Sketches and Musings

  • Experimentation Part II

    WCtreesIII1
    The materials for this project

    And welcome to week 2 of my playing around with a glue moistener bottle to make a tree sponge.  When I saw these bottles on the rack at Wal*Mart a week or so ago, I immediately began wondering if they could be used in watercolors, specifically if they could be modified to make trees.  What I discovered last week is that the flow of water through them is too fast and floods the color right off of the sponge.  Close inspection of my other waterbrushes showed that they solved that problem by placing a small sponge directly in the flow.  I decided to place some floss in the cap of the glue moistener to see if that would slow the flow enough to make it usefull in a watercolor application.  I gathered my rubber cement, an X-acto knife, and some polyester filiment I had lying around from another project.  Since I will be using chemicals and sharp objects I would like to take a moment to discuss “Shop Safety”.  You need a well ventilated area for the rubber cement.  And you need to follow all of the safe cutting practices that are outlined in the instruction pamphlet that came with your X-acto knife.  Kids need adult supervision.  Dad’s need Mom’s permission.  Moms, dial 911 and ask to wait on hold ’til Dad finishes.

    Cutting into the cap
    Cutting into the cap

    In violation of all of the safety precautions I just lined out for you, I begin by cutting into the cap.  I am cutting at a steep angle so there will be plenty of surface area for the rubber cement.  This little piece of plastic was actually tough to cut this way.  I think if I do it again, I will just use one of the wife’s steak knives.  Lord knows my mother has a drawer full of glued up and bent steak and butter knives from the various projects I’ve done through the years.  Mostly, butter knives because they make good impromptu screwdrivers, and once they’re bent they make good pallet knives.

    WCtreesIII3What you can almost make out in the picture is the batting stuffed into the cut away cap.  This is a part I hadn’t considered and it will prove to be the ultimate challenge of this project.  To use enough batting means to over stuff the cap.  This stuff is springy so I have to be careful to get it all inside the cap and keep the cap together while the rubber cement dries.  Don’t do what I did.  I licked my palm to get some traction and rolled it up into a little ball.  It worked, but it’s gross to think about.

    WCtreesIII4
    Things to do while glue dries

    Once the batting was in place, I brushed a little of the rubber cement onto the exposed lip of the cap.  Of course, when I went to put these two pieces together I realized just how small they were and how much trouble the springiness of the batting was going to give me.  At this point, I consider scrapping the batting and cutting up one of the wife’s dish sponges.  I decided I’m too stubborn to do that and eventually did get the them together.  I intended to use a rubber band to hold this in one piece, but the pieces kept sliding apart while trying to get the rubber band in place.  I ended up holding it together by hand while waiting for the glue to set.  As you can see, I have become quite adept at spider solitaire for projects like this.

    Still waiting
    Still waiting

    After several attempts at this, the batting just kept pushing the bits apart.  I finally got part of the glue set.  I flooded the cracked spots with rubber cement so they would remain waterproof, placed the rubber band around it, slipped the shaft of the X-acto knife in for tension, and set it aside.  At 2:45 am, I decided to let the glue sit over night.

    Why am I doing this?  The idea I have is to cut the sponges into shapes.  When I want to create a wooded landscape, I will then just grab the bottles with the right kind of tree shaped sponge, already full of the appropriate color of paint, and dab them on quickly.  It’s not any faster than a brush or a regular sponge, but it has been more fun!

    Tune in next week during Monday Discovery and we’ll see how it turned out.

  • Relay for Life

    luminary-drawingFriday, Jun 12th, 2009
    We went to the Relay for Life at the Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City. There were close to a thousand people on hand for the ceremony. There were tears, laughter and dancing. It is a great celebration of the life of lost loved ones, and the life of cancersurvivors.

    My Mother and Mother-In-Law are both cancer survivors so the Relay for Life event is very dear to my family.

    luminariesii

    Check out the Gallery for more sketches and photos.

  • True Love

    Posted by mobile phone:
    True Love
    It’s 1 am. I have just walked through the door and what do I find waiting on but Milk and cookies. Not only that, but my girls made a fresh pitcher of iced tea and left it in the fridge for me.

    LOVE MY GIRLS!

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    True Love

  • Lost in the wilderness

    Posted by mobile phone:
    Lost in the wilderness
    Once again, dear friends, I am out on the road making calls for my day job. I am in beautiful Alexandria, Louisana. You will just have to take my word for it that it’s beautiful here because I am not able to stop and get pictures of the countryside because of the tight driving schedule we are expected to keep and because I shouldn’t take pictures while I’m driving.

    When we do stop, it’s at a fast food restaurant or a gas station, just like any other fast food restaurant or gas station anywhere else in the world. Not very beautiful. But the landscape we are driving by is absolutely stunning!

    Hotel accomodations (no spell check from the phone) are completely devoid of any semblance of Internet access. In that regard, I am alone. Cut off from civilization. And while that means that I’m not able to check my e-mail, facebook, or twitter without extreme frustration on my phone, I will at least get to bed at a decent hour. Y’know, if 1:00 a.m. is decent.

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    Lost in the wilderness

  • Yay!

    Posted by mobile phone:
    Yay!
    FINALLY! After weeks and weeks of not being able to go to figure drawing, I finally was able to go! I almost couldn’t believe it when it wasn’t raining *AND* I wasn’t out of town *AND* I wasn’t destitute. So, I will get the work I did tonight uploaded and blog all about it on next Wednesday’s post.

    Tonight, in preperation of being out of town for another couple of nights, I spent some time setting up my mobile blog. “MoBlogging” is the only way I post to http://smalltownbiglife.com anymore. For The Artistic Biker, I need a little more control over the appearance. Also, my phone cuts off the post if I try to go back and spell check or edit. Still, this will be handy when I am out and about and just want to share something with my subscribers. Until I get my post updates under some kind of control, this will be a lifesaver while I’m out of town.

    This concludes this test of the Emergency MoBlogging System.

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    Yay!