Rabu, 03 Juli 2013

Japanese Tattoo Lettering

Japanese Tattoo Lettering - History, Basics, and Style




Japanese tattoos and tattoo lettering are steeped in tradition, symbolism and mysticism. From their roots as religious symbols to their usage as signs of the Yakuza, to their current day popularity in the West, Japanese tattoos are unique to both the wearer and the artist. Find out about the different types of Japanese tattoos and tattoo lettering, before you decide to get one yourself.

Japanese Tattoo Symbols

Japanese Tattoo Symbols
Now that you have selected your Japanese tattoo design you can begin to search for a tattoo artist worthy of creating your masterpiece. This can be difficult, please don't walk in to the first tattoo parlor you find, again research is paramount.

Japanese Tattoo Symbols
Japanese Tattoo Symbols
Japanese Tattoo Symbols

Jumat, 15 April 2011

May Your Reds Never Run

Today is Saint Hunna's feast day.

She is known as the Holy Washerwoman and is the patron saint of laundresses and washerwomen. Other names for her are Oona, Una, Uma and Oonaugh.

She might protect you from bleeding and fading dyes.


Woman washing clothes
 in camp during the Civil War


Woman Ironing by Degas

As a child raised by nuns I believed there was a saint for every cause. I've often needed the intercession of Saint Hunna. I've made several shrines to her with collage and Photoshop.




 I am not the only one who needs some help with the reds. Here's a quilt from about 1910 when reds were absolutely unreliable.

So to celebrate St. Hunna's day: Prewash some reds and be grateful for recent inventions like the washing machine.

Federal photographers recorded this
Texas woman doing laundry in the 1940s.



Here's a book comparing painters's views of laundresses to that of this artist Jean Baptiste Greuze

Buy this book by Colin B. Bailey by clicking here:



See some disasters by clicking here:
http://juliebagamary.blogspot.com/2011/03/ugh-bleeding-fabric.html
http://lazygalquilting.blogspot.com/2008/05/new-fabric.html

And check out Jane Davila's post on Willie Cole's art inspired by the iron.
http://raggedclothcafe.com/2008/01/09/willie-cole-by-jane-davila/
Here's more on his work that he calls Scorches
http://www.moma.org/collection/browse_results.php?object_id=66215
See my Print on Demand book with more Saint collages from Blurb.com by clicking here:
http://www.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/1836309

Kamis, 14 April 2011

The Asphalt Jungle

...is right here in my backyard, which is called New York City.
As a couple of hawks make their nest in prime real estate, overlooking Washington Square Park, down below, in the park itself, there is another kind of wildlife. And it's not half as civilized as those peaceful birds.
To wit: I met a friend from abroad and we had a lovely conversation in one of the benches. Later, in my house, she realized she had forgotten her cellphone in the park. I called the number and someone answered. For a split second I thought a decent citizen was about to give us the phone back, but the voice on the other end quickly disabused me of the notion.
"You gonna pay for it?"
I could hear it was still in the park because I heard someone playing the trumpet.
"Why should I? It's my phone".
He hung up.
I called back.
"Hey, you have my phone".
"Yeah. How much you willin' to pay for it?"
I, oblivious to the notion of negotiation with an extortionist, insisted that I should not pay for squat since the phone belonged to me.
He hung up and turned it off. My friend wished I had bargained.
It was already dark and we started looking for any of the many homeless denizens of the park that all look like they were run over by a particularly gnarly steamroller. I profiled anybody indigent with a cellphone in his hand, of which there were several.
Then I heard the trumpet player. So we followed the sound. He was serenading a couple who looked blameless. I asked a very tall guy with two phones and camo pants. I got screamed at in that menacing way that some Black people use to scare White people.
So one of his friends tells me to pay him no mind, he is a drunk, but he himself happens to know who has my phone and he feels our pain and he can get it for us, but the guy is going to want money for it. Yep. And I'm from Missouri. I was ready to go to the police, but my friend was willing to pay a forced reward. So she bargained from 40 bucks to 20, to 30. The guy left (I am convinced he had the phone in his pocket the whole time) and then after no more than five minutes, came back with the phone. But my friend only had two twenties and I had not brought my purse, so he went to give the money to "the guy" and came back to tell us we could go get the change ourselves, pointing at some other dude who was walking away. When we balked, the good Samaritan turned on a dime and became extremely aggressive, a studied but convincing performance designed to scare the hell out of us. It didn't scare me, but I was not about to find out whether he was hamming it up or really meant it. I wanted to go to the police camper parked next to the park, because the principle really bothers me. I don't care if your ass is full of crack, I just hate to be taken for a fool. But my friend, a peaceful soul, a believer in the healing power of positive energy, was just happy to get her phone back. I wish he gets such an enormous feast out of his $40 worth of crack or whatever it is he takes to be so dumb and so smart at the same time, that his brain explodes. Karma.

Rabu, 13 April 2011

"Exquisite Selections" May 14, 2011


Historic Deerfield in Massachusetts plans a one-day forum that "explores the creation, history, interpretation and care of whole cloth and pieced quilts."
 
Exquisite Selections: An Exploration of 18th- and 19th-Century Quilts will be held Saturday May 14, 2011.


From their website:
Join Linda Eaton, Director of Collections and Senior Curator of Textiles at the Winterthur Museum, and Historic Deerfield staff for an insightful look into this decorative, practical and symbolic form of needlework. This day-long event will take place in Historic Deerfield’s White Church Community Center and the Flynt Center of Early New England Life, and will feature examples from Historic Deerfield’s own outstanding collection. Participants will also have the opportunity to view quilts in the historic setting of the Wells-Thorn House. Eaton will sign copies of her recent book, Quilts in a Material World: Selections from the Winterthur Collection.

For more information or telephone registration, please contact Julie Orvis Marcinkiewicz at 413-775-7179. jmarcinkiewicz@historic-deerfield.org
Or click here:
http://www.historic-deerfield.org/events/exquisite-selections-exploration-18th-and-19th-century-quilts-historic-deerfield



Pieced, cotton friendship or autograph quilt
 HD 96.059.4 from the Historic Deerfield Collection

If you can't go take this opportunity to buy their 2004 catalog

Telltale Textiles: Quilts from the Historic Deerfield Collection
 by Lynne Z. Bassett
Click here:

Minggu, 10 April 2011

Look at Moda's Home Page


Because I am all over it. When you click on some of the frames it directs you to my stuff.
Click here:
http://www.unitednotions.com/un_main.nsf/main?openpage


Fort Sumter block by S. J. Gilbert
The blocks are from the Civil War Quilts Flickr group
Click here:


I'm pretty proud of that home page! Thanks, Moda!
Which gives me the opportunity to give you some links to some actual Civil War Reunion footage on You Tube.  


Fox & Geese by Carmen Maria
Two views of the 75th Anniversary of Gettysburg, one with Franklin Roosevelt.

And footage from the Ken Burns documentary The Civil War


Little Blue Basket by Theresia B.


London Square by Australia Sue


Today On I've Had It With Hollywood

My personal homage to Sidney Lumet.
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