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Wednesday, 24 February 2010

I'd Like To Copy : Dinosaurs


One of my current work projects is a non-fiction book about dinosaurs. A couple of weeks in, I can confidently pronounce dolichorynchops, know why a quetzalcoatlus is called a quetzalcoatlus and hazard a good guess at what gallimimus would’ve eaten for dinner last night were it not for that pesky comet. According to Julie, I also have the power to give people ‘arms like a velociraptor’, but that’s a tweet for another day.

For now, I’ve taken a little creative inspiration from the slightly less visual side of my job and gathered up a few fun, dino-inspired images. With two small nephews who are just learning what a brontosaurus is (was?), it’s a fairly safe bet they’ll be handy for reference long after the book is done, dusted and sitting on their shelves.


Wednesday, 17 February 2010

I'd Like To Copy: Johnny Flynn

I won't say too much about why I admire this so very much as, quite simply, I find it exquisite.

Lyrics; melody; rhythm; animation. All of it. Exquisite. Do enjoy:





Each time I listen or watch, the hairs on the back of my neck stand up and my fingers can't help but tap something.

I'll be quiet now so you can watch it again if you like.


[Johnny Flynn's website]

Julie.

Wednesday, 10 February 2010

I'd Like To Copy : Spirograph Trees

If you were a child of the 1980s, I’m guessing that, somewhere in your toy-cupboard, you had a spirograph. A strange collection of plastic wheels and garishly coloured biros, it always looked more like a science experiment than something you’d use to make drawings, although, as a bit of a maths nerd, that somehow made me love mine even more. It was like schoolwork, only prettier.

So, I’ll leave you to imagine my (slightly tragic) excitement when I received a flyer from the Southbank Centre a couple of weeks ago and opened it up to find this incredible bit of retro spirography.



Spiro-trees, for the love of Wham! How could anyone fail to be inspired?

After a little rummaging around on Flickr, it seems I’m not alone in wanting to get my spiro on all over again. People are doing it on fabric



As art


To decorate cakes!


On jewellery


….and clothing.
To decorate the coolest ear-muffs


On a Moleskine

As papercuts


And, be still my heart, as simple but oh so beautiful white-on-kraft motifs.

Whilst I’m pretty certain most of my childhood fads are best left back in the ‘80s, I'm definitely planning to revisit the spirograph soon. How about you?

Wednesday, 3 February 2010

8. Plastic Bags

Those of you who took our '12 Days' online workshops might remember how I recycled the various bi-products of one of my favourite pastimes. In other words, how I re-used the packaging left over from shopping trips; namely price/hang tags and paper shopping bags.

Well, I've returned to the scene of my shopping crimes again for another spot of re-purposing.

*Copy* Plastic bags!
A few weeks ago I ordered a Jack Wills T-shirt [it was less than half price in the sale - so not a major shopping-crime] which was delivered in this rather fetching 'corporate colours' packaging:
I know you'll understand me when I say that when I went to throw it in the bin, I just couldn't quite bring myself to let it go. That little crafting voice inside my head piped up, observing: "I could make something with that .....".

And it was right.

*Paste*

I've been making lots of brooches lately turning circles of fabric into rosettes and flowers. So I just extended this idea and treated the plastic bag like a sheet of fabric; cut it into discs; made a snip into the middle and coiled it around into a cone shape. After reapeating this lots of times I stitched them all together to create my own custom-made Jack Wills-plastic-bag-rosette!

With the addition of a safety-pin glue-gunned to the back it was ready-to-wear. Spurred on by how well it turned out I made another one, only this time, I experimented with one of the properties that a plastic bag has, but that my other fabrics don't. Plastic melts.

I set about the edges of my second finished rosette with a flame!

A lighter flame to be exact. I held the flame against the mid-section of each 'petal' and pressed it immediately onto the adjacent petal thus bonding the two together. I then ran the flame quickly around the edges of the petals forcing them to shrink back and curl over. Then, happily [for I really had no idea what it would turn out like!] the whole thing began to take on the appearance of a fancy, double, poppy flower:

With this in mind, I added a florist's wire stem to complete the floral effect:

I'm certainly going to be reassessing all those carrier bags we have tucked away beneath the stairs and checking out their potential. I think a vase filled with plastic blooms could make quite a talking point in the centre of a table!

As for the rosette, I've pinned that to my crafting tote and, as it's plastic, I think it'll hold up niceley to the wear and tear it's bound to get being dragged along to crops etc with me.

