Sad sad sad blogging situation...

Oh my goodness! How I have neglected my little happy blog. And my beloved Spain collages.

I've been working lots to catch up after my trip and also I've been trying to meet some personal deadlines with my art and dummies. So I've neglected taking the time to share here. Well, better late than never. It is coming! And it will be fun to relive all my Spain adventures a few weeks after the fact.

Show me someone in the bloggesphere who has never neglected their blog for real life and I'll show you a very un-prioritized person.

A Travel Journal Kit

Goals while packing for Spain (a few weeks ago):
1. Bring hardly any extra clothes
2. Bring way too many art supplies

I've gotten into a habit of making travel journals as I go. Instead of showing up at my destination with a book ready to be filled, I show up with supplies. Loose paper. Pens. Glue. Scissors. Paint. I brought it all with me on my recent trip to Spain.

I've got some fun arty/crafty/whimsy inspiration to share from my trip. Lots of collages. I'll post travel stuff in-between other posts for the next couple of weeks. Join me for the trip!



First...
Travel journal packing list:
-colorful pens
-scissors
-pencils
-pencil sharpener
-erasers
-colorful pen case
-funky pattern-cutting mini-scissors
-watercolor set
-small tubes of acrylics
-glue sticks
-photo squares --ESSENTIAL
-new travel water color brushes -- AWESOME! LOVED THEM
-scrappy acrylic brushes
-colored pencils
-date stamp and ink
-set of mini-letter stamps and ink
-lots of mix-match paper
-sewing needles
-string

Oh ya, I also started with a cover this time. I made it using an old poster I bought when I was in Barcelona 10 years ago. I also used my sewing machine. Having the cover ahead of time gave me some guidelines for size as I collaged the pages.

To be continued...

Western Washington University's Bond Children's Literature Conference

I've got a lot of fun things to share from my trip to Spain (check back tomorrow).

But FIRST, I have to shout out a big THANK YOU to Nancy Johnson up at Western Washington University here in Bellingham for a great conference on Saturday! For the last 6 years Nancy's been organizing an amazing annual children's literature conference. This year's line up was especially fantastic.

My favorite snippets from each speaker at the conference:

Joan Bauer spoke about finding 2 quirky little lamps that she placed in dark corners of her house where she didn't even know she had space. She likened this to stories and books: they are often lights in dark corners and, especially in bad times, it's important to fill those dark corners with light. Let your light shine!

Kadir Nelson showed us photos and talked about the research that went into making WE ARE THE SHIP. The heart he put into making the book is inspiring.

Sarah Pennypacker talked about often feeling inspired to somehow right an injustice through her writing. I liked how she talked about A.D.D. kids and how they are often keenly empathetic, artistic and innovative. When she wrote CLEMENTINE, she created a book where the adults sincerely thank the A.D.D. kid for the empathy, artistic spirit and innovative nature she shares with others.

Brian Selznick pretty much made my week by talking about and showing pictures about the making of THE INVENTION OF HUGO CABRET. I loved that he showed us images from French silent movies and that he played "The Man On The Moon" for us. He also talked about a conversation he had with a friend that changed his perspective on his work. A few years ago he had been feeling kind of down because many of his books were going out of print after 4 or 5 years. His friend asked if he liked each book better than the last. While Brian liked all of his books, he couldn't honestly say that he had stepped it up a notch after each book. So he make the HUGO CABRET. Awesome.

Three other very cool things about the conference:
1. Nancy organized a very welcoming and fun "meet the author" reception the day before. Delicious food and I got a chance to say hi to the authors.
2. Nancy invited me to introduce Kadir Nelson! What an honor. I managed not to stumble on my face or cough or shake (even though I was nervous).
3. SCBWI Western Washington had an information table. A lot of the attendees at the conference are teachers and librarians so we advertised our eKite speaker directory. Of course many teachers and librarians who are literature minded also pursue writing so we chatted with lots of writers throughout the day too. Thanks to all the volunteers who helped with the table.

And Thanks again, Nancy Johnson, for a great conference. I'll be first in line to sign up for next year's.

I'm a Dedicated Reader

Sometimes I can't help but take these kinds of tests when I see them on the internet, tempting me away from whatever correspondence has brought me to the computer in the first place. I'm shy. Correspondence can sometimes be something to procrastinate doing.

What Kind of Reader Are You?
Your Result: Dedicated Reader
 

You are always trying to find the time to get back to your book. You are convinced that the world would be a much better place if only everyone read more.

