of whales and fairytales
A lot of the time when I'm working on a piece, I reach a point when I need something I don't already have, I run out of patinated wire, or I just don't know for sure which direction it wants to take. I don't want to force it. I want to midwife it gently - no forceps deliveries on my worktable. Taking a break from the work usually means pulling up some weeds, loading the dishwasher, having a little lie-down ... but I especially like to read other people's blogs. My favorites are on the left. I'm so impressed when artists can coherently describe their processes. It really makes me feel inadequate. I love the blogs where an entire tutorial is presented. Words and photos. How do they do it? How would I ever become organized enough? Would a photo showing the state of my cuticles make readers gag?
Here's the finished piece - Labradorite, bone, black garnet. The Czech glass tube beads that make up the rosary chain are an iridescent grey that almost looks like the Labradorite. There's the whale bone again in photo three. Every time I move it, it leaves a little pile of calcium behind. I wonder what kind of whale it was. A humpback was sighted off the South Shore here this past week. Every once in while one beaches and dies out on the East End of the Island. When my kids were small, a young whale managed to find its way into the Inlet and then couldn't find its way back out into the Atlantic again. We went down to the Bay to try to see him. I think I remember that he was lured out by some fishing boats and my kids believed the story had a happy ending, but what happened to him in the wide Atlantic, I just don't know. Was his mama able to find him? I dearly would love to believe so. I'm a sucker for happy endings.
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I love to get feedback. It gets lonely here at my worktable all by myself. I appreciate that you took the time to post a comment. Thank you!