Posts Tagged ‘flowers’

Butterflies From Raindrops!

Saturday, June 8th, 2013

After a long stretch of  time away from my art, I finally was able to do something creative again.

A trip to South Carolina to see our son Nick and his family while he was there, from where he is stationed in Germany, for training and his wife and son were visiting family, was a tiring but great way to end the month of April. We visited a botanical garden and wandered downtown Charleston while we were down there.

Flower Tent Inside before Mother's Day

Flower Tent Inside before Mother’s Day

May brought Ken’s new endeavor, selling  plants and flowers at a Flower Tent near home.  Unfortunately, he needed help and I ended up spending some of May in my glory, surrounded by and helping customers choose flowers and plants for their gardens.  I quickly found that too many hours spent there resulted in full days lost, spent in bed… What a bummer of a way to spend some of the nicest days of the year… Seeing all the flowers was quite therapeutic and I got lots of photos of beautiful flowers. I also had one boring, cold, rainy day that I had to watch the tent… very few customers came out in the ikky rain. I try to keep my camera with me at all times, so I spent some of the day taking photos of flowers, raindrops and raindrops on flowers.

Flood in tent... The "river" running through the tent... We are extremely lucky to have a location on a paved parking lot... lots of rivers and lakes, but no muck and mire....

Flood in tent… The “river” running through the tent… We are extremely lucky to have a location on a paved parking lot… lots of rivers and lakes, but no muck and mire….

 

 

 

 

 
The Photo above just doesn’t show the depth and flow of the water…  Thankfully my shoes have thick soles… My feet still did get wet…  Following are a few of the many photos I took that day… The two that turned into butterflies are noted in the captions…

Raindrops reflecting trees

Raindrops on the tent frame reflecting trees

Raindrop with reflections of hanging baskets.. One of the photos used for butterfly wings.

Raindrop with reflections of hanging baskets.. One of the photos used for butterfly wings.

Raindrop with Impatiens flower reflections... Drop number 2 used for wings.

Raindrop with Impatiens flower reflections… Drop number 2 used for wings.

White Lobelia with water drops

White Lobelia with water drops

Raindrops in Pink... I think these were Verbena flowers.

Raindrops in Pink… I think these were Verbena flowers.

Raindrop on pink Rose Petal

Raindrop on pink Rose Petal

Raindrop on a random stem with interesting reflections.

Raindrop on a random stem with interesting reflections.

Wet Hen... The Hens and Chicks really hold the drops of rain

Wet Hen… The Hens and Chicks really hold the drops of rain

While spending time and playing with raindrops at the tent, the latest round of Art Cards for the Arts in the Cards trade group were nearing their deadline to be sent…   Knowing I might not have much time for art in May, I started them early during April, little by  little, adding more layers to one of the pages of an old calender that I have been using as bases for collaging, painting, stamping, etc. Each time my granddaughter visited and spent some time painting with her Grammy, I tried to add a bit more to this page.  The photo was taken just after I started cutting it apart.

Collaged Base with layers of paint, bleeding tissue paper glued on, and white paint added using sequin waste and paper doilies as stencils and stamps.

Collaged Base with layers of paint, bleeding tissue paper glued on, and white paint added using sequin waste and paper doilies as stencils and stamps.

And now for the “Fun” part!  The butterflies….  The page above was quite interesting, but needed more to make the Art Cards complete.  The Photoshopping began….  raindrop number one and two were copied, flipped, rotated, and merged to create the shape of the butterfly.  One drop became the lower wings, and the other became the upper ones. Once the parts were put together, I played with coloring parts of the raindrops till I had the right shade of blue to look good with my background paper.

Butterfly Image printed on white Kraft Tex

Butterfly Image printed on white Kraft Tex

I decided to see what would happen if I printed the butterflies on C&T Publishing’s new Kraft Tex in white. I was lucky enough to be one of the testers for the product and had a bunch left to keep playing with. It feeds nicely through my printer and the above photo shows the printed result. The black ink soaked into the paper a bit, so I enhanced some of the black areas with a black Sharpie marker.

