Classic Style Using Authentic Treasures

It's all about living an AUTHENTIC life, being true to who we are and finding beauty and inspiration in our daily surroundings. Decorating our homes with found items and antique and vintage treasures, we create a personal ~ classic style ~ that defines who we are!

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Copic Crazy!

I love art supplies! Colored Pencils, Water Color Markers, Pastels, big drawing pads of paper, special water color papers with softened edges....I could spend hours playing in an art supply store.  I also love scrap booking but unfortunately, I have more pictures and wonderful paper stored in drawers than I have in scrap books!

I read a post today that I thought was really interesting and wanted to share with you....in case you have the same love as I!  COPIC MARKERS!  They are aren't new, but more home-grown types are using them for art projects!  I can't wait to check them out, they are alcohol based, which allows you to mix colors!!  Cool!  Enjoy!

I am sharing this blog from: 
http://debbiehodge.com/2010/03/copic-markers-intro/

How to use copic markers tutorial 1 | how to buy copic markers

This is part 1 of a series of articles by Michelle Houghton on copic markers.
by Michelle Houghton
Do you have a drawer full of Copic markers because they are the latest craze? Have you been waiting to break them out, though, because you don’t know where to start?  Or maybe you haven’t invested yet because you’re not sure what the big deal is, or what to buy?

Let me share just a little bit about these markers to get you going.  The information is what I am gathering as I discover more about this fun tool myself.  I am not a certified instructor (yes they exist) but an enthusiast, and I enjoy sharing as I go. Copic markers have been around for a while, over 25 years in fact.  They were designed for artists and designers with their needs in mind.  Copic markers are filled with an alcohol-based dye ink.  The advantage to this is that it provides the capability for blending colors together without destroying your paper.  The pens are meant to be refilled with ink, and even the pen nubs or tips can be replaced as they wear out. What’s more, once dry, the alcohol ink is archival.

There are 4 different styles of Copic markers available right now but the one you will see most frequently used in the crafting industry is the Copic “sketch” marker.  These have a flat oval shape so they won’t roll off your table. They have two tips–a medium sized chisel for tight control and a brush-like tip.  You can find them at craft stores but they’re more easily found art supply stores.
  

If, after learning a little more, you decide you would like to invest here are two things you need to know.  The Copic Sketch markers currently have 334 colors to choose from and this number continues to grow. Before you buy, go to the Copic Library. Scroll down, find the color chart, and print it off to take with you whenever you go shopping. This way you can keep track of the pens you’ve purchased.  Also understand that the numbering system on the end of the pen tells you if the pens will blend well with each other.  

The whole magic to these pens is their ability to blend. HOWEVER, you need to use a combination of the right markers for that to work.  On the colored cap of each pen there will be a label with 1 or 2 letters and 1 to 4 numbers.  The letter(s) represent the color family that marker is part of.  The number(s), in laymen’s terms, represent how light or dark the pen is.  

The first number is how vibrant or bright the color is so a marker with the first number a 0 is going to be very bright while one starting with a 9 is going to be very dull or gray. The last digit tells you how light or dark that marker is within that set.  To get pens that will blend well together you want two pens that have the same letter and same first number, the last number should be within 2 or 3 numbers of each other.  You can also blend across color families but this is more complicated and an entirely different lesson.  You need at least 2 or 3 pens in a range to do color blending.

Copic markers are pricey.  You can find decent deals on the web or at sales but most people will find they have to buy only a few pens at a time and can slowly build a collection.  Try them out in a store before you buy if you can–or buy only two or three that will blend as a start so you can play with them before shelling out big bucks.


Learn how to use copic markers to their max in this class from Certified Copics Instructor Michelle Houghton. The materials are self-paced, but there is a support forum and gallery that Michelle checks daily. This class includes both art techniques for shading AND copic techniques for a class jampacked with information — as well as images to print and practice with.



Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Just Getting Started!

I have collected so many fun vintage and antique finds 
over the last few months.  

Here are a few shots of some of the "vintiques" 
I have already put in the booth.

Original Oil Painting by Ann Varner of Nashville, TN  1974

Wonderful Old Sears Lunch Box with 
Sta-Right Thermos and original cork.

Singer Sewing Machine...great for a book case or nook....1970's Williamsburg style wall clock, two 1940's year books from the University of Georgia, a vintage print of Stone Mountain; a wonderful framed Petite Point framed and matted; an old wicker, faded red stool and of course....Betty with the bow!

