Showing posts with label calligraphy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label calligraphy. Show all posts

Friday, May 3, 2024

some scribal shenanigans

in which our plucky heroine had a go at something new...

~ Celtic style Pelican Scroll ~
This is the custom Pelican scroll that I worked on last month, for the 48 hour scribal challenge I've been mentioning. It was a bit of a stretch for me, both to return to scribal activity after quite a sabbatical, and to attempt a very different style than my beloved Gothic artwork. The challenge image for this year was "March Hare" and the challenge color was "heraldic Azure"...

I was inspired by Insular and Anglo-Saxon artwork and artifacts from the 9th to the middle of the 11th century. I decided that the best way to incorporate the "March Hare" theme would be to add interlaced running hares to the side borders of the scroll, and incorporated heraldic "Azure" by being sure to include plenty of blue gouache in the borders and backgrounds of the decoration, the hares will also either be blue, or on a blue background, when painted.
The scroll is made on a Bristol board backing, painted with Holbein gouache paint and calligraphed with Calli ink. I added a small amount of metallic golden Finetec mica paint as accents. These are all modern materials.

What has worked well for me on this scroll is that I was able to create a pleasing composition in a style I never attempted before. I was also able to figure out a new variation on Roman Rustic calligraphy appropriate to the period, based on the Stone of Odda. In addition I was also particularly inspired by some of the minor imagery in the Book of Kells, and by various Anglo Saxon garnet jewelry.

In the future, I will return to my former practice of seeking out specific pages of manuscripts to use as my exemplars, and writing down where I found my ideas. In this case, I did not do so, and I sorely regret my lack of good documentation. I think this piece would have benefited by being made on Perg rather than Bristol, and will attempt that in the future.

The new to me thing I did was to use pictures of an existing artifact, The Odda Stone, as a source for the calligraphic hand on this scroll. The carved stone, which dates from the middle of the 11th C, has an inscription in Latin lettering. Since that hand is similar to Roman Rustic, which I recently learned, I was able to adapt my writing to this new variation. The other new thing I learned in my reading was that the Book of Kells used line-fillers. Those small graphics have always been a favorite of mine, and I did not know that they were used so early on. Therefore I added those to this scroll as well, where needed.

Sources I looked at for inspiration:
"Odda Stone" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Odda_Stone.jpg)

The Book of Kells"; Bernard Meehan; Thames and Hudson; 1994
 
"The Golden Age of Anglo-Saxon Art"; ed. Janet Backhouse, DH Turner, Leslie Webster; British Museum Publications Ltd; 1984

  .... 
A celtic style Pelican, and the heraldry of the recipient
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May SMART goals (x=extra)
# THINGS MADE THINGS FIXED THINGS GONE
1 4 tiny books
half front yard mowed
yard waste bin
2 10 tiny books
more front yard mowed
recycle bin
3 -replace cloudlight bulb
dead rosemary
4 - clean large paper lantern
-
5 -- -
6 x x
x
7 x x x
8 x x x
9 x x x

today's gratitudes -
1. The KAMsnaps setting tool is sized such that even my wee paws will be able to use it. This is very much not always so!!
2. The new house stepladder arrived today, and it makes a huge difference in what I can reach, for obvious reasons. While it doesn't feel quite as secure as my lower one, the extra foot of height means I can easily reach the ceiling in the main part of the house, and actually, if not quite so easily, reach the ceiling in the workroom
3. I was able to cut away the dead portions of the rosemary, which fortunately was only about half the entire shrub.

Time of Isolation - Day 1398

Sunday, January 22, 2023

lunar Year of the Water Rabbit

in which our plucky heroine...

Time to celebrate the lunar Year of the Water Rabbit, which here at Acorn Cottage means coming up with a felicitous menu for dinner tonight. I'm thinking that adding some homemade pot stickers to broth, with carrot coins and sliced greens would be warming, and a wee batch of sticky sesame chicken wings, would be a flavorful repast. If I feel really energetic, mixing up a half batch of lemon crinkles for a sweet start to the year may happen as well...

Of additional interest, here are four different ways to write "rabbit" in Chinese brush calligraphy:

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Yesterday I finished the fingerless gloves I was knitting for the last few weeks during my online meetings. They have longer cuffs and only the very fingertips exposed, so should be a lot warmer than my everyday mitts, and should come in handy while walking the dog.
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~ 100 day stitch book project - day 3 ~
Day 2 and 3 - Yesterday I finished stitching around the applique using random floss. Today I decided to add a bit of embroidery on either edge as a bit of visual transition between the applique and the ground fabric. Not sure what else will happen next, other than I will continue to attempt dynamic visual balance
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January SMART goals (x=extra)
# THINGS MADE THINGS FIXED THINGS GONE
1 striped tabletweaving
drawings for Vikki
recycle bin
2 night socks toile
2023 calendar masters
yard waste bin
3 2nd set of calendars
pocket flap pattern
recycle bin
4 night socks
- yard waste bin
5 music broadside
- -
6 fingerless gloves
x x
7 x x x
8 x x x
9 x x x
10 x x x
11 x x x
12 x x x
13 x x x
14 x x x
15 x x x

today's gratitudes -
1. homemade potstickers boiled in broth-in-a-box make a great meal. Thank you past me for putting food in the freezer and the pantry.
2. my floss is organised and accessible, which makes doing embroidery easy.
3. mechanical "minute minder" Lux timer, only the second one I've had in this lifetime, and with care will see me out. (the first one was melted in an Unfortunate Kitchen Incident)

Time of Isolation - Day 1051