Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Not Such a Blue Day Afterall...

Yay!
I'm beginning to get noticed!

Today I got this message:

Sent by lucedivetro on February 02, 2010:

I have featured your item on my blog dedicated to beautiful blue items on Etsy! =)

Yay! It's a start! Thank you, Lucedivetro!

If you want to see which scarf was selected click the link below...

Monday, February 1, 2010

Playing with Glass and Fire: A Day in Larry's Glass studio

Last week I was lucky enough to be invited over to Larry Porteous' glass studio in Naramata to play with fusing glass. Larry has been running a sweet little business fusing glass and melting wine bottles out of his backyard studio since he retired a few years ago. Larry, a good friend of my Dad's, knew of my interest in all things creative and invited me over for a little play.

Glass tools!
Years ago I told my dad I was interested in stained glass, so for Christmas he went out and bought me a whole starter kit: a hand held glass cutter, a soldering iron and a book, if I remember correctly. And it sat in a box for years, while I went travelling.

I found this design online in an Islamic children's colouring book. I coloured it with my mother's highlighters to work out how I would cut the design.

Last year on a visit home, I dug out the glass cutter and paid a visit to a stained glass store with the help of my friend Anne on my way back to the Emirates. There I bought a few things with the dream of making stained glass pendants. Teaching myself with my makeshift tools, (I knew I was moving so I practiced cutting glass on my full length mirror) I learned how to score glass and how with a little confidence, it wasn't hard to break. And I didn't really cut myself-- too badly. ; )

First pieces done! They are actually blue, as you will see below. Where you can see yellow shows you where the lines didn't quite match up. Lots of rearranging, bigger pieces next to smaller pieces. It eventually worked!

The truth is, I need more practice soldering It's tricky. And I am not really sure how to take care of a soldering iron, and I found the tip was difficult to clean. If ever I decided to get into stained glass seriously I think I would sign up for a course. But fusing glass is a piece of cake!

Orange coming around the mountain.

I picked one of my favourite easy designs with straight edges, a common Islamic design to practice. Larry and I decided transparent glass might be a little more forgiving than opaque glass if I didn't get the lines straight. So for the first try, I went with blue and orange transparent glass.

Done! But what colour is it really? Now it's time to polish all the glass with rubbing alcohol. Weirdly enough, if the glass goes into the kiln with a fingerprint, that finger print will stay there forever. It doesn't burn off in the kiln. Totally weird, in my opinion.

Larry showed me how he would cut the glass, and then I went to work. I think Larry was surprised at how fast I can be at cutting. My first two were a little wonky, but as I went along the cutting became more confident and I used the glass "pliers" to break off any annoying edges with relative success.

I thought the orange pieces were going to be difficult but they actually easier. I just used old scrap glass Larry had tossed in a box. That is one nice thing about glass- Nothing gets wasted. You can make small things or melt it all together for a new sheet of glass!


Done!

So then it was time to put it in the kiln. Larry was doing a firing the next morning and we snuck my piece in with the rest. I had no idea what it would turn out like. Larry does two kinds of firing: one is a full fuse, (Like mine) where the glass would completely melt together but would blur the points into soft shapes. The other is a half fuse, where the edges would become round enough to stick to each other and become smooth enough that you wouldn't cut yourself, but the glass basically holds it's shape. My plate went into a full fuse firing.

Cutting glass on the bedroom floor in the Emirates wasn't the ideal place for cutting glass. But Larry's studio is. So nice to work in a proper space with proper tools! God? Are you listening? I want a studio!

Two days later, after taking Zoe for a walk I stopped in to see the plate and voila! Here it is.

Not bad for a first try! But you know me. The artist in me goes Hmmm.

Next time, I will use opaque glass. Next time, I might add more detail and spend longer time on a plate. Next time, I might just go over there and hap hazardly throw things together and see what I come up with. If I ever do this design again, I think I'd like it to be a half fuse, so the design stays crisp. But until Larry gets back from Arizona, I can only do full fuse. Something I need to think about when creating the next design.