A great collection of antique and vintage dinner and decorative plates, including Montreux by Haviland Limoges; Homer Laughlin Royal Maroon and Lady Stratford, 
Spode and more!

An old cedar chest with copper hinges from the early 1900's made by Casewell Runyon; three vintage hand crafted bird houses; an antique fern stand with a great gray patina and a wonderful old heavy, gold leaf framed mirror!

Some vintage and modern day decorator fabrics; vintage rattan bar stool, old bamboo plant stand, cast iron candle sconce, a very old bird cage remnant; burlap, jute and hessian vintage and antique grain sack pillows.

Estate sale, vintage needle point pillow and 
Martha Washington style chair!


Here are a few of some of the American grain sack pillows:




This one sold on day three.....Yay!





This is a vintage, German laundry bag, hand embroidered with the owner's little red initials label.




Indian artwork on grain sacks is rare and collectible!


I am just getting started...
and have some fun ideas for merchandise and new pillows!
Several packages of antique French ticking are waiting in the wings.....so many things to make!  :)

Don't forget, the Wild Flower Festival is this weekend 
in Dahlonega...stop by and visit my booth 
if you find your way here!

Live Authentically,
Martha



Monday, May 9, 2011

Finally My First Batch of Pillows!

I gave myself a deadline of May first 
to get my pillows in my booth!  
Didn't quite make it, 
but I did get a huge first load installed today.  
I finished stuffing 53 pillows today...
and 49 went in to the booth!

Plus...this adorable wall hanging...a vintage classroom
find from a local thrift store.  I couldn't pass this up...50 squares of burlap with the outline of a state and either the state bird or flower...it has so much charm. 
Its looks as if the students made it.  It is barely hanging on...dry rot has taken its toll, but I had to have it!!  Perfect for a backdrop don't you think?




On to my day in the basement...
Two orders of bulk feather and down pillow inserts...
waiting in my basement.  
The stack of boxes was over 6 feet tall!  
Huge boxes almost 4 feet wide.


Here they are!  Bagged and ready for their trip to the booth!


Put a few more fixtures in a couple of weeks ago....
trying to get everything ready for
my vintage and antique finds and of course "the pillows"!










I have beautiful German grain sack pillows in production now, along with some adorable printed
vintage French flour sacks, 
which are similar to our American sacks.  
I also have found some
awesome Burlap style bags from Canada!  
All coming soon!!

Hopefully one day soon, I'll figure out how to take a good pic, 
and transfer it here with better resolution!
There is a lot to learn!  :)

Don't forget the victims of recent tornadoes!
They need our prayers and assistance!
Blessings,
Martha






Saturday, May 7, 2011

My "Mothers"

Gwendolyn

Mother's Day is tomorrow!  A good many of my friends on facebook this week have been honoring their mothers by replacing their profile pictures with one of their mother's pictures. It has been so much fun to see all the mother's faces smiling at me.  A good many have been vintage...with pearls and dark lipsticks and curled hair do's!   My mom is still beautiful at 78, but her picture above, in her late teens, is my favorite!  My mom has always been there for me, nudging me, helping me, baby sitting in the early years...now it is my turn to return the favor.  I pray for her to be blessed with joy and health and happiness in these later years!
 
Onieta

Her mother, my maternal grandmother was such a wonderful woman.  Racked with Rheumatoid Arthritis and bound in a wheel chair most of the years I can remember, she lived such a hard existence, but never complained.  She died in my late teens and never met my husband or her great-grandsons!  I would so love to have her meet them!


Emma  
My father's mother lived in West Virginia.  We would visit her every summer and see her when she came to Georgia to visit us.  What a strong woman!  She was born in 1897, outlived her first husband, divorced her second husband, (my grandfather), out lived her third husband, survived breast cancer and a mastectomy in the late 1940's and lived to be in her mid 90's!  She worked, played the stock market, owned rental properties and always told you what she was thinking!  A true survivor she was!

I honor my mom and my grand mothers and thank each of them...as they are all a part of me!  
Last but not least...
I honor Mother Mary...
our spiritual mother and ask that she pray for us all and intercede on our behalf!

Happy Mother's Day to you all!
Live, Laugh, Love...be AUTHENTIC!

Blessings,

Martha