Category Archives: Art

Grey Friday

Grey Friday tones: Etsy. Followed by more Etsy.

After a too-hot start to the week, Seattle is grey once again. I’m starting to pull out my sweaters and long pants & looking longingly at my boots. There’s every chance that when I stumble out of work, it will be sunny and warm, so more planning is required than a simple sweater and Smartwool-socks based outfit.

It’s an obvious trend here that my posts wouldn’t be complete without something from Anthro. I give the the Dried leaves dress in grey felted wool, with little felt flowers at the neckline, which aren’t annoying at all. Because I’m a sartorial masochist I went in, tried it on, hugged it, and put it back. It broke my heart a little. I recommend that you get a size down – because of the material, you run the risk of looking like you’re wearing a well-tailored sack if it’s too big.

I want to wear it & wander around Capitol Hill taking pretend-pictures with this camera, & wearing this upcycled felt scarf:

♥ Momo

The Tiny Fat Bird Thing.

 

Tiny fat bluebird: Etsy.

I might name my business Tiny Fat Bird. One of these days I’ll have to write an explanation/history of why tiny fat bird, but for now, I’ll stick to because. Tiny Fat Bird. That’s why.

If I hadn’t been on a bus at the time, {Yesterday} I would have stopped in my tracks at the sight of a girl at the bus stop with an adorable fat teal bird tattooed on the top of her right foot. I would have stopped and declared my undying love for her foot. I must be mad.

Robins: Lost? They look lost…

♥ Momo

Motopresse on Etsy

Alice Necklace

New pieces up on Etsy! Rutilated/tourmalinated quartz drop necklace finished with a stack of tiny rubies, on a fine double sterling silver chain.

I’m sure I’ve talked about my octopus designs before; I’m awfully fond of them. I call him tako-chan, & I hope he’ll find a good home!

I tried something different this time: offsetting the clasp. I also placed a corresponding ring on the other side for balance, & like the effect. The ring also doubles as an additional loop for the clasp to shorten the necklace if you like. If it goes over well, I might bring it back in future pieces!

I’m not sure why I call him “he”, when he’s got several sweet faceted garnets keeping him company. Habit? In any case, I’ve named it the “Olivia”.

I’m so excited to have these up! A couple of people have actually made my first piece a favorite, and I hope that means that people like my work. I really wasn’t sure what to expect as far as Etsy traffic goes: I’ve heard from people who sold their pieces within 24 hours of listing, and some who have been on for a year before selling anything at all. I have high hopes.

♥ Momo

Blueberry Lemonade Necklace; Thoughts on Value

Blueberry Lemonade Necklace. Silk.

I’m reading the discussion of perceived value on LinkdIn, which starts with a quote from Japanese Economist Noriko Hama:

“When you buy something cheap, you lower the value of your own life.”

…I buy that. {I also crack myself up} Pricing is the issue that haunts all artists, & value is an even more nebulous issue. I work with perceived value materials: precious stones, sterling & fine silver, gold. Our world gives these things value that goes beyond their physical properties. Your brain will automatically classify rubies & diamonds above garnets & quartz, without giving it a second thought. Forget that you can buy some rubies for a dollar and some cuts of quartz – which is a much larger range than you know – can cost hundreds of dollars. These things are relative.

The trick is apparently to price so that you’re paying yourself an hourly wage & covering the cost of your materials. From there? No one seems really comfortable talking about it. I’ve worked for boutiques that marked their retail prices at six times what they paid the artist/vendor they bought it from. In pricing & selling my own work, I don’t have to worry about the retail cost of things – except that I do. If I end up selling my work through a gallery or boutique, they’ll take 50%. I also need to make sure that people will want to buy my work, which as it is really doesn’t represent my full aesthetic or skill set. I’m just starting out. I almost feel as though I shouldn’t be selling my work right now, because I’m just not there yet.

That’s a silly concern, though – as though I’m turning away buyers. I do crack myself up.

In pricing to my insecurity, I run the risk of lowering a piece’s value simply by making it affordable. In class last weekend, a girl whose work I love made another excellent point: “If I’m pricing to my tax bracket, I may never make any money at all”.