Phew! No fingerprints!

Now that it's been fired once, I have the choice to slump it into a little bowl, or put three feet on it to make it a trivet. I think I might leave it the way it is as a trivet and get a little more creative with the next one. I've been scanning ETSY for glass artists I like, and maybe I will borrow from their creative designs as I begin, and move into something a little more "Creative Caravan" like once I get the hang of it!

Thanks again, Larry!
XXMelanie

Glass on ETSY that I like:


deSignSSglaSS's Adobe Pebbles:



Friday, January 29, 2010

The Creative Caravan has a visit with Craig Henderson of mynaramata!


A big thank you to Craig Henderson who took the time to chat with me about the Creative Caravan's return to the Okanagan and all of the projects currently happening. You can see it here on the mynaramata website:

www.mynaramata.com/show470a/Chasing_Geese_Captures_Naramata_Moment

or in the article below.

Thanks again, Craig!

xx Melanie


29th January 2010
Chasing Geese Captures Naramata MomentNew or Updated
Editor

An artist and teacher is staying productive during an extended stay with her parents in Naramata.

In recent years, Melanie Mehrer has lived in the Middle East, Turkey, Shanghai and Taiwan.
But, she has landed in her old hometown and is taking some time to get reacquainted and appreciate Naramata from an artist’s perspective.

Before arriving on her parents’ doorstep in December, Mehrer spent the past year with her sister in Turkey.
Melanie was teaching yoga and painting with a process called gouache, a watercolor-like medium.
Her first Naramata gouache (gwaash) is now complete, and it’s a fun and animated piece called Chasing Geese on Manitou Beach. (see above)

Mehrer hopes to create an entire series of perhaps six, and maybe some cards, before her winter break in Naramata is over.

Melanie attended Naramata Elementary and Penticton Secondary School. She studied art history and linguistics at the University of Victoria. Stays in Taiwan and Shanghai were spent teaching and paying off her student loans, often travelling with her sister Rene. In the United Arab Emirates, Melanie was stuck in an administrative role at a language school, but when Rene called from Istanbul, the two sisters from Naramata reunited.

It was in the Turkish city that Rene and Melanie started to make scarves with a block printing process. “They are a funky fashion accessory with a Middle Eastern touch, and just days after we arrived back in Canada, my mother Heather had a place for us at the Naramata Artisan Craft Faire. We sold 25 scarves that day!”

The scarves continue to be sold through the Penticton Art Gallery, or through a website linked below.
Or, (you didn’t hear it from me, but) next time you are in the Naramata General Store, you might ask Heather at the counter if she can hook you up with one of the uniquely designed scarves.

So, what is next for this prolific artist and artisan?

Melanie is squeezing in an online writing course through UBC during her winter stay in Naramata.

And, she hopes to paint enough local scenes to warrant an art show in the coming months.

Here is a link to her creative news blog, followed by her online store site:

http://creativecaravan.blogspot.com/2010/01/chasing-canada-geese-at-manitou-beach.html
http://www.etsy.com/shop/TheCreativeCaravan?section_id=6721962

Photos below: in Egypt; and Rene and Melanie hamming it up, preparing and selling kebobs in Istanbul.


Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Chasing Canada Geese at Manitou Beach!

“There is nothing like returning to a place that remains unchanged, to find the ways in which you yourself have altered.”
Nelson Mandela


Chasing the Geese at Manitou Beach 13 x 19"

My First Canadian painting since coming back to Canada!

I'm hoping to get a series of Okanagan paintings together and there is talk of having a show in Penticton sometime this year. I'll keep you posted!

This painting is of a much bigger scale than the other paintings I have done so far.I wanted to try painting at a bigger scale because I didn't have to be so finicky with the details. Working on a smaller scale with a tiny brush is often much harder!

The crew at Manitou Beach in early January.

About the Painting:

Manitou Beach in Naramata figured largely into my childhood. It's the place that I learned to swim. It's the place I drank my first beer. Manitou Beach is where all the action happened day after day all summer long.