Kraft Tex Butterfly with Sharpie accents and Glossy Accents

Kraft Tex Butterfly with Sharpie accents and Glossy Accents

Of course, after darkening the black, I just HAD to add one of my new favorite supplies- Ranger’s Glossy Accents.

Glossed Butterfly cut out from the Kraft Tex printout

Glossed Butterfly cut out from the Kraft Tex printout

Once the gloss dried, the butterflies were carefully cut out, then some bending and manipulating was done.

Butterfly Wings Folded to prepare  for gluing on cards.

Butterfly Wings Folded to prepare for gluing on cards.

Since I wanted the wings to be free on the cards, I folded the wings to crease them so that the body and head would lie flat on the cards while the wings would be loose.

Butterfly Wings Curled to give dimension.

Butterfly Wings Curled to give dimension.

With the wings curled, they looked a bit more realistic. The Kraft Tex is a heavy paper-like product that will also tend to hold some curling and shaping for more interest.

Butterfly on ATC

Butterfly on ATC

One of the butterflies glued onto one of the cards cut from the collaged base paper.

Wing Loose on Card- Only the body is glued so the background can be peeked at.

Wing Loose on Card- Only the body is glued so the background can be peeked at.

Look! The wings can be lifted to peek at the textures and colors under them.

Group of 4 Calypso cards

Group of 4 Calypso cards

Four of the cards with their antennae added, ready to be packed and shipped to their new owners.

 

Single Finished Calypso Card

Single Finished Calypso Card

I hope the new owners of these cards will enjoy them as much as I enjoyed making them.  Check out the Arts in the Cards Blog to see the other cards made for this theme. The Kraft Tex material from C & T has  been very interesting to try out. It is described as a paper that  has the feel and texture of leather that is very durable and I have been finding new used for it all the time.

This has just shown you how being bored on a rainy day can actually turn into a good thing…. You just never know what can be done with a camera, and some time spent with Phohotoshop.

Retreat!

Friday, March 8th, 2013

There has been a lot of retreating going on around here lately, such as my running away and hiding in bed or vegging on the couch (not a good kind), but a much better kind of retreating is with a bunch of quilty friends on a quilting retreat. A week ago, I was at Watson Homestead near Painted Post NY with 27 or so other women from the Endless Mountains Quilt Guild.  The retreat started the previous Wednesday and ended Sunday…. 5 days of no housework, cooking, or other household distractions…. just quilting, sewing, creating and of course some chatting…   I spent many days packing things and loading the van in advance, hoping that doing a little each day would keep a nasty pain flare at bay (it Was a good idea…). I also finished washing out the latest batch of dyed fabrics and started ironing all of them….the night before leaving (OK, Not such a good idea)….

Tricolor Dyed fabric- Another piece that was under other other pieces in the dye container, giving it bright colors, but more white space.

Tricolor Dyed fabric- Another piece that was under other other pieces in the dye container, giving it bright colors, but more white space.

One doesn’t realize how long it takes or how mesmerizing ironing all that fabric can be…. it was like Christmas again…. You just don’t see all the details of the patterns and colors until things are pressed out nicely…. Once I got started I couldn’t stop till all was done… I didn’t want to waste retreat time with the ironing board… OK, it was well after midnight when I finished that task….

Coral Fabric- A try at a color to go with some peachy-coral painted ones from summer.

Coral Fabric- A try at a color to go with some peachy-coral and hot pink painted ones from summer…. Look at the subtle color differences and neat patterns!

Sateen Surprise #1- I loved how the colors were so bright on this piece, but didn't realize it was a sateen till I ironed it.

Sateen Surprise #1- I loved how the colors were so bright on this piece, but didn’t realize it was a sateen till I ironed it…. I love surprises like that! The cotton sateen really takes the dye well, giving super rich, bright colors.

Multi Colors on White... This piece looked perfect for my stained glass.

Multi Colors on White… This piece looked perfect for my stained glass.