So I’m struggling with pricing. I’m looking at Twist, where the pricing includes the name of the artist; you’re buying the prestige of wearing their name. There are pieces made from knotted silk & rocks that are several hundred dollars. {The same logic that makes a sterling necklace from Tiffany & Co. $300+} There’s the experience, too: Anthropologie has this down. They have zero advertising, and you only get their catalog if you subscribe, implying you have already found them through the dark underground of Anthro addicts….or, if you buy your niece a gift card for Christmas….sorry Uncle Steve, you will be getting Anthropologie catalogs until the end of time. The point with Anthropologie is that you’re not buying a piece of jewelry or a dress, you’re buying a lifestyle. You’re buying a ready-made look, which is made unique by nature of the cost – not everyone can afford to have a complete wardrobe from their store. I barely scrape by, & I’ve managed with a number of pieces found used, but I’ve also spent money I didn’t have in order to buy into their life. I think about this when I’m pricing my own work; I’m not empowered to make other women spend money they don’t have, but I know that people do; can I be held responsible for that? Probably not, but I’ve never been comfortable with the money aspect of retail.

But if I were pricing for my tax bracket, I’d never make any money.

My jewelry is worked out on the foundation of my aesthetic, which is simple, organic, clean, and classic. {Find me a designer that says their work is anything else.} I’m trying to make something organic and beautiful out of a pile of silk, silver and stones, of varying perceived & actual value, with a skill set that’s still growing.

I don’t know how to describe what I’m looking for when I look for materials; I probably have a better developed sense of the materials I want than skills to work with them. In the end, I’m looking for stones that speak to me. When I see them, something clicks.

It’s a lot like fashion; when you look for clothes, you go right to some pieces, right past others. Some just make you shudder.

I don’t have an answer yet. All I can do is keep making jewelry, failing faster as Shawn says. Sometimes I hit upon something that clicks. Say hello to my newest project:

Prehnite is apparently useful as an aid in meditation. While wearing it, I was able to juggle a purse, hot coffee, a glass of lemonade, and a pound of Strawberry Daiquiri Jelly Belly’s four blocks, up and down escalators and stairs….this is lot more than I typically can manage without some sort of epic disaster. Maybe it gave me inner calm, keeping me from spilling hot coffee on myself? Not a bad thing to hope for, even if it is psychosomatic.

Don’t ask about the Jelly Belly’s.

Thanks to everyone who sent me messages of support since my first piece went up for sale! Let me know what you think of the silk piece in this post; I’m thinking of making more.

♥ Momo

Etsy Finds: Mud Poppy

Etsy: Mud Poppy

Mud Poppy: my new favorite Etsy shop. The skulls & the baby aren’t really my thing, although they’d be right at home with an Urban Outfitters/Zombieland addict, and I can respect that.

I love the teacup, above, and the moon chimes & H.G. Wellsian hanging planters:

Happy Monday!

♥ Momo

Pomegranate Joy

Pomegranate Bliss

Pomegranates might not be in season, but this is too cool.

{Hint: this is a big wish list thing of mine; I may limit the pieces I wear that aren’t made by me, but I would a. never have made this, even though when I first saw it, I felt like some creative void inside of me had suddenly been filled with light – too dramatic? why?- and b. people will understand the pull of something as unique as this.}

I have an exciting Skill Advancement class with the amazing Nanz Aalund this weekend, and one can only run on so much coffee. Got to go to bed earlier.

♥ Momo

Fish Food

I can so catch fish!

I have proof! I went on vacation, and caught a fish! {Love the hat.}Not just any fish, but a big, fat, 16″ bass-type fish. {Bass} I actually thought it was a log until it started moving from side to side, and of course, the flopping bass jumping out of the water is a dead give away, right?

I actually caught three: an 11″ & a 14″ fish in addition to the 16″, but this one was the one I had to fight for. You now how much upper body strength you need to pull this fat thing in? More than I have, it turns out. But I did it, all by myself.

{Note: the words “all by myself” do not include taking the fat fish off the hook. Overwhelmed with guilt and a little afraid to touch the fat fish, I looked on as Shawn took over and unhooked the fish for me. I named him George, then we threw him back.}

It was gorgeous the last couple of days we were there, with beautiful blue skies turning into loud, thundering rainstorms:

It was counterintuitive to me to go fishing in bright daylight like this; I was raised in a family where we get up at 3 a.m. and drive out to a lake in the middle of nowhere, where I would then have to either disguise my height or cast to shadowy places across the river and under logs to trick the fish into biting the cleverly constructed fly tied on the end of the line. That’s what you do for trout, a.k.a. “smart fish”. Bass are not “smart fish”. Bass and Pike, I was told, are known as “irrationally angry fish”.

