Studio Musings

Showing posts with label learning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label learning. Show all posts

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Whole Lotta Beading Going On This Weekend

If you're in or around the Seattle/Lynnwood area this weekend, then I cordially invite and indeed urge you to check out the Northwest Bead Society's annual Bead Bazaar.  For anyone who loves beads, this is definitely a "gotta go" sort of thing.  There's a great line up of vendors, including a booth for the Fire and Rain Society - I spent a lot of time drooling there last year.  And came away with a number of spectacular treasures, even if my pockets were a bit to let.  There is an admission fee of $6.00, but it's for both days and goes to help support the Bead Society.

And then there's the lecture schedule!  Once you're in the door the lectures are free and run 50 minutes.  Look at the line up: 

Saturday
Pendant by Linda Larsen
Pendant by Linda Larsen
12:00 - 12:50 Riveting
Linda Larsen 
Learn how to attach a stone or glass bead without soldering.

1:00 - 1:50 Cold Connections and Fold Forming
Juan Reyes     
Create a simple clasp & transform a flat sheet of metal into a 3D object.

2:00 - 2:50 Little/Big
Lynne Magie   
Using small beads to showcase the beautiful art bead you just purchased.

3:00 - 3:50 Polymer Clay Color Transfers
Sarah Wilbanks  
Polymer Clay Color Transfers for beads and pendants

Sunday
12:00 -12:50 Viking Knit
Kathy Repp     
Basic & Advanced techniques - from simple chains to variegated, stripes and inclusions

Seedling Hinged Bracelet by Marlo Miyashiro
1:00 - 1:50 Improving your Small Object Photography for Internet Images
Marlo Miyashiro
Marlo gave this lecture at the School House Craft conference I attended last weekend and I HIGHLY recommend it!  She has some great insights and is an awesome source of knowledge. 

2:00 - 2:50 Going Rogue with Free Form Beading
Karen Williams
Ever wonder what's involved in freeform bead weaving, or how to start without a specific stitch count or pattern?  Karen shares a look into her process from start to finish in creating original, organic designs.

(Since it's my blog, I shared my description instead of their summation.)

And if you're not tired out from the lectures and the shopping, there's also a series of "informal demos" on both days.  They may be informal, but on Sunday I'm scheduled to talk about:

11:00-12:00, Peyote and Right Angle Seedbead Weaving
Back to basics here - just the basic stitches, can you believe it?     

12:15-1:15 3D Sculptural Seedbead Weaving
This will be a bit of a trunk show, mostly.  I'm planning to bring a number of pieces, both completed and works in progress.



Thursday, February 23, 2012

Breaking Radio Silence

Aulani Resort
I apologize to everyone for being gone for so long.  I could claim it's because I was on vacation, but the truth is I scheduled the last two posts for while I was gone.  Vacation was wonderful. 

The hard part was returning - we've been home for a week now and other than an hour of sun yesterday, it's been cold, wet and rainy pretty much ever since our return.  The studio seems extra quiet now too, after a week of hanging out with my co-conspirator (aka my husband). 

So where did we go, you ask?  We went to the Aulani, the new Disney resort on Ohau and pretty much stayed right there, enjoying everything the resort area had to offer.

Snorkeling with sea turtles
Playing in the public lagoon in front of our resort, we saw a sea turtle, then later we went on a snorkel trip where we saw far more.  They are so large and it's fascinating watching them swim.  Though their flippers move in what seems like slow motion,  they cut through the water so fast!  It's easy to underestimate their speed when you're simply watching their flippers move. 

I also snorkeled in the private reserve in Aulani's water park area.  It's small, but stocked with fish from around the islands.  Far more than I've seen on many a snorkeling trip and great fun at feeding time, when I could swim through swarming schools of fish and feel their swift movements in the water all around me.
Feeding time at Aulani's Rainbow Reef

One of Aulani's major focuses is on traditional Hawaiian art and culture, which inspires the entire hotel.  Some of the touches are whimsical, like the Menehune hidden throughout the resort area. Like this little guy at left, hiding in plain site near the ceiling in one of the elevators. 

Other touches are simply beautiful.  The curtains and shower curtains in our room featured kapa style prints.  Kapa is the traditional Hawaiian bark paper.

