is being held. I hope she loves camp and becomes one of those kids who loves camp so much she ends up being a counselor. But, I will not be disappointed if she is not a camp-kid. There are other ways to enrich a kid during the off-season.
Design comment - the colors of the stamp directed the colors she used. Her design has nothing to do with croquet. This is a good reminder that any stamp can offer up a nice color palette. Does anyone think that there are any colors that absolutely do not go together? IMHO - the neon colors can clash with the subdued organic colors - but having said that, I'll be on the lookout for examples where they work well together.
And here is an off-topic blurb about flowers - I'd be tempted to try this, but, I'm on a very restricted schedule. It's going in my *Maybe Never* folder.
You probably thought you had heard the last of my early-bird visit to the Dew Tour skateboard competition. It's been too hot to do anything outside so I had to *surf* a bit in between the indoor chores. I figured that the Dew Tour would have some videos on YouTube and I was right.
I didn't watch all of them, but when I saw *adaptive* in the title of one of them - I was curious. It's heart warming to see that skateboarders have included a division for people with prosthetic limbs, no limbs, and on crutches.
If you have any interest - here is the link to all of the videos. They keep adding more, so it's hard to find the Des Moines ones.
Here is the Des Moines video - Women's adaptive division. I'm not sure what the first woman has. The second woman has no legs and the third is the one on crutches.
The two flowers that run off the two left corners have a slight difference. And the red one in the lower right is different from the two on the left. Did she consciously make that decision? Or was it an innate design sense guiding her? Or both?
IMHO - when you are using repetition, you can be super rigid about it - or you can make a point of having some variation. There's no right or wrong way to make that decision. It's just a decision. Making any kind of art/design is an endless array of decisions. In some ways, it boggles the mind.
Of course, you can just let your gut guide you and flip a coin whenever you have to make a decision. But, even that is making a decision. OK, I have to stop. I don't even know if I am making sense any more.
These were the ones I inserted into the two that ran yesterday. For the first time in a very long time, I got out some actual nibs and ink, although it was actually watercolor. It was fun, even though I'm rusty. The little scroll tip nibs are so much fun. These were envelopes that I had rubber stamped at Jan's a while back. I used my exciting new/old stamps that I bought from Stamp King.
Alessandra and Mia have one long name and one short name. Writing names that have a lot of contrast in length using a fairly small point size and keeping them on one line to minimize the contrast is one way to deal with names like that. You need to be more creative if you are going to do one name a lot larger than the other. Someday I should wander through the archive and pull out some of my favorite ways to combine super long and super short names.
Above are the tiny envelopes - they were joined by these medium sized envelopes that went in the outer envelopes - which were posted yesterday. Neither of them are brilliant - but they were both fun to do. The polka dot stamp is recycled - since it was not going through the mail. The coffee pot is one I have been hoarding - and it is on my list of stamps that hopefully I can get more of - when Jan and I go to the stamp dealer.
I was not happy with the colored pencil on Alessandra's and wish I had not added it. I think the little Y in Germany is cute. Did anyone notice how I spelled Germany in the top one? There is a mistake in her street address in the one below. It takes a lot of concentration for me to write words or names that are unfamiliar. I've been reading another book on how memory works and it's really interesting - they keep figuring out more about how things work. Not so much on how to repair.
At first glance, it might not seem ugh-mo. The colors are fine - and they go with the stamp. It's only ugh-mo when you see what I was using for inspiration. It's on this IG account: carla's IG
I should not have tried to do something similar on such a large envelope. The proportion of any focal point to the overall size of the work is important. Then, I should have known that the hot pink lines for the plaid would be too bold. They might not look that bad - and that's because I spent time covering them up with a white gel pen. That was not a good use of time - but I did not know that until it was done. It might have been cool. I'm also highly annoyed with myself for not extending the crossbar on the A over both strokes. The address is too big and bold. If the plaid had been softer, I could have drawn all the lines and then lettered the address over the top. I should have done it in pale colored pencil.
It might have worked to double stroke the letters in her name - to make the name the same proportion as Carla's. And the crossbar should have tilted upwards. I know that. When there is only one horizontal thing, tipped, it needs to tip up to the right to look happy. Downward tipping is the universal symbol for *dismal.* OK, that's an over-statement. But there are perky directions and somber directions.
And for the final blast - what kind of looney-toon would try this on that stupid ribbed paper? That was guaranteed to mess things up. I knew that going into the whole thing - but, chose to be stupid. Why? No excuse, sir. .
Many thanks to everyone who resisted the temptation to tell me that mine is just fine. It's not and I appreciate that all y'all agree with me.