Zoe enjoying breaking the rules at Manitou. (No dogs allowed!)

Recently I took my parents' dog Zoe for a walk to Manitou. For some reason, in my mind, though it's deserted during the winter months, Manitou is still where the action is. It's the vantage point of the southern Okanagan Valley, It's where the Marina waits quietly for summer sailboats to return, and it's where the flocks of Canadian Geese and a few Mallard Ducks socialize on the frosty sand.

Honk! Honk! Honk!

Zoe would have loved to have chased those birds, four times her size if I had let her off the leash. But Canadian Geese, despite their serene appearance, are not the nicest of birds. I remember once as a child trying to feed some ducks, only to have a big Canadian Goose come squawking over to scare the ducks away from their meal. I picked up a big rock and threw it at the goose, hit it, and than ran for my life as it charged me!

Pure goose panic!
This painting is Zoe's fantasy. To be a big dog big enough to scare the geese away and have a little fun doing it.

Bark! Bark! Bark!

XXMelanie

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Creative Caravan is at the Penticton Art Gallery!

Just to let you know the Penticton Art Gallery is now carrying Creative Caravan Scarves! Stop by, check out the exhibitions (There are three on the go at the moment!) and check out the scarves in person in the gift shop and let us know what you think!

As for me, I'm easing off the computer and am madly working on a painting which hopefully will be done in a day or so, which I will be thrilled to post here- the first Canadian painting! I only have an hour or so of daylight left so I'm off!
xx Melanie

Thursday, January 21, 2010

The Adventures of January 21st.



Today I have been on two adventures.

The first one is that I have been invited to mess around in a glass fusing studio because word gets around that I am creative.

Today I went to a studio owned by a family friend, and got a tour of the projects, the kilns, and the myriad of glass. Larry and I talked about the science of glass that expands and contracts at different temperatures. (A big no-no to fuse them together- they get fractured easily when the glass hits the dishwasher, for instance.)

Tomorrow I will lend my hand to some creative ideas, creative cutting (Thank goodness I have practice in this! The first time I cut glass I was really quite scared!) and hopefully our projects will go into the kiln! Could be a disaster, could be fun who knows? It could be a day trip that turns into a journey! I've always wanted a kiln for clay work. So tomorrow I will play with pretty broken glass and fire, two things I was always told to avoid as a child.

I may have to take up a band aid donation. I'll keep you posted!

The next thing, which for me was quite exciting, was making new Creative Caravan tags. Our scarves have been invited to sell in the Penticton Art Gallery Gift shop so they needed tags, and nothing I've come up with so far in the past few weeks seemed very fitting or interesting.

So today I took a page from Nick Bantock and made these tags. I dug around my mother's old junk and found these tags and the little "posted" stamp. I might add airmail stickers too, if they are free from the post office. (They were free in China! I still find them in the odd place!)

Tell me what you think! There is always room for improvement.

Three hats and a boar.

Three men from exotic places holding stuff.

The man tags standing at attention.

Mish Mash!

Please leave your comments!
XXMelanie

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

The tricks of ETSY

So I've got my shop up. I've got forty scarves photographed and about another twenty to go. Every morning I check to see which scarves have got the most hits the night before. Only one sale so far, to a friend of mine in Los Angeles, so what do I have to do to get my shop out there?

I've linked my ETSY shop to this blog. I've figured out how to add the showcase too. I've tried to poke around the ETSY forum to introduce myself to other ETSY people who might have ideas of how to promote the shop. I've donated scarves to charity because I think good karma is always a great thing. I'm in the process of making a logo for the scarves that will sell in the Penticton Art Gallery which will have the address to the ETSY shop on them as well.

And now, with the bulk of the shop up and at least running, I will try to mellow out about it all and get back into some painting. This week or next I will try to get my paintings up on ETSY. I've also got some new ideas and some old ones still kicking around my head that ought to come out.

Wish me luck!
XXMelanie