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The Beauty of Destruction...

These tiles by Lesperancetile on Etsy are quite wonderful. The artist writes this about the first one: "The year I planted my first crop of corn I discovered the evils of this beautiful pest. Damaging all but 6 ears of corn along with the corn stalks I planned for festive fall decorations made this pest a very unwelcomed visitor to my garden. Considered a major pest to corn and other crops, the various stages of the European Corn Borer are destructive, yet well designed. The image on this tile is based on an old engraving found in a book of common garden pests. I became familiar with a number of them that year."
From Destruction to Beauty!

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Calendar Of Love...

I love the idea of having a 'Valentines Calendar', something to keep track of the days before the 'day of love'. This artpiece by Dineo Bopape somewhat fits this idea. It is listed as being made of: "love letters, receipts, photographs, condoms, hankies, paper, wrapping paper, lace, ribbon, wool, cotton, shoelaces, and glitter" - all stuffed in hand sewn envelopes... truly a Contemporary Calendar of Love!

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When More is More...

Jeweler Vanda Leitao creates wonderfully 'over the top' jewelery pieces that evoke baroque splendor... I wonder if Marie Antoinette wouldn't have been more comfortable with a ship on her belt - than on her head?!?
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Dragon Backpack!

The Leather work of Bob Basset is not for the faint of heart, but I have to admit that it would be wonderful to walk down the street with ones 'familiar' on ones back - even if only for a day! Doesn't that look like a phone in the dragons mouth - just within ears reach???

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Glass Hearts

Glass artist Tim Tate has been HIV positive for 22 years. It was this diagnosis and his Mothers death that propelled him into glass making, and hearts in particular. I find his glass hearts full of wonder and pain at the same time. And I love his 'Reliquaries' where he has added writing to the surface. One has to admire such creativity born from illness and pain...

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TOPSY TURVY WEEKEND

First I want to give a THANK YOU TO EVERYONE WHO EMAILED AND COMMENTED ON 'THUMBELINAS WEDDING COACH'!!! It really means a lot to me, and points me in new directions!!!

Despite all the wonderful praise this was a bit of an UP-DOWN weekend for our family. It started off with my having a wicked Migraine early Saturday morning at 5:00 am. I am prone to these so I have a heavy-duty arsenal of drugs to keep the monster at bay, but it does mean that I litterally lose an entire day after the fact, sleeping and being drousy afterwards... Not how I wish to spend a day!!!

Come Saturday Evening, I woke to find puddles of Blood on the kitchen floor, only to discover that our dear dog Sadie, ripped a 2" by 2" flap of fur off her belly! Not a pretty sight, it looked like a war-wound... I yelled for Michael, who also blanched at the sight and quickly tied a towel around her. We rushed her to the Pet Emergency, where she spent the night being stitched, sutured and drugged - poor thing.

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What could have caused such misery? I spent all Sunday Afternoon ripping off all of the ivy from our back fence, where I discovered over 40 nails (hung 12 years ago to hold up jasmine vines). Now we have a 'blank canvas' to plant something new, I hate the bareness, but it needed to be done!

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My daughter blessedly spent the weekend working on her handmade Valentines... "Mom, no one is making their own Valentines this year, but I don't care! I hate those store-bought Valentines...!" The tradition continues, and may it never die!!! I am facinated by her 'girls can have reds and pinks and hearts' but 'boys need darker colors, like browns and blues and only a heart if they are "really nice". Oh to be 12 again...

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TODAY, my fingers are sore, and my heart a little heavy, but I am glad that its Monday and time goes on. I leave you with this 'bit of whimsy' (found via Elaine Haby's delightful blog Pasadena Mansions!) How I wish I could be a button for a day.... (Press little arrow on bottom left hand side)

The Story Of An Ugly Brown Bug And Thumbelina's Wedding Coach.