Obsessive-Compulsive Bookworm
 
Literate Good Citizen
 
Book Snob
 
Fad Reader
 
Non-Reader
 
What Kind of Reader Are You?
Quiz Created on GoToQuiz


Now. Back to my art!

Proof reading and Grammar

Okay, okay, a few days ago (March 4th) was National Grammar Day. I didn't celebrate it.

Deep breath.

I have some ugly confessions regarding grammar.

I kind of suck at it.
Gulp.

I just always have. And I really honestly try very hard to learn otherwise.

Sometimes I feel like an impostor as a writer because I am the world's worst speller and I feel like I make more than my share of mistakes with grammar too. I sometimes find it embarrassingly intimidating to associate myself with so many kick butt writers because of this.

Try my friend, Martha Brockenbrough. She has written a book on grammar, THINGS THAT MAKE US SIC, that I've heard nothing but rave reviews about. I still need to read it (and I plan on doing so soon), but I feel like I need her in my head all the time. I need someone to point out all my stupid mistakes. I just don't see them despite the fact that I try really hard and I've read THE ELEMENTS OF STYLE numerous times (I especially like the Maira Kalman illustrated edition -- I would).

For example, I just sent an email of a professional nature to someone and I used the wrong "it's/its." How many years have I wondered if the stupid its/it's thing will EVER sink in for me? It just doesn't. I ALWAYS have to go check a second or third time. This time I still missed it. It's just not a natural thing for me to notice. Does anyone else have this problem?

I read so many things saying it's something a good writer, editor or agent notices right away. They should. Why don't I? Does this disqualify me from the writing world? Maybe I should stick with my paper and scissors. Artist's don't have to be perfect with grammar, right?

Usually I deal with this using handy tools like spell check and my copy-editor-inclined husband. I NEVER send any mail without having him check for dumb mistakes like using the wrong it's/its. But I can't have him check my every email.

I'm also a perfectionist. Painfully so. So these kind of dumb mistakes sometimes leave me feeling unnecessarily self-conscious. For Pete's sake, it's only an "it's" (when it should have been an its). Oh well. Wound licking done.

I can at least take solace in a different kind of editing. When I'm at my critique group, I may not be the one to catch the wrong use of it's/its. But I kick butt at helping others find the heart in their stories (allow me to toot my own horn, I'm wounded after all). I do. I always feel like I'm floating on cloud nine after my critique group, partially because I always feel like I helped my fellow writers see that special window or door into the very best of their work. It's something I'm very good at and I'm proud of that.

So critique group, you keep an eye out for my dumb apostrophe mistakes, over-used exclamation points or dashes and misplaced capital letters. I'll keep looking for the heart of your stories. And maybe after another decade of attempting to call myself a writer, you'll help me finally have it's/its sink in so that it's automatic and I don't make those stupid mistakes.

The Rain In Spain

I'm on my way to Spain with my sweetie!
I made him this valentine's card at the I HEART ART studio tour last week.
I'm going to give it to him on the airplane.
It comes with pockets of goodies:


XOXOX

Happy Valentine's Day!

The Edward Hopper Exhibit at Seattle Art Museum


I'm loading up on inspiration again. Before the I HEART ART studio tour on Saturday I went to the Seattle Art Museum to see the small Edward Hopper Exhibit they have there through March 1st (the picture is from my journal). The emotional quality of the paintings especially struck me. And I also always love to see many pieces by the same artist in one spot.

I highly recommend stopping by the exhibit if you haven't done so yet. It's small, it will only take you 1/2 hour to an hour to spend a few minutes with each painting.

I HEART ART Illustrator Studio Tour

I've been riding a total buzz for the last few days because of SCBWI Western Washington's I HEART ART Illustrator Studio Tour that I attended and helped with this past Saturday. Thirty lucky-duckies including myself got to travel around to 4 awesome illustrator's studios and see how they work.

The amazing Laura McGee Kvasnosky organized the whole thing and I was an even luckier ducky because I got to help with some of the behind the scenes planning. Laura is one of the most amazing and generous artists I know. It was a treat to work with her.

