2.02.2013

Creative Gratitude With Anna Corba




I did a workshop today with Anna Corba at her Found Cat Studio in Santa Rosa. It is such a beautiful, peaceful place, and just teeming with creative inspiration.









Only Anna's studio has cups of glitter lying around. :)















There was a full house for the workshop - Gratitude Boxes. We made the boxes before lunch, then had a delicious pear and blue cheese, walnut salad and artisnal pizzas, followed by some amazing brownies. Jasmine approved.















After lunch, we did the cards for inside the boxes. Everyone's work was so individual and beautiful. So honored to be in this workshop and have the chance to practice some gratitude.



















Happy with the boxes and cards I made.














Even the trash is beautiful.


2.01.2013

Some Boxes To Hold Things

My name is Laura and I collect boxes. I am powerless over boxes.

Yes - I have a problem. If you bring a box to my house, even if it just had a UPS shipment in it, I will probably ask you if I can keep it. I can be quite insistent, possibly even rude. The smaller and cuter the better. Round, square, small, big - I don't really care.

Truth is, I am also a wee bit frightened of opening them. It is a macabre thing - to love something so much, but also be frightened by it.

I will leave that conversation between me and my therapist. For the time being, though, I have been working to find ways to make boxes pretty.

I was turned on to some great glue not too long ago - it is called The Ultimate and it is made by Adhesive Products, Inc. (API) right here in Albany CA. It is the bomb for adhering papers to cigar, oatmeal, etc. boxes.

Here are some boxes I repurposed for a show coming up on February 9th in Petaluma. I only made five. We'll see how they are received, then go from there.

God knows, I have a whole cupboard of boxes I could keep working from. A little bit sick.








1.29.2013

My Solemn Vow



I promise to keep at making 
art and art-making 
accessible to all, 
and to allowing everyone to realize 
they are creative until
it is so.

This is my vow. I declare who I am and what I am up to in this world. It is solemn, a promise I will live out through the rest of my days. It is how I will show up in every situation, at every time.

I will invite everyone out there to join me in this amazing feel-good soup. They will start showing up with their creativity, happy and joyous to be providers of solutions. Maybe, world peace?

1.28.2013

Birds in Iran

I'm trying something new. Using Citrisolv on magazine pages, then scanning them. I take the group of scanned images (from a single magazine issue) and make new images by combining parts of them.

For example, I put images from an article on birds into other images on juveniles in Iran.

The pages smell really "citrus-y" until they are scanned and digitized. Then, they are more fun and easier to work with.

Here are a few from today:













1.03.2013

Travel Writing - France 2012

Read about my recent trip to France, complete with photos, as published in Belle Inspiration Magazine.

Belle Inspiration Magazine Nov 2012
Laura McHugh Mini Mag

11.11.2012

Vision Cards for Now



Book Structures - 4 in One Day!

Sign up for this 1-day class where you will learn how to make four different book structures.

Simple book architectures you can use later to embellish, publish, etc.

Taught by Nancy Struck and Laura McHugh, the workshop will be on Saturday Jan 26th from 10 am to 3 pm. All materials included except for your personal tools.

Bring a bone folder, straight edge cutter (like a linoleum cutter or box cutter), cutting mat (if you have one).

Details:
Sat Jan 26th
10 am - 3 pm
$99/person
Non-refundable deposit of $25 to hold a spot due by Dec 24; balance due by Jan 15.

You can send someone in your spot if you cancel after Jan 15. Otherwise, the fee is non-refundable after Jan 15 if you have to withdraw.

11.08.2012

Love Pillows and Graphically Interesting Sachets

I haven't posted here in a long time, but this is my art diary, so this is my best option for this post.

Sometimes, okay a LOT of the time, I buy little things impulsively. I'm a sucker for old tools, especially drafting, drawing and sliderule type things. Jenny Kompolt and The Junk Girls are my all-time favorite "go to" for this stuff. Jenny saves stuff out for me, knowing that I love things like calf-weaners and bullet pencils.



I also love boxes (wooden, or nicely made cardboard ones) and stamps. I love stamps, and I use them in my art. Rubber mounted stamps, those new-fangled clear stamps you have to put on an acrylic block to use, and metal stamps.


I justify buying the metal ones, which are very heavy and usually quite expensive, saying I can use them in my art, but the truth is that they are for letter press type work and they don't usually work very well for hand stamping.

Still, over the years, I have collected an odd assortment of metal stamps. My favorite, besides the "5" which is my favorite number, is the one that simply says "bacon" with a small farmhouse down in the corner.


Last night, I was stumbling around on the internet - using StumbleUpon, one of my favorite apps (Firefox Add-on) in the whole wide world. It searches for things I'm interested in - like art, fonts, food, graphics.

It works randomly to find sites that are interesting to me and non-commercial. I like it better than Google because it provides a seemingly infinite source of creative ideas, though one time I did get a message that said it had run out of sites for me. I must have been on a several-hour long Stumble bender that night.


Last night, it stumbled me to a site called "Instructables" and to a page on that site that showed how to use rubber stamps to emboss fabric.

I tried it this morning as per the instructions. First with one of those cheapy stamps that have to cling to a block. I was bummed when the heart melted itself into the fabric. By the way, the red fabric is the bottoms from some IKEA curtains I put in my guest room. I went back and looked at the instructions, and sure enough, they mentioned I might not want to use the cheapy-type stamps. I moved on to my rubber stamp colleciton. I cherish these, so I was worried I might ruin one. I tried a $1 flower stamp I got in the Michael's bargain bin with perfect results!

So I hot-footed it back out to my stamp-stash to pick some images for the pillow I wanted to make. I bought this red/white picnic tablecloth at the thrift store last week. I loved the bright red and white, and the hearts were so cute. But...I knew I didn't have a rubber heart stamp...so what to do.

While rummaging around, I saw my big, H*E*A*V*Y box of metal stamps and instantly realized I must have bought these for this future project. They are hearty and are built to stand up to the beating that commercial graphics printing dishes out. They are cute and I love the designs. Digging in, I found an X and an O, and thought these would be a nice motif for the front of the pillow with the red/white fabric on the reverse.

I'll post some images of the finished pieces (love pillows, plus little graphics sachets) when I finish them.

I love finding an idea, then making it my own. Thank you Instructables, for germinating this idea for me.