Guess which one is more fun to catch? Since I’m 5’9″ and about as sneaky as a bull in a china shop, I am clearly meant to be going after “angry fish”. These are fish dear to my heart because, bless their souls, I could be standing right in front of them with a big sign that says “this is a trap, stupid fish” and they might even be more likely to bite because I called them stupid! Here I’ve spent my childhood getting skunked in trip after trip failing to outwit the “smart fish”, when there were fish just a few states over who would swallow the bait even if they knew for a fact it was a trick. The casts that didn’t hook bigger fish still had about six or so pissed off tiny fish that would bite the bottom of the worm, and not let go. They chased that sucker till they got bored with it, and as soon as it moved, they were on it again. Love. It.

{My father is designed for “smart fish”, and can go all KGB on them quite well in our….grey, cold, rainy Northwest weather. I eventually moved on to kicking around in a float tube with a book and two bottles of iced tea. I’m pretty sure the fish spent these trips hiding underneath me.}

After the rain and thunder blew over, we ventured out and I raided a nearby raspberry bush, now cleaned by the rain:

…you know who else likes raspberry bushes during a rainstorm? It turns out that mosquitoes do. Giant ones, that rise up in an enormous cloud before you like something out of a Michael Crichton book. {Or the Great Pumpkin. But I don’t think these guys wanted to give me presents.}

So, I run screaming from the giant cloud of mosquitoes, cover myself from head to toe with “Off!”, and return to my raspberries. They were beautiful.

This was what the sky looked like as I headed off to roast marshmallows:

Evening…

…because when you’re stuffed full of raspberries, the next logical thing to stuff yourself with would be roasted marshmallows. A half a bag of them. I think I’m known as the “Queen of Sugar” now.

♥ Momo

Living in: Miss Marple.

I’ve been listening to Rosemary Leach reading The Mirror Crack’d while I work & it’s making me sentimental.

Tea set; I’ve loved this pattern for years.

It would fit in nicely in the scene when Miss Marple is telling Dermot McCraddock exactly who killed Heather Badcock. {I won’t spoil the surprise.}

This dress looked to me like something Marina Gregg would have worn on set before the day of the murder.

The ABC Murders

Teacups for the ABC Murders; in my top five Agatha Christie mysteries, along with the Mirror Crack’d, Murder at the Vicarage, The Orient Express, & The 4:50 from Paddington. {Originally published in the U.S. under the appalling name “What Mrs. McGilicuddy Saw!”}

♥ Momo

Inception

We went to see Inception this weekend, and it was amazing.

♥ Momo

A Few of My Favorite Things: Ocean Jasper

A close up of a bench pin….

“Oh Tigger, where are your manners?”
I don’t know, but I bet they’re having more fun than I am.”
— A.A. Milne

The Intergem gem show came to Seattle a while back; and I thought I’d share some pictures of my new raw materials. On Jasper: Jasper & Agates have to be my favorite stones. Give me a nice cut of Condor Agate over whatever precious gem is in vogue any day. Tell any child who’s just found an agate on the beach that it isn’t as incredible & precious as a diamond. Jasper has so many faces it can fit any style of jewelry. Some of my favorites look like landscapes, or waves. I have one piece I haven’t set that looks like a sailboat in a storm as Chris Van Allsburg would imagine it. I read The Wretched Stone at a very young age & it’s stayed with me. Then there’s ocean jasper. It’s just cute.

I already have sketches laid out for the tiny green square that looks like an owl peering out at you. When we’re back from vaction {I will be blogging from MN for the next two weeks, because it turns out you can still stalk Etsy when out-of-state} the plan will be to set up a soldering area so I can start working properly again! I have an acetylene tank and torch tips and everything, and wooooow is that a nervous feeling, no matter how comfortable you might be with those things before you bring them into your house. {*Update: sold the acetylene tank & setup, bought myself a mini torch. Same level of heat, much finer control.}

I’ve done a lot of research, taken a number of soldering classes at the studio, & I’ve been working on my own there for three months or so, & I’m not too worried. It just takes practice. I’m looking at some welding tables with steel backs, just little 12″ x 12″ things; but I’ve also seen people who have set up a soldering station on a wooden Ikea shelf nailed into a wall! I know I need a tripod, mesh screen, asbestos-free board, I have tweezers, flux & solder…and I need to find a tiny yet functional crockpot for pickle…thank goodness for Goodwill & their endless supply of barely used crockpots.

I have a nagging feeling that I need a flex shaft.

I have a new favorite supplier on Etsy; she merits a mention here, for anyone wanting to pick up some pieces of their own…or for me! {I know, it’s not all about me…sigh.} I do really try to pass on the love when someone really wows me in the customer service department; this woman was exceptional.

Oh, and go listen to “Television” by Peggy Sue & The Pirates. It’s so cute!

♥ Momo