Showing posts with label oil can. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil can. Show all posts

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Just 71 days left . . .


[I wrote this on December 30, 2008 and posted it in my "Creative Edge Alumni Group." In light of Dale asking me why/how I use an artist's journal, I thought I'd post it here in my blog.]

On the brink of a new year . . .

Our lives are so fast-paced, with events, images, and noise bombarding us constantly. No wonder we feel time is screaming by and continues to pick up speed. Before we know it, a day, a week, a year, and perhaps a life, is gone.

How can we slow it all down? How can we savor the little things? How can we remember the quiet of an early morning, the day it snowed on the coast, the clever phrase we just read, the pithy quote, the price of crab this season, that there were 10 fishing boats on the horizon last night?

How can we freeze-frame all these seemingly insignificant things and "mark" them so they take on more meaning, more importance, and add quality to our life?

We do it with our photography. Why not add words and scribbles to your artistic melange and create a journal of sorts?

Journals aren't just a "chick thing" -- stereotypical crafty moms with glue sticks -- nope. Lewis and Clark were masters of the journal; Benjamin Franklin became a publisher as a result of his; and Leonardo da Vinci? I rest my case.

Your journal may consist solely of your photos -- a photo a day? a week? It may consist of 3x5 cards (actually, this is a cool idea, and I just thought of it). Keep index cards handy when you read, when you eavesdrop in a restaurant, when you watch TV. Write down the date and the absurd statement, the humorous quip, the clever quote. File the card away. Do this daily and, combined with your photos, at the end of a year you've got something interesting with seemingly no effort.

What's my point? Life is zooming by way too fast. Let's slow it down and savor it by paying more attention and by recording -- in pictures and words and scribbles -- the little things that are too easily forgotten.

By elevating the smaller stuff and giving it more importance and by snagging it in some form that we can go back to, the current moment becomes that much more enhanced. Our life becomes richer and more meaningful as a result.

A new year begins tomorrow night. Slow it down. Savor it. Make it important.

Carol Leigh
[Written 12/30/08]

Saturday, March 21, 2009

In a continuing series . . .

It's great to have something around to shoot when it's raining. It rains here a lot. Luckily I have lots of oil cans! Insanity reigns . . . ©Carol Leigh

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Family portrait . . .

Half of my oil can "family." ©Carol Leigh

Monday, March 16, 2009

Oil can #4 . . .

It's become an obsession. I love these things — their shapes, their purpose, their texture, patina, age, their imperfections . . . Creepy, huh? :-) ©Carol Leigh

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Oil cans


I set these guys up on a bookcase shelf to shoot. Think I'm gonna need a bigger shelf to shoot the whole collection . . . ©Carol Leigh

Oil can in blue

Nothing like ultramarine blue combined with burnt sienna. Nothing like applying painterly terms to a photograph! Love this color combination. Love these oil cans. ©Carol Leigh

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Oil can du jour . . .


It's rainy and nasty out so I fired up the flatbed scanner and set the oil can on top of it. Voila! My photo of the day. Here's another oil can photomontage. ©Carol Leigh

Monday, February 2, 2009

Oil can . . . first in what promises to be a long series


I have fallen in love with old oil cans. Seriously. Their shapes. Their patina. Their form/function characteristics. I love them. I found six in an antique store the other day and bought them all. Luckily they're relatively inexpensive. But oh, they're gorgeous. Here's the cutest one. Shhhh, don't tell the others . . . ©Carol Leigh