Showing posts with label puppy love and longer days. Show all posts
Showing posts with label puppy love and longer days. Show all posts

Monday, February 1, 2010

new month... new plans...

Two of my own stamps appear for the first time on the art work for February. There's a heart stamp that I carved from an old eraser for Valentine's Day 2008. Also, I carved my initials into an old art gum eraser ( the 1" cube type). I drew them on tracing paper with a soft pencil, turned it upside down on the eraser, rubbed it to transfer the letters, and cut around the letters with an exacto knife. I liked it so much, I made one for my sister also.
I made February 1st by gluing red rice paper to the card. Then I cut a cream colored heart to glue on - never can get them symmetrical without folding. The verse relates to the shortness of the month ahead and the lengthening of the days.

Twenty-eight days hath
February. The minutes
make the hours increase.

It doesn't make sense, time wise, but I like the notion of hours increasing. In reality, the hours between sunrise and sunset are increasing, noticeably now.
Our backyard looks like March; we need a nice, serious snowstorm - six or eight inches of snow would be lovely..




I did art work on mat board for the covers and dividers of 365 Daily Haiku 2009 yesterday and bound the book with cord instead of the rings I had used. This picture is on my work table. I think the book looks great. I was so anxious to bind it, I didn't photo the art work.
This is not how I had planned to bind the book. But I decided that I had to leave the pages in the sleeves, not glued together. I want it to sit in a circle when on display.

February 2010 started with a clear cold day. It's Deezel's first birthday, so here's the picture I took of him at 2 weeks. Roger saw an ad for blue merles, we called and visited two weeks later.But today's his birthday. We will have ice cream tonight with "Auntie" Ila (our dear friend).Deezel and I walked back from the garage this morning. We went through town,by the river then into the woods where he could run free. And he did.