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Friday, May 30, 2008

Have a relaxing weekend.

(Photo by Aya Brackett)

Etsy Friday: Oh, Leoluca

Now and again, I'll find myself trolling etsy for new vintage shops. Well, today I found one! In her brand new shop Oh, Leoluca, Berlin artist Teresa Hu features quirky European vintage. Also, she is stunning and has a star tattoo. Shop here, my darlings.

Deer Beds

This is a beautiful concept: Katherine Wolkoff followed deer trails in Block Island and photographed deer beds. Apparently, deer press down the vegetation to make a sleeping place where predators won't see them. They never use the same bed twice, but the imprints can last for a few days. Katherine told James Danziger that the experience was incredibly emotional, and she chose to make the prints 40x50 inches, almost life size. Wouldn't these be stunning to see in person?
(Via the inspiring Year in Pictures)

Sweet Yellow Canary.

Luke Stephenson's 20x200 print is so sweet, no wonder it sold out in two seconds. See more of his funny photography here.

Home Inspiration: Typography Decor

I love seeing type used in cool ways. This Nava calendar looks great in a green kitchen, and Alex and I have the Noa Bembibre calendar, which makes me happy every time I see it. Go, typography!
(Via Domino Magazine)

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Automotive Monogamy

This blog has been getting a little girly (sorry, dudes), so here is a stereotypically male post. Italian photographer Matteo Ferrari tracks down men who have been driving the same car for decades. He then recreates the photos taken when they first bought their cars. I love seeing the people both young and old and thinking about how much they must adore their wheels.
(Via Perpenduum and Intersection Magazine)

The Kenora May Palette Erupts into Green Tones, but also into Unexpected Hues

29 May 2008

The muted greys and off-whites of the early spring Kenora palette have exploded into a range of diverse green and other less predictable accents.

The following photos were taken during late May walks around our home.

It is intriguing to see how rapidly the landscape is altered by the explosion of green, which occurs in the space of only a few days.

Note here how the spruce cones are now joined on the forest floor by the earliest sprigs of new, green growth.

Winter greens remain in evidence against the bark of this long-dead birch (we live on the margins of the birch range, and the mature birches rarely survive for long in our climate).

The first green buds assert themselves here, already accompanied by the spider's web.

A wildflower seizes the opportunity to express itself against the austere backdrop of granitic bedrock.

Blades of grass do the same.

Here I have presented the lake itself as a palette. Note that every colour of the surrounding environment can be found in the rippling surface of the lake water. (Our homemade dock awaits in the background.)

New growth accompanies the decay of former life.

The northern sky seems thin and ethereal to me, and to some extent, this is literally true. The sun's angled rays have little to impede their journey to the earth's northern surface.

The diverse hues of lichen on granite are understatedly rich.

Susan created this sculpture while clearing the earth to the northeast of our house.

The contrasts of light yellow-green, dark sombre green, off-white and empty blue are to be found everywhere.

No hint of spring here.

But new growth will not be deterred.

Granite at times takes on biological form....

While the forest floor explodes with new life.

Organic eruptions in red and umber tones challenge the cliché of green....

While birch does not shy away from shades of mauve and pink.

Unexpected grey-white, yellow-white and red-orange aspects of the Kenora May palette approach the indescribable.

Present manifestations of granite recall its prior liquefied state.

Human intervention creates an orderly contrast to natural patterns....

But the timeless forms from past geological ages inevitably prevail.

The birch trees stay fresh by unwrapping themselves.

Only a week later, far richer greens are to be seen.

The richness of the subsequent week seems unending.

Finally, by May 28, our dock is in the water.

I very much regard the dock as a work of art...

Even the rope strewn at dockside.

The austere geometrical forms of the dock and rope call to mind the works of Mondrian.

A shorter journey than a trip to New York's MOMA (Museum of Modern Art).

Art is everywhere, and without artifice....

Let's now bid adieu to the waterside, the palette of the lake, and the wispy balsam branches, which seem to have been sketched in by Tom Thompson.

In fact, simple, beautiful forms are to be found everywhere.

So, let's close with the unassuming herb garden, situated literally in a rock pile near our northeast drain spout.

Hopefully you have found joy and delight in the modest but surprising forms and shadings of Kenora's late May palette.

The Kenora palette series:

The Kenora March Palette: 2009

The Kenora Palette: After the June Rain

The Kenora May Palette Erupts into Green Tones, but also into Unexpected Hues

The Kenora Palette in May

The Kenora March Palette
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Look at all the redheads!

Remember this weighty discussion? Here's a blog all about redheads, with gorgeous portraits by (redhead, of course) Julia Baum. Some say that redheads are going extinct, so now's the times to see them!
(Via The Year in Pictures)

Home Inspiration: Pretty Quilts

Quilts add such a lovely, personal touch to a bed. This photo makes me want to cuddle up with a good book.
(Photo from Design*Sponge)