There were so many wonderful things about the day, it's hard to choose what to say about it. I thought maybe I'd just say my three favorite things about each studio:

Julie Paschkis's studio:
1. Her amazing house and studio were like a gallery! I loved the mosaics, the way she painted her piano and all of the incredible art she had around her house.
2. She did a paper cutting demo for us. My heart beats faster when amazing artists start cutting paper.
3. She has a book coming out soon about Antoni Gaudi and I am about to go to Barcelona! She had the F&G out in her studio. It looks like an incredible book. I LOVE Gaudi and I think Julie's illustrations are a perfect fit for a book about him. What a treat for me to see them. She also lent me some of her Barcelona guidebooks and had advice about restaurants to go to in Barcelona. WOW! Thanks, Julie.

Kathleen Kemly's Studio:
1. All of her tracing paper sketches, storyboards and drawings. Fantastic!
2. The originals she had scattered all around the studio. This was an inspiring part of the day in each studio: seeing the originals from all the artists was such a treat.
3. I liked the story she told about one of her books. A writer who is also in her critique group had gotten her first book contract. Yay! Then a few months later, Kathleen was asked to illustrate the book. The publisher had no idea that the writer and Kathleen knew each other, let alone that they were in the same critique group. They handled everything very professionally though and it was a fun serendipitous match.

Nina Laden's Studio:
1. Again, I loved seeing Nina's originals. Especially some collages from Roberto, The Insect Archetect, which is a book I oogle over. I also loved seeing the way she boxed up her work for shipping. This was very useful to me and I could see myself using a similar method with my own work.
2. She did a demo using acryla-gouache. Awesome! I wanna try...
3. Her studio is so cute and cozy. I especially like her thinking loft.

Laura McGee Kvasnosky's Studio:
1. Laura did an awesome demo of the wash technique she uses in her work. I loved watching the black ink wash away to reveal a little illustration.
2. Laura had my art sample on her wall! Which made me feel all warm and cozy inside.
3. I love the border on Laura's backsplash that's made of old typeface. She also has an amazing typeface coffee table in her house.

AND THE PARTY (we had a fabulous and fun after-party at Laura's):

1. Yay for crafty time with other artists! I had helped Laura gather supplies for making valentines and it was fun to see them put to use. I also loved crafting around my fellow illustrators. And I especially loved seeing all their valentines hanging from a clothesline in Laura's living room.
2. Yummy treats! Annie Gage, our SCBWI WWA amazing food lady, brought amazing food for us to eat. Chocolate. Cookies. Yummy things! Oh and Jaime Temairik brought some of her famous cupcakes. Delicious.
3. Seeing everyone so happy after a great day. I loved seeing and hearing reactions to the studio tour. I felt like my face was stuck in smile-mode for hours after I had left.

Thanks everyone for a wonderful, inspirational and fun day.

P.S. You can check out more photos from the day on this shutterfly page.

Halloween in February

My sister is visiting. She just commented on the fact that I have (now had) a Halloween skeleton table runner decorating a prominent place in my living room. And no I don't have a year-round skeleton fetish. It really was a Halloween decoration. It was right on top of the T.V. cabinet (happy eye level) in the living room. Meaning, yes, I somehow managed to leave a Halloween decoration up through all of Thanksgiving, through Christmas (which I decorated the whole house for), through the big task of taking all of the festive Christmas decorations down, and through all of January. It's almost Valentine's day for pete's sake! I'm a little mortified (pun really wasn't intended).

We had Christmas at our house. I just looked through my Christmas pictures. There it was! My nativity set right over my skeleton table runner. I'm a crafty decorator sort of person. Even though I can be a slob, I've cleaned my living room dozens of times since Halloween. How could I not notice the skeleton right in front of me?

I'm thinking this could be some sort of metaphor for writing or something. I wonder where I have awkward skeletons in my work: right out in plain view where everyone sees them (even my mom who never notices anything about the way I decorate) but I'm so used to them that I don't even notice. And no one says anything because they are either too nice or they just think I'm weird like that. Hmmm...

Or I wonder what traits my characters might have that are like this. Obvious to everyone but themselves. Hmmm...

I have to say that I'm having quite the laugh at myself. In my defense, my husband didn't notice them either.

Handmade Book of the Week(s) Feb 7 - Mar 1, 2009

I call this design "Tree Of Life."
I thought I'd put it up because I'm leaving for a big adventure in Spain soon. And adventure gives me life, so why not the Tree Of Life book.

I guess technically I could have had posts scheduled for the weeks I'll be gone. But that's not very much like vacation. I'm taking vacation. So this book will be book of the "week" for several weeks.

I might put up a few posts from Spain though if I feel inspired to share something cool and crafty or awesome and arty that I find. We'll see.