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Now it's over to you .....

Do you have any carrier bags you could craftily combine into your projects? Maybe you could:

  • use an interesting graphic / pattern from a bag on a layout;
  • cut bags into strips and combine them into pom-poms [Kirsty has had success with this technique in the past];
  • cut them into strips to use where you would use ribbon ie: on a layout / around a gift ;
  • crumple one up, dab it into paint and stipple onto a canvas / layout / wrapping paper;
  • photograph one in an artistic manner;
  • Do you remember in the film American Beauty where someone makes a video of a plastic bag soaring and fluttering in the air? You could even try that!

If you do make something inspired by the humble-yet-environmentally-unsound plastic bag - remember to link it up here for all to see or drop it into our Flickr group. It's always good to share alternatives to them ending up in the landfill.

Julie :)

p.s: We hope you've been enjoying our new 'I'd Like to Copy' posts. Between us, Kirsty and I have so many ideas for full-blown challenges which we'd like to share with you ... but as much as we'd love to, we just can't manage to create a project from each and every idea. It's often a case of our crafting eyes being bigger than our belly!

Now, through 'I'd Like to Copy' we're excited to share with you a wide range of our favourite, inspirational artists, designers, musicians, photographers, works of art, everyday objects etc etc which inspire us to be creative .... even if we don't always have time to put that inspiration into practice. Hopefully you'll find something amongst them which spurs you to create too.

Friday, 29 January 2010

I'd Like To Copy: Corrina Rothwell

I discovered the work of Corrina Rothwell in one of my favourite galleries in York and I immediately fell for her combination of illustration and humour.

I really admire the way she commits to expressing a single idea within her drawings. Their direct simplicity really appeals to me and her words make me smile.
For further examples of Corrina Rothwell's art see both her website and her blog .

Her work makes me want to reconnect with my pencils and pens which, these days, often get overlooked when I first consider creating something. I think the last time I did use pencil on a project it was for the PostSecret challenge we did here on Copy + Paste last summer in which I confessed to wanting to write comedy. Perhaps drawing hands have a direct link to funny bones?

Maybe I need to dust off my pencils [or even crack open my lovely new ProMarkers] and put my funny-head on.

Funny head. Not funny face. There is a difference.

Julie

Friday, 22 January 2010

I'd Like to Copy: the 'Wallander' wall

Everything, and I really do mean everything about the style of BBC's Wallander series thrills me. The muted colour palette; the set design; the cinematography; the atmosphere; the costume choices; the wall painting in the police station .....

Oh my.

How I love that wall:

It reminds me of .... the Bauhaus style; of the work of Ben Nicholson and Paul Klee; of 1970s fabric designs and of geometric patchwork quilts.

And those things combined make for a very alluring work of art for me!

I really would like to *copy* it. Maybe there's a wall in my house which should be bracing itself for a new coat of paint, maybe I could recreate it on a canvas, or from paper on a layout or maybe it would suit a patchwork or freestyle cross-stitch project.

Or all of the above. Until I get around to creating one of those, I've made myself a Wallander-wall-inspired Flickr mosaic to feed my desire:

The 'Wallander' wall

It was incredibly hard to find images of the wall on the internet. Very nearly impossible.

In fact, it was almost as if there was no one else out there who's as madly obsessed with it as I am ....and surely that can't be true ....

Julie :)

Wednesday, 16 December 2009

7. Tiffany Keys

Hello again! :)

It's great to be back here setting you a new challenge after taking a little break to deliver our 12 Days online workshops. Both of us and our respective work-rooms and all available surfaces are [almost] back in 'pre-manic-class' shape ... and we've been treating ourselves to a little luxurious eye-candy.

Well, if you can't have a little indulgence at Christmas-time then when can you? So here's what we're gazing longingly at / copying this festive season ...


*Copy*:

Tiffany Keys
According to the Tiffany website this range is: "A magical collection of Key pendants brimming with intrigue and allure" and I can't help but agree!

The plainest ones are my favourites with their clean, strong, handsome shapes there's nothing fiddly and delicate [not my kind of thing] about them.


Not only are they aesthetically glorious, they also seem to evoke cosy feelings of home and belonging in me. In short, I love them. So much so that there's only one thing taking the edge off my adoration ... their price! At anything from £80 to £9,140 I suspect that they may stay on my 'Wish List' for quite some time.

