Tuesday, March 30
7 Aesthetic Themes - Part 2
4) Flora and Fauna Flowers, trees, leaves, birds, elephants, tortoises, cockerels, cows...you get the idea. Mother Nature is an excellent resource for stained glass designs.
5) The Year Still on the theme of nature, the changing seasons always bring fresh inspiration....as does the cycle of festivals and celebrations as we move through each year.
6) Trademarks and Logos Sometimes, when I've been given a brief to design a window featuring, for example, a cow, I find it really helpful to search Google Image for logos featuring cows...to look at interesting ways to break down the subject to its essential components in a few simple lines.
The other thing about logos is that they're designed to be eyecatching, visually satisfying and memorable in a way that is usually fun. Step forward, Mr Peanut, who was quite probably floating around somewhere in my head when I was designing Eugene and friends.
Images from here and here
Well, that's definitely six, but I might have to include this...
7) Victorian Domestic Stained Glass It's what I used to do when I lived and worked in London. Rows upon rows of Victorian terraces, all being refurbished and restored to their former glory by eager homeowners...the 1980s double-glazed front doors ripped out and replaced by as close a possible match to what would have been there 100 years before. Those beautfifully muted colours - heather, olive, flaxen, violet, sage, rose - juxtaposed with a jaunty red border or some brilliantly sparkling hand-spun roundels. Delicious. And the quirky charm of a hand-painted centrepiece, featuring a bright-eyed bird perched on a twig about to devour some poor little critter. I still paint these to order, it's always a pleasure to do.
I shan't tag anyone in particular, just anyone who is interested in doing this. I'd love to see what fires you up.
Friday, March 26
7 Aesthetic Themes - Part 1
1) A 1970s Childhood We're talking Dick Bruna, FisherPrice, Bod, Meg and Mog, Playmobil, Topsy and Tim. Those strong, simple designs with their black outlines and bright colours translate to stained glass so well.
Images from here, here and here
2) Retro Fabrics I never get tired of gingham. Ever. It just always looks so fresh and fun and girlish. As soon as I learnt how to acid-etch glass, I used that technique to make gingham. Back in the old days, when I lived in London, we lived around the corner from Cath Kidston's first shop in Clarendon Cross. This was in the days before she was a household name and had sold her soul to Debenhams (sorry Cath) when it was a quirky little shop selling lovely things and the catalogue was a couple of photocopied hand-drawn sheets of A4 (cue harp music and misty eyed nostalgic moment). I digress. Around this time was when I started learning the various techniques of manipulating sheet glass, and the first pieces I made were pretty much homage to the fabric designs of La Kidston. I was also (much to the amusement of my OH) spending a lot of time hanging round the Imperial War Museum and using up my ration coupons. Once I'd worked my way through cabbage roses and floral sprigs, I moved on to abstract designs of the 50s and 60s - Lucienne Day and Evelyn Redgrave. I love the challenge of trying to recreate fabric designs in stained glass. The limitations of the medium are also what make it so addictive.
Images from here, here and here
3) Scandinavian Folk Art Bold colours, simple designs, repetitive patterns, flourishes, symmetry, flowers, birds. Of course.
Images from here, here and here
Well, as much fun as this is, it is also taking up all of my Friday night. So Part Two follows soon....
Friday, March 19
Boiled eggs and soldiers (and rabbits)
A few weekends back, we went on a family jolly to Wookey Hole Caves. I love a good old shonky visitor attraction. The kind that probably started off as a mildly interesting geographical feature, and ends up as a pick 'n' mix of attractions. Indoor funfair? Check. Fibreglass dinosaur park? Check. Victorian penny arcade? Check. Mirror maze? Check. Collection of hard-boiled eggs painted like famous clowns? Check.
Gargantuan Jeff Koons-style rabbit? Check.
Brobdingnagian wooden soldiers? Check.
Such fun. You must go.
Monday, March 15
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Friday, March 12
Hello, how do you do?
I'd like to introduce you to some friends:
Maurice
Roderick
Melvin
Claude
Eugene
These little eggy fellows are in the shop right now...well, eggcept Maurice and Melvin who will be packing their suitcases and heading off to Kent to stay with their Auntie Linen Cat.
Such fun to make these guys. Initially, I had ideas about making decorated pastel coloured Easter Eggs for the shop. Do you know the book The Color Kittens by Margaret Wise Brown - illustrated by the amazing Alice & Martin Provensen? "And then a world of Easter eggs that danced about on little legs"
That image just kills me, so I started designing eggs with legs and arms, and then I kept putting faces on them that made me laugh and found the legs and arms to be rather unnecessary. So I dressed them in dapper little outfits and here they are. I was channelling 1970s men's hairdressers for the names...spending most of yesterday wandering around muttering things like "Hair by.....erm....Roger? No, not quite right"
I hate to show favouritism, but I think I love Claude the best...who's your favourite?
Wednesday, March 10
Friday, March 5
Spring Girl
This seems to have taken forever to finish. I don't know why. Perhaps I should have chosen a less labour-intensive medium in which to work. Regardless, I am so pleased with the glass colours and textures together - most Springsome indeed. And I'd like a cute blouse like that too.
Made from a combination of recycled kiln-flattened bottles, vintage and scrap glass (well, glass left over from bigger projects that is just too lovely to throw away, but too small to be of much use!), this panel will be exhibited in Camden as part of the Folksy/Sue Ryder competition winners show. I don't have a firm date yet, but it's looking likely to be April. I'll have some smaller items available for sale as well.
Monday, March 1
Ho Hum
In the meantime, I'm really looking forward to this Friday's episode of Mastercrafts (9.00pm BBC2) which will follow 4 apprentices trying their hand at stained glass. The mentor who will be training them is an artist called Sophie Lister Hussain, whose work embraces a wide variety of styles and practices and is technically superb. She also shares a studio with my ex-collegue and good friend Delia (http://www.apollostainedglass.co.uk/), so I was a little green with envy that she would be rubbing shoulders with the lovely Monty Don for a few days.
I've yet to catch up on the previous episodes of this show (green woodcraft, thatching and blacksmithing) but by all accounts they make really interesting viewing.
Other newsworthy items...I won a giveaway! This beautiful paper mechanical animal set from Oh My Cavalier! (via Pikaland).
Julianna's work is inspired by ephemera, folklore and sharp-toothed mammals. This hesitant little badger just about breaks my heart.
All photos from Oh My Cavalier
Oh and I should also like to point you in the direction of It Belongs To Turtle by way of thanks to the Turtle for his kind words about my glass. A very charming Turtle he is too.