There were LOTS more great pieces, but I won’t bore you with them here ;)   I thought I might concentrate on doing more with stained glass looking borders on pieces, and the fabric above is one that is perfect for what I wanted to do.  I never know just what I will want to do during a retreat, so I usually take tons of fabric and whatever supplies and goodies I can think of that I might “need”…. Always too much….

Van in Slush- Not what you want to see when you are planning an escape...

Van in Slush- Not what you want to see when you are planning an escape…

Ahhhh…. the travel morning…. Yea, a slushy snow, sleet, rain storm was upon us…  Ikkkk!  Thankfully it was warm enough that the ice on the van slid off easily and the roads were pretty bare and mostly just wet until I got near the retreat center.  Lugging my things in with golf ball sized splatting snowballs falling wasn’t too fun, but once all was moved in, I would be able to stay inside for the rest of the time there.

Group of Brag Book Photo Albums

Group of Brag Book Photo Albums

Once I got my things set up and organized, I began by finishing up several of the photo album and journal covers I had started months ago using some of my newest sunprints.  By the middle of day 2 I had the four albums above and 3 larger journal covers done.   A good start considering I was dealing with one of the worst pain flares I have had in a long time… It wasn’t a surprise…. remember the ironing??… and lugging stuff always sets off flares…. I did a lot of stretching, pacing, and a bit of napping and got through the worst.  The Album on the right in the above photo gave me a bit of a challenge… I could not find a button in my stash that looked right, so I began some playing with new supplies that arrived 2 days before I left for the retreat. (a future post will show what I got…. it was a prize that I won!)

Playing with Alcohol inks on Buttons

Playing with Alcohol inks on Buttons- This shows how the same ink looks on gold and silver tone buttons.

I had 6 new  bottles of  Adirondack Alcohol Inks to try out and decided to add some color to some of my buttons.  I had never played with the stuff, so I didn’t have any applicators or extra alcohol to clean things up (or gloves)… I ended up with some great buttons And a hot pink finger… (since getting home I have learned a lot from online videos about using the inks… lots of play ahead!)

Inked Buttons with Sealer on Them

Inked Buttons- with Vintaj sealer on them

I learned a lot with the first buttons, and finally discovered that poking the shanks into a piece of card stock made things much easier…  Next time there will be parchment over the card stock… I almost sealed the paper onto the buttons and almost ended up with an extra decoration permanently on the handle of my spare rotary cutter handle.  I only happened to have the Vintaj sealer by luck…. another part of the prize…  The bottom left button was white pearl with gold around it.  The silver rose with Wild Plum ink was used on the Maple leaf album.

Mini Design Wall with "victims" for the week.

Mini Design Wall with “subjects” for the week.

After finishing some book covers, I started with my stained glass…. I have been trying to think of ways of updating some of my older little quilts that I have left from years of selling at art and craft shows.  I got the idea after I decided that some new pieces needed a bit more pizazz and started adding the stained glass look borders to them. The Delphinium piece above is one of my newest, and the Rose is circa 2003 from my “Botanical Applique” series of simple quilts for framing.  Since my stash of “chunks and hunks” (little fused quilt sandwiches in various sizes) was very unorganized, I started by sorting things to see what colors I needed to add to what I had on hand.  I spent one whole evening sorting and organizing things.  I even threw out some of the tiniest pieces  I had been saving (horrors!)… they did go to a good cause… someone was collecting little bits and scraps to use as filling for dog beds for a shelter.

Large Hunks and Strips- This is a large plastic drawer full of sorted pieces... There is also a small container of itty bitty bits for pins... I couldn't part with all the little stuff ;)

Mostly Large Hunks and Strips- This is a large plastic drawer full of sorted pieces… There is also a small container of itty bitty bits for pins… I couldn’t part with all the little stuff ;)   Under the container are pieces of an art quilt started years ago…

Small Strips and Chunks- Sorted by color family and size

Small Strips and Chunks- Sorted by color family and size

The above strips and chunks were laid out on a tray table and a larger table at the retreat while I was working with them so I could see what I had to use… It was Wonderful having so much room to work! Now at home they are neatly in a plastic container till I use them again.

