Saturday, October 30, 2010

My particular favourites:

I worked out the drawing style for these books with two illustrators as inspiration: Shirley Hughes and Freya Blackwood.


I love how modern and subtle Freya Blackwood's work is, and how people are half real half simplified. I later used her watercolour style as my guide to watercolouring—she's a lot better than me, but better trained and more devoted, so it's only fair. Oh, I wish I could draw like her.


I read some Shirley Hughes when I was little. I love how she fills her pages with childish details: grubby hands, frowns of concentration, pants falling down, wind-blown hair. She has a very unique style I have no hope of attempting!

I also used the photography on pumpkinpatch as a guide for little kid's proportions. By the way, they have a nice range of little girl clothes this summer with hardly any pink.

Coming soon: How I actually figured out my own style.

Friday, October 29, 2010

First sketches.

Starting many months ago...



This is the first thing I drew, I think. It is for a book in the MM series still in the pipeline about a toy picnic or something, and it was a test run when the idea for doing these kid's books was still a hazy potential. It's rather cute and very on the realism side. Realism is a lot of hard work, it was a good thing we didn't go down that path.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Storybook time!


I'm currently doing some illustration. I'm doing some freelance stuff, not very exciting: diagrams of the safe transportation of gas bottles. But at MM I am doing another children's book. Which is a lot cuter. I think I might run out of things to sew soon, so I'm going to share some illustration stuff. I think I might show you the work as I do it. The book will actually come out next September I think, so you are in for quite a ride!

Rosie's Walk is up there because I remembered about it yesterday. I loved it when they read it on Playschool. The sneaky fox steps on a rake and gets hit in the face, haha!! The pictures are cool. It's from 1968. It's so different from the style of drawing I try and do. 

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Vegetable couscous.


I had massive pumpkin cravings for a few days. Really needed to eat some veg, after a few days of bread, toast and other simple carbs I wasn't feeling good.

I don't often buy these packets, because they all taste the same: salty. They are so salty. Curry, mozzarella, all are salty. But it inspired me as a base for this veggie and couscous meal. I baked some pumpkin, and some mushroom. I boiled some carrot and a tin of chick peas for a few minutes before I added the couscous packet. I added some garlic, of course. Then I mixed in the pumpkin and mushroom and scooped it onto a plate of baby spinach. Once I put some fetta on top, it looked pretty fancy. Tastes OK not amazing, but it makes me feel healthy, and it looks pretty gourmet for something I invented.

Big patchwork cushions: blue.

I finished the bigger bluer version of this pillow. I bought a sort of chenille upholstery fabric at Spotlight, it was pretty cheap and feels soft and sturdy. 

It's synthetic, not cotton, so it flops around more and is harder to sew, and the edges of my patchwork were not straight, but as always, once you turn it the right way and put it on the pillow it looks fine. European pillows are cool. Very nice to snuggle up on. I have the pink pillowcase folded away because this is my new favourite—the pink cover is smaller than the blue one, so the cushion inside is fuller and firmer. That's a good tip—overestimate your cushion insert size if you want plump pillows.


I have crossed a few tasks off my UFO list last weekend!

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Skirt #2 finished!

Well, almost. A little hand sewing remains on the inside of the waist to finish off the lining. This is Apple's practise skirt, her first attempt, before she tries sewing with the lovely floral satin from Tessuti. This purple poplin was actually a bit hard to sew with, because it doesn't stretch or mould very well. So the inside of the hem is all scrunched, the blind hem was very awkward to sew. But you wouldn't know once it's being worn!

I'm wearing my green linen Skirt By Summer today, it is lovely. I think the quality of the fabric isn't just easy to sew, it helps it to sit nicely, the satin one will probably turn out the best.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Sherlock over...

It ended on a standoff. Gasp, growl. But there are promises of more to come! If only it was on the ABC and I could watch it without ads. How I love Martin Freeman as Watson. I am pleased that he is going to play Bilbo Baggins. Moriarty was awesomely creepy, such good acting.

In the meantime, The Mentalist is back on tonight. My other TV love. In the ads he seems like another friendly psychic, but he's really a nasty tricker, much more interesting.

I used to like Glee, but I've stopped watching it because I'm not home when it's on, and now that I've stopped watching it I've stopped liking it. The balance has tipped and the things I don't like are outweighing the things I do like. Sue and cover versions don't stand up to shallowness and sameness anymore.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Skirt #1 finished.


Hemmed my skirt and it is finished! I successfully did the hem on my sewing machine, which if you put it on the right stitch and fold the edge the right way, you get a hem which finishes the edge with a lot of zig-zags and doesn't have a seam show on the front (tiny stitches if you look carefully). It's so tricky I could never have invented it. Every time I want to do one I spend 15 minutes in confusion folding it wrong.


Monday, October 18, 2010

Mulberry time.

I'm walking along, staring at nothing, and suddenly I see on the ground the evidence: purple bird poo. I have now found two trees in my suburb. One is very sweet, one is less so but has more berries.