To see more photos or to buy the book go here.

Happy trails!

25 Random Things About Me

Oh my goodness, my to-do list is long these days. I soooo didn't have time to write this. Oh well, I wrote it anyway. I guess it was the journal-keeper in me. It was fun. But I did stay up wayyyy too late doing it.

I keep getting tagged on Facebook to write 25 random things about me.
So I finally did it. Only I put my 25 things here instead.

1. My father died in a tractor accident when I was 3 years old and my sister was 11 months old (we lived in rural Minnesota). After a few years of grieving, my mom managed to pick herself up, dust herself off and start anew. She went to graduate school (taking us with her), she got a good job out west (taking us with her) and she raised my sister and I solo through it all.

2. Watching my mom I learned these things to be true: there is life after death, anything really is possible through hard work, and deep love fosters endurance.

3. I met my husband while traveling solo in Europe after I graduated from college. I was there to spend three months solid looking at art (really – I spent 8-10 hours a day in museums for almost the entire trip, it was amazing). He was there to watch a series of different professional bike races. We met in Rome. We had our first date in Venice. We had our first kiss in front of Claes Oldenburg’s buried bicycle sculpture in Paris. We were married 2 years later. (The photo was from a trip we took a few years later when we returned to the bike sculpture).

4. My husband and I got engaged on a tiny island in the middle of Lake Titicaca in Peru. The island had no phones or Internet. We were excited to tell our family about our engagement but on our journey back to the mainland, the engine on our small boat exploded and started the boat on fire (a pretty big fire for such a small boat). It was terrifying. The lake is enormous and we were at least a mile from shore. People were screaming that they couldn’t swim. There was a baby and lots of old people. The boat tipped back and forth as the boat operators filled an enormous plastic barrel and doused the fire. One man had severe burns. Another boat rescued us before anybody had to swim. I wrote an email to everyone I knew that night telling about the fire. Then I said, “By the way, Bryce and I are engaged.”

5. I have been working at becoming a writer and illustrator of children’s picture books for 12 years and working hard at it for about 6 years. It is my heart’s passion. I love it.

6. I’m a paper artist. I make handmade paper and I make cool stuff out of handmade paper like journals and photo albums and illustrations. I’ve sold my work online and at big craft shows. My favorite craft shows I’ve participated in were the Park City Kimball Arts Festival and the Bellevue Arts and Crafts Fair. I did these two shows two weekends in a row. Despite being in the throw-up phase of pregnancy, I kicked butt and it felt good.

7. I heart all things crafty. I like making stuff and I like having stuff other people have made. Handmade is my favorite. I share this passion with a lot of my dad's family.

8. I had a teacher for my 2nd, 3rd and 4th grade years who took our entire class on grand imaginary journeys every year. The whole year’s worth of study revolved around our pretend trips. In the math center we might do exchange rates or pretend we needed to figure out our bill at a restaurant. In the science center we would learn about animals from that country or study scientists who had come from there. One year we turned the classroom into a time machine and traveled back in time. I met dinosaurs, cruised around the world with Magellan and became a patriot during the revolutionary war. Other things I did in her class: I participated in the changing of the guard in the UK, took part in a Japanese Tea Ceremony and built a castle. We made elaborate journals and scrap books from our travels.

9. I went back to visit that teacher in 2006. I was a paper-maker in her colonial village. All the kids had artisan trades they had studied and were “practicing.” It was a blast. I showed the kids how to make paper. They showed me how to make shoes, barrels, wagon wheels, bread, medicine, horseshoes and many other items. My shop went out of business due to unfair taxes set by the British government. That’s how I left to fly home again.

10. I am also an adventurer caught in a worrywart’s brain. I tend to have anxiety issues. But as a result I find it deeply satisfying to spit in the face of my worry monsters and do brave things.

11. During college I fulfilled a long-time dream by training and earning my paraglider pilot’s license. Unfortunately towards the end of my training I became deathly afraid of flying, even on airplanes. Most upsetting was that I also lost my beloved ability to fly at will during my dreams while sleeping (a cherished super-power) and it’s taken me years to get that back. That’s the way adventures work though. Most of the time they are awesome and sometimes they scare the crap out of you. I admit that even though flying ended up scaring the crap out of me, it was also extremely awesome. I’m glad I can do it again while I sleep.

