Posts Tagged ‘spring’

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And just like that, the season turns. I don’t know what that Punxsutawney Phil guy thinks he knows, but his predictions rarely apply here. Spring comes early in the Northwest, and yesterday I spied this little harbinger of good things to come. I’ll take the predictions of the trees over any prognosticating rodent.

The sun’s returning in earnest now, too—not just with this batch of unexpected blue skies we’ve had lately, but with noticeably longer days. Everyone here is just a little more cheerful as a result. Suddenly, everywhere are smiles and open windows, as we all breathe in that first hint of fresh spring air.

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Despite an overabundance of deadlines and studio hubbub lately—well, beautiful spring weather and productivity just don’t mix. So I took a day off and made my annual pilgrimage Up Nort’ to the Skagit Valley to catch the end of the Tulip Festival.

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I’m glad I waited this year; not only did the blooms hit a late peak, but the weather was nearly flawless.

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Of course, a sunny Friday in the Northwest is basically a license to play hooky, so I wasn’t the only spectator.

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Finding a shot that didn’t include minivans, port-a-potties, cyclists in DayGlo jackets or entire families striking goofy poses was quite a challenge, and required a lot of waiting and creative cropping.

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This time I was interested in far more than the tulips, however; whenever I wandered away from the fields of pink and red, I seemed to have whole acres to myself.

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But that’s the thing about the Skagit Valley—

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the tulips are lovely, but the place is perfectly magical, all on its own.

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This year’s trip came with a little added bonus: I gave into the urge to just keep right on going up the coast. There wasn’t time to get on a ferry to the San Juans (off in the distance above) or head all the way to Vancouver, but I was curious about Bellingham, so that became the destination.

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(I took the back road, of course.)

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By the time I pulled into Bellingham, though, I’d spent so much time watching people harvest shellfish and falling down the rabbit hole of fantastic bookstores that the town was closing up shop for the day.

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I did fit in a stroll around downtown, though—

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and even discovered a ferry terminal to Alaska (and started plotting future “road” trips along the Marine Highway).

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Just as I began the internal debate over whether to stay for dinner, the last of the clouds disappeared, and Mt. Baker came out. (No, not the one on the left—the other Mt. Baker!)

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That put an end to the argument—I high-tailed it back to the tulips to catch the sunset. Dinner could wait.

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By then the last of the other tourists had gone home—

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it was just me, the mountains, and a sea of blooms stretching to the horizon.

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It might officially be spring out there, but around the house, winter still has us in its grip. Both the Tailor and I have been battling a particularly nasty, über virus for weeks now, so no matter how promising the weather reports might be, my brain is just screaming at me to stay home. I’m finally on the upswing, it seems, but just to give the ol’ system an extra boost, I’m going through our winter stores of citrus fruit like there’s no tomorrow.

My favorite thing is to squeeze a big splash of lemon and orange juice into piping hot Earl Grey—this time I juiced a couple of last October’s ruby-red pomegranates (yep, they’ll keep that long!) as well, since I haven’t had a chance to pick up any of the blood oranges that are just coming into season now. I toss in a few cloves and cinnamon sticks, stir it with a goodly dollop of honey, and sip away. And suddenly I feel far less poorly … at least until my mug is empty again. Which reminds me—I think I hear the kettle whistling.

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Yesterday I headed north with a friend for my second Skagit Valley Tulip Festival. I was hoping to do some drawing this year, but the weather had other plans.

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It was like I’d never been there before—everything was different this year. For one thing, the tulips are blooming early, so the daffodils hadn’t retired yet.

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For another, the farmers have rotated their crops, so the tulips are occupying different fields than last year—which gave me a whole new set of photo possibilities.

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And best of all, we had the place to ourselves—Tuesday discouraged the tourists with day jobs, and the rain took care of the rest.

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The Skagit Valley is quickly becoming a favorite haunt; it was hard not to turn the day trip into a week of following all the back roads and exploring all the hidden pockets of scenery I discovered yesterday.

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That’s okay, though. I know that next time, more than just tulips will be waiting for me.

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…it would be the unexpected blooming of an early spring.

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Today we dished out our first strawberries and cream of the season—cause for major celebration at our house. Now, lest you get the idea that I’m either entirely too easily amused, or have never heard of a supermarket, let me explain. The Tailor and I do our best to eat locally, organically, and seasonally—and we’re lucky to live in a part of the world with lots of like-minded people who do the same. I think, however, that we tend to fall in the, uh, hardcore variety of seasonal foodies. I’m sure this topic will crop up again in the future, so I’ll save you the spiel. For now, let’s just say that if Mount Rainier happened to go ka-blooey some winter, cutting T-Town off from any supply routes into the city, we could live on our stored food for a good three or four months before we started beadily eyeing the squirrel population. Sure, it’s probably a little nutty, but what it boils down to is the fact that we only eat asparagus in the few short weeks every year that it’s available locally—and we don’t buy any produce between November and April. So for me that first beautiful mouthful of fresh, perfect, tiny strawberries is better than any birthday present (though I admit to occasionally breaking down and impulse-buying California berries two months early when my will is weak).