Library DVD review: The Man from Snowy River.

FIrst time watching this Australian classic. It is beautiful. The mountain country is just stunning.


I think it was made in the 80s when period stories were heavily romanticised and women wore a lot of lace and men wore puffy shirts, but they all seem to be wearing pretty normal clothes. Period clothes, but they were plain and real-looking, and also drizabones and boots. Very easy to identify with the place.

It's not an amazing script, and the story is pretty simple, but it's a really good piece of Australian rural culture. Girls on the ag college I use to work at loved it. It's a shame there isn't more like it, because I think bush culture is under represented. It was cool watching Australian men do rugged, useful things like crack whips and boil tea on a fire, foggy forests and horses running over mountains, and that stuff is still there today. The whips, the horses, the mountains, the roughness. I don't get into dramas like Mcleods or East of whatever it was. It shouldn't be a soap and it shouldn't be false nostalgia.

It is basically a coming-of-age story, which is another story rarely told in our age of delayed adulthood. I've been hearing a lot of media conversation about when do boys become men in our society, how do we mark that... so there is a line in the movie that stuck out to me. The young bloke says "it's more than a man can take" and the old fellas say "Man?" and he answers "my dad raised me to be a man".

Anyway, it was good. Sigrid Thornton and Tom Burlinson are quite good. The horse ride down the cliff is very good. The landscape is the best part, and the people on horses improve it. Make another one and I'll watch it.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Skirt by summer.


Apple and I have a skirt sewing project, first we chose a pattern and bought materials, then we spent another saturday cutting out the pattern and pinning bits.

I had a bit of time to sew on the weekend and I decided it would be easier if I did my sewing bit ahead of her, so that I would know what to do and we wouldn't have to keep swapping our threads in the machine. It was very quick, the actual sewing bit. Even the zipper. All I have to do now is hem it. I'm considering trying some fancy pin tucks around the bottom, but the fabric might be a bit heavy.

Note the pincushion: I made it myself. It was so annoying when Jess came over and we had to put the pins in and out of the packaging, I gave up and made this the next day.

Anyway, I shall photo the skirt once I've finished it. Currently it is "hanging up to let the bias hang out" for a few days so that the hem is straight.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Flags and butterflies.

Brooke Fraser has just released another beautiful album, Flags. She has a wonderful voice with a really sweet break, and because I never know and understand all her lyrics I never get bored listening to her. Once I know a lyric, there's no mystery. Particularly nice on Flags is a duet, Who are we fooling?. Duet's can be really special, and they aren't done much.

The more I discover nice music for myself and own it, the more it stays with me. When I like someone else's music, I get tired of it too fast.

I saw this massive butterfly this morning on my favourite street. I thought it must have been stuck in a web because it sat there for so long while I moved a twig out of the way to snap it, but afterwards it took off.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Sherlock Holmes



Television is so dismal these days that I recently found myself getting slightly excited at a poster for Beauty and the Geek. Scary.

All my hopes for good television rest on Sherlock. It has almost everything: mystery plots, modern take on vintage literary hero, good British casting—Benedict Cumberbatch is one of my favourite names, and he is so interesting (he was apparently in the running to be Doctor Who, which would have been cool—and now I notice how much Matt Smith looks like him), and he's been in good stuff, I have such high hopes for his Holmes. It rated really well in the UK. I'm surprised it's on NBN not ABC, it's a shame it will have ads.

Can't wait to see.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Knitted hats.

Karen B is a really good knitter. I've known the basic knit stitch for a long time, but I find knitting proper shaped items very daunting. Karen helped me follow this pattern, and helped me start and finish the hats, otherwise I wouldn't have made it.

I gave my final finished hat to Apple on her recent birthday picnic. Yay!

Other than having a Karen to help you, the secret to impressive knitting is probably nice wool. And cool knitting needles make it feel better.

If I knit something else, I'd like to try this pattern for a mobius cowl. I tried to put a mobius strip on the cover of a book once, but it was shot down and replaced with an hourglass, which is not as cool.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Dress to skirt.


I bought this pretty dress 4 years ago. It was about $60 from Portmans. I love the dress, it is beautiful, but it was not a successful purchase, because it is so low cut at the front. Also, it is really too pretty so I feel overdressed in it. I prefer to blend in and look a bit dull.

I kept it in the wardrobe for ages with some lace pinned across the front, wondering if I could make it not so low. I also wore it as a skirt a few times.

So last summer I decided to sacrifice the beauty of the dress I never wore to make a skirt which i would wear, and get better value out of. It is a shame, but I am much happier with the skirt than I was with the dress.

I cut the top off the dress, and sewed the two layers of the skirt together—it has a petticoat built in. I bought some elastic, sewed it into a loop, and put it between the two layers of the skirt, then sewed the skirt together over the elastic. I didn't quite estimate the length of the skirt perfectly, so it is a little long, but it works really well.