12. I was an intensely nerdy and hard-working academic in high school. I graduated in the top 10 of my high school class of 600ish with a perfect grade-point average. Peers in my classes tended to be the sort who planned on being doctors, lawyers, scientists and engineers “when they grew up.” I felt like I harbored a sick and ugly secret: I wanted to be an artist. I dropped out of Honors physics half way through my senior year to take pottery for the 3rd time as a T.A. A few friends and teachers seriously acted as if I had jumped off of a cliff into doom. As silly as it sounds and as silly as it was, it was the most liberating thing I did in high school.

13. Even more liberating than dying my hair purple or night-swimming in cold Lake Washington during seasons other than summer. Both of which I also did in high school (I only dyed my hair purple once, but I’ve gone night-swimming in Lake Washington oodles of times, and a few times as a grown-up).

14. I love reading to my son, Oscar. He loves books and so do I and it makes me so freaking incredibly happy that we have that in common. He is the cutest and most joyful thing in my entire life.

15. I’m passionately in love with my husband and I love going on adventures with him, eating good food with him and just being near him.

16. These are the ways I practice my spirituality: going on walks, taking time to notice beauty in the world, exercising, practicing yoga, listening, walking the labyrinth at my church, sharing a relaxed meal with loved ones, playing with my son, attempting to stand up to injustice in the world, being near water or mountains, writing in my journals, counting my blessings, and making stuff with my hands.

17. My mother’s family has a reputation of being honest almost to a fault. My Great Grandfather emigrated to the U.S. from Sweden through Ellis Island. He was missing all but one finger and a stumpy thumb on one of his hands when he immigrated. Lucky for him he was carrying his hat with his mangled hand when he went through immigration and no one noticed his lameness. After making it through, he was sitting outside resting when another Swede commented that my Grandfather had been lucky to make it through with such a mangled hand. My Grandfather was extremely concerned that he had somehow made it through dishonestly so he went back in. Luckily they treated him as a nuisance waved him away. This is something I probably would have done too.

18. I led a high school mime group for five years (as an adult). It was one of the most fun and rewarding things I’ve ever done.

19. I secretly love being a salesperson (as long as I’m selling crafty or arty things). It's fun to help people bring arty/crafty stuff into their lives. The kind of stuff that's treasured and loved for a long time. I love selling things at craft shows so much that for a while I got a job at a pottery store in town just so I could experience more of the sweet success of selling stuff you love. The job at the pottery store helped me to weather the long road I’m traveling towards getting my picture books sold -- where the tastes of success are bitten off in more distant intervals.

20. The walls in my house are all different colors. We believe in color courage around here and I don’t know if I could ever go back to living somewhere with plain white walls without feeling restless.

21. My studio has white walls. But the ceiling is blue.

22. I have no self-control when it comes to puzzles (logic ones NOT trivia ones, I'm horrible at trivia). I have a tendency to get addicted when I take them on. I used to subscribe to Games magazine and it was a worse time-sucker than the internet. The only thing that can keep me distracted from my horrid fear of flying on airplanes are Sudoku puzzles. I'm the same way with strategy-type board games. Once my husband suggested we take up chess together. After I wasted several full days playing chess against the computer in some kind of stupid hypnotic trance, I banned chess from my brain. This is what I have to do with most puzzles or I would have no life. Seriously. But please, anyone please, play Clue with me? Or Settlers of Catan? BEWARE I am viciously competitive and take myself way too seriously when I play them. But please?

23. I have a pair of beloved shoes that fit my feet perfectly that I’ve worn, repaired, worn again, repaired again (etc) and cherished for over 15 years. I only wish they were cuter.

24. My mother’s extended family has a tradition of taking big adventures together. When I was 10, 7 of us traveled to Europe, rented a van, toured the places my Grandpa fought in WWII and met relatives in Sweden. When I was in my twenties 9 of us went to China together. Two weeks from now, 6 of us are going to Spain. My 85-year-old grandma will go with us.

25. What I live for most? Creativity and adventure. All the more when they are put together.

Okay, Tag you're it.

A pat on the back for me and A GIVE-AWAY!

I've been whining about the CPSIA law a lot. I've filled out petitions etc. But. Finally...

I took the time out of my enormously long to-do list to write a personal letter to Congressman Rick Larson, Senator Patty Murray and Senator Maria Cantwell. It only took me about 1/2 an hour.

This is the first time I've ever bothered to write my own letter, as opposed to using a pre-written letter some other activist wrote. I'm proud. Pat on the back for me.

