Allen Arts Festival at Watters Creek shopping Center, Allan TX

Gearing up and getting ready for another GREAT day at the Allan Arts Festival!!!!!! I'm so excited, the last two shows we've had, (King Williams Fair in San Antonio and The First Saturday Arts Show in Houston) have been such a hit that all of our inventory was sold!!! What a great problem! We have spent the first day of the show creating all new mobiles and even launching a new line designed and created by Celeste Landrum herself our Fun and Fashion Expert!!!! We are looking forward to the beautiful weather and great new friends we will meet here. Come out and join in the fun!! We will be here until 9:00 tonight and 12:00 to 6:00 tomorrow (Sunday). There are wonderful activities for the whole family and especially the kids for this Mothers Day Weekend, so come out and enjoy the delights and stop by and say "hi"!!! 

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Setting up in the morning 

 

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these are right in the sunlight 

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Ready on time

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A glimpse of our newest line

FORGING METAL

Forging is the moving of metal.  It includes pinching and pushing.  Metal moves like clay, according to Nile Fahmy, the tatooed Tinker, a nationally known copper smith and metal artist who has taken  one-week residency at the Creative Side Academy in Austin..

This is made from a 1 1/2 inch copper disc.

Night night number 2 produces a more complex rosette:

Forged Jewelry - Not Fake

in an earlier blog I talked about wabi-sabi, the hand made and the manufactured.  Hand-made does not imply wabi-sabi. An excellent essay on the distinction of hand-forged jewelry is found on the website of Victor Canera, a Southern California custom jeweler.  Canera works in Platinum and gold. Hh says, " A design is formed in the mind of the designer, ingots of platinum or gold are melted and then pressed, bent, formed or pulled into the different parts that comprise a piece of jewelry. "  This is the perfect expression of forging. 

Burnet Bluebonnet Festival - 31st annual

The 31st annual Burnet Bluebonnet Festival looks delightful.  While I really enjoy a show where I can kick back and be with the people. I am making up a special collection of earrings from my extensive collection of beads acquired in the past year.  The weather is going to be perfect. The whole town will open up for this annual celegration centered around the country square.

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Wabi-Sabi

The beauty of industrially produced objects lies in its uniformity. For three hundred years the expectation of quality has been associated with machine-produced refinements. Even today, the “high-tech” aesthetic influences design. Even as this industrial aesthetic has dominated design for centuries, a counter movement can be traced back to the late eighteenth century interest in ruins and the late 19th century medievalist revival. The Arts and Crafts movement sprang from the aesthetics of Pre-Raphaelitism . The governing aesthetic in jewelry design remains the industrial. However, there is a significant world-wide reaction the nu-natural in jewelry design. The result is an aesthetic which leaves the imprint of the human hand on the finished work.

Kiff Slemmons, a Chicago artist-jeweler, wonders about imperfection and its impact on art in an essay that appears in Metalsmith Magazine (Vol 28, No 1, pp 26-29).

"The beauty of imperfection, its pull on our conscious as well as sensual engagement, is not always recognized for its positive attributes. This is particularly true in the more narrowly defined realm of craft, where perfection is the ultimate achievement. But sometimes the most perfectly executed object lack vitality and their impact ends quickly after this acknowledgment….

"Imperfection can offer openness; in a way, whereas perfection can sometimes be closed and frozen in place. Imperfection can certain energy—can make for flow. Perhaps imperfection is most obvious and easily understood in outsider or folk art, in which the expressive qualities are spontaneous and immediate."

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiff_Slemmons