Category Archives: Uncategorized

Elfish59 Art Journal Video

I really like how this person has  integrated text with images and used shapes to contain images and words as well as to direct teh eye around the page. It’s not the most beautiful journal artistically but it is at the core of what art journaling is- figuring out a thought or process out in a safe place. I think that sometimes we loose sight of the basic part of art journaling that it’s really not about the product as much as it is the process and the idea. Art journals don’t need to be finished art pieces they need to bea primary place to hash out ideas. That is why I like this video (though the music made me want to stab my eardrums with a pencil) it’s art and writing. Just turn off the sound…

unique teacher’s gifts are in order as school approaches

I used to be a teacher, believe it or not. I taught high
school art for a year and when that fizzled for me I went into working in an
Elementary Special Ed program grades 2 and 4. Both experiences led to many
memorable moments. The teenage girl who drew the penis disguised as a
lighthouse and didn't think I'd notice, the boy with whom I had to have a
discussion "IN MY OFFICE NOW" about respect, the runny noses and hugs
from 2nd graders for whom I was the strange lady who would talk to them like they
were human and doodled in the back of the classroom.

On of the sweetest things about the younger kids was that their parents would
send them in with some unique gifts for the teachers. I used to take these as
offerings to the merciful teachers who would take their hyperactive kids off
the parental hands for 9 months of the year and instill rules, boundaries and
limitations on their otherwise unruly kids. I have a feeling that if the
parents could have sacrificed a goat, sheep or virgin to get the kids out of
their hair they may have done it, but many of the gifts simply said,
"Thank you thank you thank you. I was one step from homicide and the front
page of our small local paper." Their faces told us that they were one
step away from insanity and a trip to the nut farm. As the kids walked into the
door, offering in hand parents looked on, hoping the teachers would be appeased.
The relief on their faces as the doors shut was visible.

Most of the gifts were pretty neat-o: flowers, homemade treats, various
school supplies among other things.(some of which we will not discuss here.)

Now there is no need to figure out a unique gift, a
parent just has to head to artfire.com and pick something and the artisan will
pack it and ship it right to their door. Check out the jewelry section for some
neat stuff. Also check out my shop for some really unique gifts- one-of-a-kind
handmade journals, perfect for note taking or journaling. I know for a fact
that most teachers are office supply junkies and would appreciate a journal
covered in soft leather, or an eco friendly jotter or a larger sized notebook
covered in recycled
/ upcycled sign vinyl.

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The sweetest gift I ever got was a dusty candle holder in the shape of a  watering can,iInside a dusty candle with faded scent. I spent a lot of time working one on one with that kid, helping him with math and reading as well as his speech therapy. At the end of the year he came in with a well wrapped gift for the lead teacher of the classroom and shyly sat at his desk laboring over a gift tag for the candle holder. He then waited until my back was turned and left the candle holder on my desk. Later that day I was talking to his speech therapist who had been talking to his mother that monring. According to the mother the kid had thrown a temper tantrum that morning because she'd gotten an end of yeaer gift for the lead teach but not for me. He woudln't leave the house that AM. He grabbed the candle holder and asked his Mom if he could give it to me. Hearing that story had been one of those moment wher I felt like I'd reached a kid. It also made it incredibly hard when I got the pink slip a few days later.

Totem Doodle

I found this website via the Doodler's Anonymous twitter. It's epically cool and makes you think of what you can draw in a small square. My high school art teacerh (Mrs. Friedman) had an exercise where you were asked to grid off a page in 1 inch squares, it had tobe precise, she checked it, then in each square you had to make marks, had to come up with as many different marks as possible. You scored better if your marks were all diddferent or you came up with ideas to make the grid work with itself. You could cross your lines (no crosshatching and no scribbles). It's a great exercise for a lot of different work. I feel li ke the totem project is a rift on that.

Whe I'm partilarly blocked I go back to this or a riff on it. Sometimes I draw equal sized circles on a page in my journal and fill them in with marks or faces. I"ve also folded a sheet of paper into equal sized yet small sections and done the grid exercise. I'm not as militant about no scribbles or cross hatching, after all rules were made to be broken and the idea is to free myself to get out of the rut.

try making a few 2 inch squares in your journal, go ahead now fill them in…

Custom Recycled Journal

MY friend asked me to make her a custom recycled journal to give as a gift, so I did. The cover is made of a recycled advertising sign with pockets stitched into it for support and storage. Inside are 240 pages of Wausau 30% post consumer waste recycled paper with 25% cotton and it's a nice 24lb paper. It's a natural color with green lines for writing.

I stitched it up with heavy hemp thread, lightly waxed for ease of use. The stitching is simply a linked long stitch. I really like how the hemp looks against the cover.

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Recycled Sign Journal Stack


REcycled Sign Journal Stack
Originally uploaded by lessherger

Not a great pic of these journals but it gives you an idea. I’ve been working on these all week. Monday I stitched the covers. tuesday I punched the holes and folded the paper. Wednesday I trimmed the paper. and The rest of the week I stitched them all together. this sort of piece work makes these seem to go really fast.

Most of these are on my ArtFire Shop here.

large sized jotters all of them


large sized jotters all of them
Originally uploaded by lessherger

It's been a long weekend here in my studio. I started churning out books on Friday and here it is sunday and I'm listing a bunch of them. I've been stitching up books while I watch TV too. SO I've gotten a massive amountof books made this week. This stack of large jotters is just one example.

I happened onto some log books that were being tossed into the recycle bin at work. I pulled them out and they were covered int eh most gorgeous stiff red coated coverstock. Super thick and printed with a leather like pattern. I reversed them and put the printed side inside and the flat side on the outside of the books. the cardstock is super thick. I can't wait to use one. I made a mistake on one and get to keep it. 🙂 Anyway these are listed on my ArtFire shop here.

Les Calepin de Lapin and Issuu

I found this gem of a sketcher's blog via doodlers anonymous's twitter(@doodler). I really like this person's style, quick sketchy but over layers of background and just wonderful coloring. It's just a sweet bi-lingual blog. Also I found the site Issuu through them which is a site that lets you publish a book free online, particularly nice for sketchbooks, because it lets you almost thumb through the sketchbook and see each set of pages just like you'd look at it in person very nice, better check out Lapin's stuff on there, it rocks.

Realization; and buying local

Last night on my way home form work I was tempted to stop at Charette, the art superstore. As I went to merge into the right lane, I remembered it had gone out of business and I was hit with a moment of sadness.

I have to wonder how long before  all we have left as artists and crafts people to purchase supplies from are large big box art and craft stores or online retailers?

I want to shop for supplies as I create, small and handmade. Charette may have been a larger retailer but it was Mass based (right out of Woburn where the superstore was) and I felt good about going there. The older guy. Arthur knew my name and knew I always came in looking for watercolor and pringtmaking paper and that I shopped the clearance area for paper pretty heavily.

Right now, just thinking about never beiong able to walk in and buy some great HMP I'm pretty sad.