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ONCE UPON A TIME there was an ugly brown Bug. He had been an 'extra' from a vendor, sent with 8 other smaller and more delicate insects to a Mistress who preferred their colors and dainty looks over his robust and plain demeaner. He was quickly relegated to a deep and long, dark and cluttered drawer. His Mother, a truly 'Wise Insect', who loved him dearly, had told him when he was quite young: "Always hold true to your dreams, and even dark drawer's will not hide your splendor!" and this now he held tight in his heart.

One day, a couple of years after his arrival to his new home, his Mistress was playing with colored powders - colors of jewels, as rich and luxurious as any he had ever imagined. Seeing him peeking out of his drawer, she invited him to come play, thinking how funny it might be to see this ugly Bug sitting amongst the glorious powders. Well, brown Bug didn't hesitate for a moment and jumped up on the table, so quickly in fact that he landed right in the middle of a pot of bright green powder, the color of Emperors jade. At first he was quite startled, having never seen himself in color before, but then the glory of the situation struck him, and he quickly decided to swim in the lapis-blue and sapphire-violet powders as well! His Mistress was shocked, was this really the ugly brown Bug, one she had once called "Gross" when he first arrived? He looked grand now, even noble in his fine new colors.

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Brown Bug could hear his Mother's voice in his heart and remembered his dream. He wanted more than anything to be special, and to be loved for who he was, and he wanted to travel. He told his Mistress he had always admired Miss Snails 'House' on her back, thinking his own back - flat and fairly useless. She thought about this for a while, and then remembered a lovely barnacle 'chair' sitting in the window-sill, and gently placed it on Bugs back. Within minutes the chair attached itself to Bugs back, like a saltwater shellfish to a rock. Tiny pearls grew along the seamlines adding to his beauty. "Splendid Indeed" he said, "but how shall I travel with such weight on my back?"

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Mistress, a fairy-godmother of sorts, had an idea... Deep within another dark drawer lay wings, dropped by a careless fairy eons ago, that might just fit Bug perfectly. With a splash of powder here and a pinch of glitter there, and a wink of an eye - Bug now had not one, but two sets of wings to take him where his heart desired... A large pair, strong enough to lift his 'chair' to great heights and far distance's, and a smaller pair to navigate 'fair tropical winds' - for she had a mission for him now!

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She had been struck by his charm and touched by his humility and decided that he, the once unfavorable brown Bug, should be "Thumbelinas Royal Coach". A few more royal and majestic touches were all that was needed and Bug was sent on his way... now more stylish and grand then he ever could have imagined!

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THE MORAL OF THIS STORY IS: Even an ugly brown Bug can become a splendid swan!

Shell Reliquary From France

Isn't this French Shell Reliquary wonderful? I think its a marvelous idea for a Valentine!!! (and no, I am not bidding on it - drats...)

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Textile Charms

I think these necklaces by Rebecca Purcell are charming! (Pun totally intended!) They are apparently made by women's co-ops in Nepal, (each necklace is unique and incorporates vintage materials). What a wonderful way to use tiny little textile treasures and charms...

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Studio As Art

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"Georgia native J. Morgan Puett emerged in the mid-1980s as a fashion designer. Her distinctive style, which drew from sources that explored the history of garments, were hand-made, crafted of hand-dyed natural fabrics, often in wrinkled, informal states. Her quirky SoHo retail space was heralded for its evocative environment—a bewildering combination of store, art installation, architectural remnant, and factory. Puett closed her Wooster Street store in 1997, and archived all of its contents—from dresses and patterns to financial records and shipping receipts—most of which was preserved with natural beeswax. This Pompeian action was the subject of a 1998 exhibition at the Centre d’Art contemporain Kunsthalle in Fribourg, Switzerland. In her installation at Alexander Gray Associates, Puett critically revisits this material at a timely moment, when the lines between the art world and luxury branding are collapsing."

I love the idea of having an exhibition of ones studio that isn't anymore... Part reality - part dream...

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