All of this is to say that living seasonally certainly teaches one to learn the cycles of the year (so as not to miss the asparagus, you know), and to appreciate the best parts of every season, however brief they may be. So while I was utterly failing to save the rest of the berries for later, I reflected on how thankful I am for the lovely, prolonged spring we enjoy ’round these parts (in the Great White North, it passes in a pink flash). And then I remembered that I owe you some tulip photos.

(See how my brain works? I’m a walking non-sequitur.)

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Long before we moved here, I’d heard stories of the Skagit Valley Tulip Festival, of the magic of standing in a sweeping vista of rainbow blooms, seeming to end only where the Cascades began.

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The stories left out one important point, however: the light. As soon as the sun cleared the clouds, every flower burst into a neon glow, filling the valley with unreal color.

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You know, for a place that claims to be grey so much of the time, my digital color correcting skills are getting awfully rusty.

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Sorry for the long absence. I’m running a little behind to begin with (deadlines and out-of-town visitors have moved to the front burner lately), and there were a lot of photos to sift through. But I’ve been meaning to share these for some time now—better late than never, I suppose.

The window displays in the old Woolworth’s store downtown have been converted into a twenty-four-hour gallery, with artist exhibitions and installations rotating quarterly. Shortly after I moved to Tacoma, I found out that they were accepting applications for the 2009 gallery slots. I thought it might be a good opportunity to play with some completely non-letterpress (un-letterpress?) ideas I’ve been nurturing, so I gave it a shot.

For many years I’ve carried a sketchbook everywhere I go, but for the last couple I’ve been experimenting with something a little different. One day I was in a hurry, and knew I wouldn’t have time to fill an entire spread with the watercolor sketch I wanted to make. So I chose a page that already had some figure drawings on it, and just painted within the negative space around the figures.

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And from then on I couldn’t stop. Once the number of watercolor paintings began to catch up with my stock of line drawings, I started attending model sessions again. This time, though, I used the figure drawings to compose the page, with the expectation that eventually I’d go back in with another sketch later.

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Several people told me they’d like to see these drawings on canvas or framed on a wall—and more than one suggested a wall mural version. Besides, the conceptual link between nude figure drawings and mannequins in a store windows was too tempting to resist. So I applied for a Woolworth Windows show, but I guess I never expected that my proposal would be accepted. I was talking about gigantic nudes on a busy street, after all. When the notification date came and went without a word, I assumed the project had been rejected and moved on. And then, three months later, I received an email that said, “Congratulations! By the way, your show begins next weekend.”

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Now, I’m not normally an installation artist, but I do have six years of technical theatre and several large-scale murals under my belt. Still, there was something rather daunting about being thrown in the deep end of a double installation project, which involved attempting to paint proportionally accurate, ten-foot-tall nudes inside a narrow, very public glass box. A very monkey-cage-at-the-zoo glass box. To be fair, every mural I’ve ever painted has begun with a ripple of fear, and thoughts ranging from “Oh, right, I forgot how big walls are” to “For the love of Pete, how did I ever convince these people that I was capable of painting something that actual humans would be able to see from a distance?” Depending on the scale of the project, of course—hey, if blank pages can be intimidating, blank walls (and tall ladders) are pretty terrifying. So this time, what with the many passers-by glancing in at me, I needed a few extra deep breaths. It’s funny that I still get that little moment of panic—because once I finally start in with either pencil or brush, I feel right at home, and even the ladder becomes an old friend. There’s just something so satisfying about slathering paint on a wall.

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One of the challenges of the Woolworth Windows was getting my design up on the wall, at the correct size, without distorting anything. If I were painting a scenic flat for the theatre, I’d just photocopy my design onto a transparency, hook up a projector, and blow up the drawing to whatever size I needed. In a window display, however, there simply isn’t room to put a projecter far enough away from the wall. So I did it the old fashioned way: made my rendering to scale, laid a grid over it, and drew the same grid at the larger size on the wall.

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You can see a little of the pencil grid in the top photo; in the left-hand window the pattern repeats did most of the work for me.

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Like the drawings in my sketchbook, the inspiration came from a variety of sources. This pattern was an original design, but I was heavily influenced by the patterned brocades I saw at Versailles (see below).

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Another element from this collage found their way into the design—my sketches of the inlaid floor of Saint Chapelle in Paris became the basis for the floor of the right-hand window.

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The windows also contain elements found closer to home: a bit of the restored Harmon sign in Tacoma,

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and a stained-glass window in the home of my friend Christina, who lives in a former church.