Small Stained Glass Pieces- in the process of becoming borders.

Small Stained Glass Pieces- in the process of becoming borders.

To make my stained glass, I satin stitch seam my little fused sandwiches using black thread.  I start by randomly stitching different colored pieces together and keep adding, cutting and adding more until I get something I like. At the end of the retreat I had this little container with lots of pieces.

Watson Dining Room Windows- This was a HUGE Room!

Watson Dining Room Windows- This was a HUGE Room! This photo doesn’t begin to show the size at all.

Off on a detour now…. Here are photos from inside the retreat center where we were… As you can see out the windows, the ground was covered with snow… It snowed at least a bit every day we were there except moving out day… Perfect weather to be able to stay indoors.

Watson View 1 Out The Windows

Watson View 1 Out The Windows- showing the “hotel room wing” and the view.

Watson View of Chapel- We were working in the room below the chapel.

Watson View of Chapel- We were working in the room below the chapel.

Even though we were indoors, there was lots of walking involved… We had use of a huge room under the chapel shown above, and stayed in dorm rooms along the halls between the chapel and dining room, or in hotel rooms way on the other side of the rambling building.  We also had an extra room downstairs near the main room where we had our scrap pile for sharing and other items to share along with a couple extra irons… Too many irons in the main room results in tripped breakers.  I left a LOT of fabric pieces and leftover strips on the share tables that went home with new owners :)

Delphiniums in the Garden With Stained Glass Border

Delphiniums in the Garden With Stained Glass Border Stitched On

This was the first quilt I worked on… I thought it was finished months ago, but then I realized it needed something, so it got a stained glass border.  While making the border for this one, I also started one for the Yellow Rose piece in the earlier photo.

Delphiniums in the Garden Finished

Delphiniums in the Garden Finished- 11″x14″- Black with silver yarn couched around the center panel and used to bind the piece.

 

Delphiniums in the Garden Finished Detail 1- Shows pearls, crystals and painted flower centers.

Delphiniums in the Garden Finished Detail 1- Shows pearls, crystals and pearly painted flower centers.

Delphiniums in the Garden Finished Detail 2- Showing Butterfly

Delphiniums in the Garden Finished Detail 2- Showing Butterfly

The only quilt finished during the retreat…. “Delphiniums in the Garden” also ended up going home with a new owner!!  Another guild member saw it when I took it for show and tell, wondering if it should get the stained glass…

Yellow Rose Nearly Bordered- Ready to be stitched to the Rose panel after I remove the white border.

Yellow Rose Nearly Bordered- Ready to be stitched to the Rose panel after I remove the white border. This will finish about 11″x14″.

My Yellow Rose got pretty close to done…. the border is ready to be stitched on and finishing touches added.

More Mini Quilts Awaiting Borders

More Mini Quilts Awaiting Borders

The two little quilts above are a couple that are 5″x10″ in size with their ivory borders and I think those borders will stay and the stained glass will be added to make them 8×10″ when finished.  The stained glass piecing is pretty meditative and works well as something to so when my brain isn’t working well… I love seeing how the colors interact with each other as I add them with the black stitching.  If this helps to make some of my oldies but goodies more marketable, then that is definitely a win, win, win!

Now that I have been home a while and nearly recovered from the “back home flare”, my next project will be to play with my new supplies that came before the retreat….between bouts of stitching stained glass.

Prize won in the Get Crafty Promotion put out by ArtFire!  I still can't believe I won all this!

Prize won in the Get Crafty Promotion put out by ArtFire! I still can’t believe I won all this!

Amazingly, I won a big prize from ArtFire from a promotion for their new Craft Supplies section…. WOW!!  I will be blogging about what I do with what I received…  Such a wonderful thing to have happen especially when otherwise I would not be able to purchase any of those items for quite some time.  Art Therapy, here I come!

