Happily I got to sit and write my rainbow words with a much better blue-indigo colour and I am really happy with the result (compared to this too-dark-for-me indigo version here).
believe looks quite different from breathe colour-wise; and a nice step up from the blue of beauty.
So there are now two completed sets of rainbow daily words done.
As I polished B's bowls today, I got an absolute sense of satisfaction and completion of the first real job I had done here in the new scaled down studio space. Yay.
Here they are, scattered in the first bowl.
And in the second bowl. And a bit of a close up too. This second bowl is much deeper, and more worn, but very lovely.
As we organise ourselves and our online shops, these bowls and words will soon to be for sale. I will let you know when we go live.
And to more beginnings...
I took the chance over the weekend to print some more grief cards, after the order that went out last week.
I cut some paper down to make the cards and grabbed the chase that already had the type set in it and went about printing the inside wording. It felt so good to be able to print again! I also managed to get the front page type printed, but am yet to complete the illustration. So another beginning has begun!
Proofing that the type was straight and the right distance from the bottom, and also the right distance from the end of the card.
And then I thought I might start testing a new card. You can see three proofs in this photo.
No. 1 (in the middle) shows that I decided that the second line of type should move to the right a bit. It looked as if the capital G had a bit of a non printing bit; and I was surprised to have picked up a non-italic 's' from the tray!
No. 2 (top) I liked the line positioning and then saw for the first time that I had the 's' in breaks upside down! Had totally missed that in the first proof.
And then No. 3 (bottom)is just right...
Endings, beginnings, finishings and beginning again. The life of a maker.
The settling in has begun then... after all the work of the last weeks and months it must feel grand to be puttering about, a bit of this, a bit of that. It's always interesting to me what escapes and what captures our attention when assessing our work - I'm usually wary about the one that "got away", that I'll notice when the final rendition is attempted!
ReplyDeleteOh it does feel grand!! And I often wonder what a true proof-er would do (not a made up one like me). I tend to scan and react, then scan again. And I guess in the scanning the eye can fly right by. In a really large piece I will stop and check letter by letter, and sometimes I even turn it upside down to read out each letter. And still, the occasional blip gets thru! Must admit I wasn't expecting a non-italic letter to have slipped into the case.
DeleteCan't help but think that there are many of us in the US who are grieving the loss of the country we loved ... life will never be the same again, so it will be up to us to re-make it better than it ever was
ReplyDeleteDeep grief Liz. And trauma. You are living history and the grief is real. Loss of trust, belief, confidence in institutions...so much. And you are right, life will never be the same again. Go gently.
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