And one day a week artisan Dalani Tanahy comes to Aulani to share her experiences and knowledge in this artform; it's history, the tools and materials and the challenges modern kapa makers faced helping to resurrect the knowledge from old accounts and extant artifacts as all of the original kapa makers were gone. 

Traditional tools for kapa making

Dalani Tanahy demonstrating the pounding process
Me playing with feathers and beads: Take 1
Throughout the week, Disney offered a wide range of arts and crafts classes on traditional Hawaiian classes.  Some free, some for a small fee.  My favorite by far was one I almost missed.  The day before our snorkeling trip, I discovered that Kuahiwi Lorenzo would be teaching traditional Hawaiian feather work at the same time we'd be out on the boat.  But, he'd be doing a presentation at the artisan's corner later that day, after we were back.  So I sought him out, and asked enough questions that he ended up offering to give me an impromptu feather working class.  I hadn't realized, but in ancient Hawaii, bird catching was a special occupation, where they learned to trap the birds without injuring then.  Once caught, they'd remove a few feathers from each bird, then release them so new feathers could grow.

The project he started me on was supposed to be a feather bracelet lei made from dyed turkey feathers.  I worked on it for a while with him, then later.  But then I started wondering what would happen if I added beads.  So you can guess where I went from there, working from my traveling bead box.  I got most of the way during vacation, but finished up the last of it after our return home.  Definitely room for exploration here!

These arrived in the mail from Bobbie
So what finally prompted me to break through the silence that's been stifling me since our return?  A wonderful little package from Bobbie over at Beadsong Jewelry

She'd hosted a giveaway to celebrate her 100th blog post and I won these wonderful swirl beads from Thornburg Bead Studio.  They just arrived in the mail yesterday, bringing with them the promise of spring.  Thank you again Bobbie! 

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

2012 Programs for the NW Seedbeaders

If you live anywhere in the greater Puget Sound area and are interested in working with seedsbeads, I highly recommend you check out the NW Seedbeaders, a focus group of the NW Bead Society.  I've mentioned them before, but Sunday was our planning meeting for 2012 and all I can say is Wow! The upcoming schedule of programs is phenomenal.  Here's a sneak peak:

January 22:  Pearl/Crystal Bangle-- Debbie Johnson
 
February 26:  Fingerknotting-- Georgia McMillan
 
I'm afraid I don't have any pictures of the two above.  (Bad me - since I was responsible for taking all of the sample photos on Sunday.)  Then:

March 25:  Bohemian Wrap with Kate Parsons (Sample by Ann Wilkinson) 


April 22:  Huichol Baskets with Debby Zook
May 20:  Ribbon Pouch with Shirley Pauls
June 24:  "Corset & Stays" Right Angle Beaded Bead with yours truly
July 22:  N'debele Tube with Deanna Raabe, Aug. 26: Russian Leaves with Jennifer Brown
September 23:  African Helix-- Janet Thompson (no picture yet)

October 21:  Snowflakes with Debby Zook
We even have programs planned into 2013, including a workshop on Kumihimo in March of 2013.  We generally meet on the fourth Sunday of the month from 10:30am - 3:00pm at the Maplewood Rock and Gem Club in Edmonds, just a little bit north of Seattle. 

And even if you don't live nearby, if you should happen to visit the area on one of these days, come join us for a fun day of beading and camaraderie.  About half the time is devoted to the program, though you're welcome to bring and work on your own project as well.  The women are all so talented, fun and welcoming its become one of the highlights of my month.  Oh, and lunch is potluck.  (And someone, I'm not sure whom, brings the best deviled eggs. Yum!)

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

The dorm


In order to save a little cash for important things (like more beads) I opted to stay in a dorm. Mine's called "Building 54" it sounds very official, like it should be in a military installation. Instead its a very cute building with a red tin roof.

My dorm room itself is huge. On either side of the front entrance (with the red porch roof) there is a single room set up for up to 4 students. The front and back walls each have two twin beds with a bookcase headboard in between. The bed has a trundle drawer underneath it, and a small chest of drawers next to it. That's our personal space. Then we have the dance floor in the middle - its at least the size of our bedroom at home! Between the two rooms is a sort of shared hallway that's the bathroom, with 2 showers, 2 toilets and 3 sinks. I've got two roomates and the other side has 2, so there's five of us on this floor all told.