I really hope I remember to put some stamps in thought bubbles. It's probably cutest when the stamp features an item that one would dream about. The flowers are stickers and tomorrow there will be another one from Mary, using those stickers. Very clever. The stack of books is clever.
***So one of my alert readers spotted an article about the very last shop in Chicago that sells stamps - old stamps for stamp collectors. She knew I ventured into Chicago once in a while and as luck would have it, I had a short trip coming up. Mr Wilson and I were going to drive in on a Wednesday to hang with the grandkids while their parents had a long weekend getaway with friends - and then we'd head home on Monday.
I checked the address of the stamp shop and it was literally one block off of the interstate - so it was going to be really easy to pop in. There are no words to describe how much stuff was packed into the shop. Multiply this photo by about 6. Six times that much stuff.
There was space to walk between the stacks that were at least 5-feet high - but, it had to be single file and it would have been challenging if two people needed to switch places. I should have had MrW stand next to a pile so you could see that they were at least 5-6 feet high.
The name of the shop is Stamp King. Mr King invited me to sit down at his desk and he cleared a space that was about 24" x 24" and asked me what I was interested in. I wondered what the process would be if I asked for something that was in the bottom box in a stack of 6 banker's boxes. I took a chance and asked him if he had any stamps that he sold for less than face value.
I lucked out, because he was able to quickly retrieve a fairly small box (about a third of a banker's box) and I was able to choose some. He was disappointed that I was on a tight schedule and only had 20 minutes to shop. Unfortunately, it was like shooting heroin again after being straight for a few years.
Since the price has gone up to 60-cents, I started wondering if any of the 30-cent stamps were old favorites. There were no 30-cent stamps. They jumped from 29 to 32. So, I searched 32-cent stamps and what I found has launched me into a really precarious place.
Stamps were 32-cents from Jan 1995 through Jan 1999. 1995 was the exact year I got seriously hooked on stamps. All I know is that I went a little bonkers when I saw all the 32-cent stamps. Like crack. It took me back to the euphoria of the early days.
On top of it -- I have the ongoing greeting card project with someone who has been as smitten as I am with postage and we've decided to revisit our local stamp dealer. I had stopped going a while ago. She stopped going because of covid. Our dealer has moved -- so, we're going to venture out to his new space and see if we can get some stamps for less than face value.
There's a longer story - but, I'll save the rest of it for when I report the outcome of Jean and Jan's Excellent Adventure.
Somewhere I saw the option to play Wordle with 6 letter words which I tried, but, I lost the link. Anyhow, as with most new games, it takes a while to get the hang of them - but, if you like games, you might want to give them a try. Scroll down on the link to find the options.
Here are two of my winning games.
All I know for sure is that I set a deadline to fill up Aug 1st through the 15th before I have my breakfast. So today and tomorrow are going to be complete drivel. Or maybe just today. I can write about Quordle tomorrow - which is only semi-drivel.
And -- there is always the option to come back and replace this drivel with something new and interesting and more art related. I can put *drivel* in the title -- and hopefully something comes up over the next two weeks.
After the farm report - it seems like we should have a weather report. In Aug of 2020, a derecho blew through Des Moines and surrounding areas (states) causing as much damage as a tornado. Most of us had never heard of a derecho and we hope it was a once a millennium event. I just saw a report of a haboob in NW Iowa. I've never heard of a haboob - and neither has spell-check. This is very concerning. Google has heard of it - its a desert sandstorm. Not that we have deserts in NW Iowa, but we have dirt - and between derechos and haboobs - we're talking Dust Bowls.
I'm not going to delve any further into ominous weather. I'm going to switch to the way I use those dash marks instead of commas. I extend my most sincere apologies to any punctuation specialists who read the blog.
I had to check the spelling of derecho - and stumbled across this weather map. I don't even know how to *read* weather maps - I just know that those are some really big hunks of weather covering a lot of territory. And here is how you pronounce it: də-rā′chō (duh-raitch-oh)
Here is an 8 minute video for those of us who love learning about the inner workings of the post office. It is an in-depth look at what happens when the scanners cannot read the penmanship on the mail. There are many people - trained to look at the images and see if they can figure it out.
It answers some of our questions about the scanners - and reinforces my decision to make my envelopes scanner-friendly. Don't miss the big chart on the wall that shows them what *cursive* looks like. They only have one style. If I ever find their actual address - I should send them some wall charts on other styles - like copperplate and Spencerian.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxCha4Kez9c
Or, maybe the mobile unit just has to find places to stop along the way and they do some of these random events because they have time to kill between the logical events (like state fairs). I was so tempted to go back and talk to the recruiters to see what kind of info I could get out of them.
Last year's winners here in DSM. Apparently our skate park is one of the biggest -- so they came back this year.