If you get a chance have a look at the full range here on the Tiffany site ... but please don't hold me responsible for any overwhelming covetous urges you get while browsing.

So if, like me you like the idea of decorative keys but don't quite feel like offering up a vital organ / your first born child / your family car in exchange for one ... then read on ....

*Paste*

Julie's project: I bet you've got a place somewhere in your home, be it a drawer, a hook, a bowl etc in which languishes every key you've ever known but which you either [a] can't remember what they unlock and hold onto them 'just in case' or [b] you can remember what they unlock [eg: your parents' old back door!] and despite it being of no earthly use to you ...you hold onto them 'just in case'. I think you know what I'm talking about!

After visiting that key graveyard in my own home, while I may not have anything with 'Tiffany' etched on them, I do have some rather lovely new Christmas tree decorations:

Above I used jewellery findings to add a section of crochet haberdashery trimming to a decorative key, which I think came from an old padlocked diary.Meanwhile the photo below shows a key from a padlock [which came from a Christmas cracker!] which I coated with Glossy Accents and Pearl Pigment powder then added a gold bow to the top:

More haberdashery / key action, with a pearl heart gem:

And finally, the equivalent of the £9,000 diamond encrusted Tiffany versions here's the key to my parents' old back door, encrusted with [plastic] gems, black [plastic] pearls, Glossy Accents and wire:

Best of all ... my new ornaments cost me nothing as they were made entirely from things I already had, so I can put all my spare funds toward saving for the real thing!

*Paste*

Kirsty's project:

Like Julie, I too have a place for keys old, spare and of uncertain origin. When I come across one, I put it in a safe place, ready for . . . well, times just like this, when I have need of an otherwise useless key. The trouble with safe places, however, is that you can only ever locate them once - the once when you put something there to keep it safe. It isn't just me, right? So, short of sacrificing my front door keys, or driving the length of the country to raid Julie's highly-organised key bowl, I had to improvise. Languishing in my art cupboard (it's next to the boiler cupboard, and so very warm and enticing just now), I have two boxes which don't get used as often as they should. One contains moulding paste and the other, resin. They work beautifully together, and the paste seemed a perfect way of recreating a real key without suddenly finding myself locked out.

Making a mould is as simple as pressing the key into a sausage-shaped lump of paste, and I then added the resin and waited patiently until it had set (that's 'patiently' like an eight-year old on Christmas eve...). Once de-moulded, I spread a small amount of clear-drying glue over one side and sprinkled some super-fine glitter on top for a shimmery finish. At this point, you could happily use the pretty, sparkly, semi-transparent key as an ornament, to decorate a card or layout, or - taking inspiration from Julie's pictures above - tie it to a length of ribbon (Tiffany turquoise, please) and hang as a tree decoration.

To up the ante a little, though, I added mine to a junky, vintage-inspired necklace - a length of silver chain, some threaded pearls and crystal beads, a few chunky turquoise beads and a scrap of Tiffany-inspired ribbon to really highlight the key.
It might not be quite as festive as Julie's project, but there's really no reason you shouldn't look every bit as well-decorated as the tree at this time of year.

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Now it's your turn. What do you fancy doing inspired by Tiffany keys?

By the way - as pointed out by Kirsty - 'Tiffany Keys' does rather sound like a real person doesn't she it rather than an item of luxury jewellery?!!!

Anyway ...you could be brave, open up that much neglected junk drawer, dig out all your old keys and make some Christmas ornaments as I did or:

  • use an old key on a greetings card [especially fitting for 21st birthdays / new home cards];
  • create grungy 'steam-punk' styled projects using old, tarnished keys;
  • or spray / paint them cream and add pretty ribbons and hang from hooks / peg rails for a 'country chic' feel;

Or you might take altogether a less literal approach, perhaps you could:

  • take a photograph / make a layout / write a poem / record a story about a set of keys which have been significant to you in your life.

Whatever you decided to do we want to see it - remember to link us up to your project or leave it in our Copy+Paste Flickr gallery. We love to see how you all copy the same inspiration point and yet go on to paste such unique responses and we hope you can have a bit of fun with this challenge even at such a busy time of year!

I'm now going to make a swift exit before I succumb to the urge to make a pun about your contributions being the 'key' to our Copy+Paste community ... or something equally as comedically feeble!!

Nice to see you again, it's been fun, we should definitely do this again sometime!

Julie :)

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