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Since I had a lot of equipment to stash in such a small space, I had to paint in a piecemeal fashion,

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moving my supplies closer to the door as I painted myself into a corner.

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Despite the challenges of the installation, this has been one of the most interesting and fun mural projects I’ve ever done. For one thing, I fulfilled a secret childhood wish to be “one of those people” who designed and created window displays (I was a big fan of Mannequin). For another, the best part about painting in public is that you get to meet all kinds of wonderful people. Everyone I’ve seen has been incredibly supportive, curious, and thoughtful. Mothers wheeled their strollers right up to the window so their toddlers could press up against the glass and watch. School kids on a field trip gathered around my rendering and recognized the Harmon sign immediately. Street-smart teenagers stopped to ask insightful and challenging questions about gender roles in art. Friends brought me coffee on a chilly day, or kept me company when I started to get tired. Business people flashed me a thumbs-up on their way to work, and neighborhood regulars shouted their encouragement through the glass. I guess I didn’t have to worry about the public reaction to a bunch of naked ladies after all.

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There’s a catch to all of this, however: the installation is temporary. The last day of my show is June 13, and then I have to paint everything white once more. So stop by while you can—you’ll find these ladies on Broadway, close to the corner of South Eleventh Street (on the same block as the Thursday farmer’s market).

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I guess that’s another thing all those years of theatre taught me: how to practice a little detachment when you have to dismantle what you built.

Even if it were only up for a day, though, it would have been worth it.

Everywhere I turn I hear complaints about how pokey Spring has been ’round these parts, but I have to say—if this is late, hallelujia anyway. It’s been a long, long time since I’ve lived anywhere that had blossoming trees by early April. We had a late spring in Minneapolis last year, too, which meant that it was Memorial Day before the blooms had anything to say about it (I know, because I was fretting about the bare trees right up until my wedding that weekend).

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My work tends to deal heavily in flowery typography and ornamental Victorian doodads, so this book has become a constant companion. It’s a reprint of an 1897 design primer, and displays a series of increasingly abstracted renderings of various flora, from realistic illustration to graphic pattern.

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Most of the patterns in the book aren’t really my cup of tea, but they get the wheels turning and make me think in terms of filtering my sketches and observations into graphic elements. And since I’m in need of some new reference material, both for upcoming letterpress projects and for the new artist book I’m working on (more on that another time), I thought I’d see what Spring had to show me. So on Thursday Nicole and I took a little field trip to the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle to grok the blossoms, cameras in hand.

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And boy howdy, those cherry trees weren’t kidding.

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The sun decided to join us, illuminating every perfect bloom in turn.

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A few magnolia varieties were ready for their close-up;

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most of the saucer magnolias, however, thought they’d sit this one out. But those branches! Each tree looked exactly like a candelabra.

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Not to be outdone by the tourist-attracting trees, the shrubs and perennials had their say as well (although this was one of only a few rhododendrons that showed up on time; I guess the rest of them will have their party with the saucer magnolias).

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Even the greenery was super-saturated (no need for Photoshop today!).

I came away with a head full of ideas, and my work cut out for me. I wouldn’t be surprised if my lettering starts sprouting petals. Nicole and I weren’t the only artists out that day, either; Azalea Way was just crawling with oil painters, watercolorists and photographers—and other like-minded folk who seemed to have quit their day jobs to do what they love (there was something very heartening in that thought, and it reinforced my own career choices).

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The ducks, however, were working overtime that day.

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On Saturday I tagged along with Jessica Spring to help some unsuspecting Bainbridge Island residents get their hands dirty. As part of its current INK exhibition, Bainbridge Arts & Crafts hosted Jessica and her hundred-year-old Sigwalt clamshell press for a letterpress demo.

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Before long, folk of all ages were printing up spring keepsakes,

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playing with antique wood type,

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and creating their own DIY t-shirts. Stella!

As for me? Well, I couldn’t resist that day-glo red ink, so I made my own little contribution:

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Can you guess which season is Jessica’s favorite? Happy springtime, Bainbridge!

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Spring made her grand entrance this weekend, sweeping in with the first warm, flawless day of the year—complete with guest appearances by Mount Rainier and the sun. ‘Round these parts, it’s almost criminal to miss a day like that—as evidenced by the sidewalks, parks and shorelines packed with grateful Tacomans.

So believe me, the significance of a big group of steadfast book and art lovers eschewing the perfect weather in favor of hearing me blather on about sketchbooks and photopolymer isn’t lost on me. Many, many thanks to everyone who came to either the gallery talk yesterday or the exhibit opening on Thursday (or both!). You made both events a huge success, and your enthusiastic presence made me feel so welcome to the Pacific Northwest. I’ve been the new kid on the block many times in my life, but I’ve never felt so at home so quickly as I do here in T-town. Thank you.