Now. Somebody out there: do the same.

Look, I've got a give-away to encourage you to do just that.

If you send a letter to all three of your representatives (your house member and your two senators), even if it's just a form letter, and then comment about it here, you'll be eligible to receive a free handmade flip-out book made by me. I'll draw eligible names from a hat if there's more than one person who does it. And I'll even let you tell me what colors you want (I've got a bunch in stock). Here's a photo of one:


And here's a photo of a full one:


Also if you make cool handmade stuff I dare you to do a similar give-away.

All the info you need to write the letters can be found via the link with the cute teddy bear to the right.

There. Now...

Go to.

David Macaulay Exhibit at the Tacoma Art Museum

The weekend before last I went to see the David Macaulay Exhibit, THE WAY HE WORKS, at the Tacoma Art Museum! Here's a page from my journal:
The museum was offering free admission to anyone who brought a book to donate to Page Ahead, a great organization that gives books to kids who may not otherwise be able to own many books. I donated a copy of Paul Zelinsky's The Story Of Mrs. Lovewright and Purrless Her Cat.

Can I just say, Tacoma Art Museum Rocks. It seems that they've been doing quite a few of these illustrator exhibits over the past few years and they do such an awesome job with them. GO SEE THE EXHIBIT!

My favorite things about the David Macaulay exhibit:
  • The flat-file like drawers set up throughout the exhibit. You can open drawers and see sketches mixed amongst finished art.
  • The scrap-book wall. It is meant to mimic the way Macaulay lays out his research on his own wall. It included sketches, photos, and all sorts of misc. interesting stuff.
  • All those pretty architecture drawings up on the walls and surrounding me like a big cool not-quite-finished framework of a building. I love architecture. When I was a kid I wanted to either be an author/illustrator or an architect. I used to collect house floor plans from the real-estate magazines or classified sections of the newspaper advertising open-houses. So as you can imagine, I love David Macaulay and his work.
  • And my most favorite part of all? The video chronicling the evolution of Macaulay's book, Rome Antics. Before this exhibit, I was mostly familiar with Macaulay's various building books and his awesome masterpiece, The Way Things Work. But I LOVE LOVE LOVE Rome (my husband and I met there) and I love the way the pigeon in this book travels through the city to deliver a message to someone. It's like I'm a traveler in Rome all over again. Only I also have wings.
So I bought a copy of Rome Antics from the Museum gift shop (as a thank-you to the museum for bringing such awesome exhibits to Washington State) and I've added the book to my favorite-books list.

The other book of Macaulay's that I think isn't as well known but I love and I want to mention in this post is called Building The Book Cathedral. It's about his process of making the more well-known book, Cathedral. It shows his dummies and pre-drawing sketches and talks about his trials and errors in creating the actual picture book -- it's a sort-of journal. I think anyone who's a picture-book creator should definitely check it out. Especially if you love cathedrals as much as I do.

As a side-story I must add that my awesome husband surprised me with that book for Christmas many years ago. He picked it out and found it himself, no hints or wish-lists from me. What made it even more awesome was that I hadn't even heard of the book then (which isn't like me when it comes to awesome picture books that are exactly my taste). Isn't it amazing when a loved one gives you the most perfect of perfect gifts?
My sister took these photos at Chartres Cathedral several years ago (don't worry she didn't use flash). My favorite is the one of me walking the labyrinth. I also like the blue light from the stained glass shining on my foot.

Handmade Book of the Week Jan 24 - Jan 30, 2009

I'll Fly Away...
(One of my favorite Songs)

My Fly-Away Journal is this week's book of the week in honor of the cool idea that Creative Kismet put on her blog. Many artists all over the internet partook in the "Birds Of Change Giveaway," including my friend, Kim who made an awesome bird with map wings. I was late in learning about it but maybe at a future date I'll give away one of my new Book Birds (click here for a picture of one in an old post).

Anyway, happy hope everybody!



For more pictures of the Fly-Away Journal, or to buy the book, click here.

Handmade Book of the Week Jan 17 - Jan 23, 2009

Because sometimes things take a long time...
A turtle journal is this week's handmade book of the week.
Okay actually, the real inspiration for this book's posting didn't really happen this past week, it happened a couple of weeks ago. But I forgot about it until I was sorting through some photos of Oscar. We were at a restaurant. He likes to have cups with straws:
And he's learning how to share:
To see more photos, or to buy the book, click here.