This post is linked to Nina Marie’s Off the Wall Friday… Follow the link to check out lots of great posts from other bloggers.

Jonquil Sunshine… Learning Lots

Sunday, September 9th, 2012

Back to blogging about Art again!  I haven’t written a post here about my Arts in the Cards ATC exchanges for a while, so here goes with the latest lesson in patience and learning…. This post was started a while back and I am finally finishing it and saving it from being stuck in “drafts”  forever….

Orange Jonquil Fabric Beginning

The theme for July was Jonquil… Our themes this year are colors, and the color prompts are open to interpretation which had made them very interesting and lots of fun.  I began by painting fabrics in colors found in the beautiful Spring flowers. The first piece was done with oranges and yellows. The photo above shows the first streaks of colors added to the wet fabric on my paint table outdoors. The colors were layered on while keeping things wet until all the paint was applied, and I kept spritzing the fabric with water during the drying to allow the colors to run and blend into each other.  In addition to the yellows and oranges, I also added some metallic gold for some shimmer.

Jonquil Fabrics Group

The photo above shows the deep orange finished fabric in the center, along with two others. I used the same paint colors for the two coordinating fabrics, just with more water for lighter shades. The lightest one was a fat quarter used to clean the paint out of the brushes… just enough left in them to give it a light wash of color. The medium  colored piece began as a white print with circles on white fabric that added more interest to the piece. The photo also shows the backs as well as the fronts of the fabrics. Both sides are interesting to use!

Since the medium colored fabric had circles on it, I decided to stamp circles on some of the dark fabric using various plastic bottle caps as stamps with white paint.

Stamping Circles

I have acquired a glass topped outdoor table to use under the “Big Top” (my tent set up by the front door) where I can play with paint on fabric in the shade and have easy access to my paint table that is nearby in the sun for drying fabrics. The glass is a great surface to spread paint on to dip the caps or whatever items I use as stamps. The above photo shows the orange fabric stamped with the white circles in various sizes. The pieces of Zucchini sitting on the table are waiting to be used on the green fabric on the table next to the orange for the next challenge with “Cucumber” as the prompt.

Jonquil Construction 1

My original idea for these cards was to use the three fabrics together with the addition of stitching.  The idea had to change almost immediately, due to a burned out main electric breaker… The breaker box lives Behind the set of shelves that lives Behind the TWO design walls in my studio… While trying to find a new main breaker, it was found the brand of box we had was a fire hazard… Not a good thing, so a brand new box was in  order….  That left me moving everything that was on 2 entire floor to ceiling walls of shelves (where most of my fabric lived), as well as everything from my new ironing board shelves, everything from on and around the cutting table. What follow are a couple studio photos…

Behind Design Walls

The photo above shows the wall after my foam design wall was removed and the plywood one was opened to reveal the offending box and wall that needed to be accessed…  Note, the shelves are literally wall to wall and the back set is blocked by the South wall set… everything had to go…. UGGG!!

Studio Shelves Moved

After a day of moving, this was what the view was just inside the studio door… The shelves were moved out of the way as much as possible.  My sewing machine, iron, and lots more were also moved out as well as the thread that was still on the racks in the above photo to keep them safe from drywall dust and such…   So much for stitching anything….

After hoping things would be back to “normal”  in a week, I didn’t get much accomplished on the art cards. Then I decided I HAD to do them somehow, so the ironing board was set up in the kitchen for fusing and card construction began. (I also hoped that blocking half of the kitchen with the ironing board would hurry the process of getting my studio put back together along… it didn’t help much.)

Jonquil Construction 2

The pieces of fabric cut and fused looked pretty blahhh, especially since there could be no stitching involved, so I decided that I would add the yellow “suns”.  I still didn’t like the look of them… still blahhh… not much to look at… so some supply digging was in order… Why is it that whenever things are packed up, I decide I just HAVE to use a certain item or 3???  It seemed every time I needed something, a major search ensued… I could not remember what pile or container or whatever I had packed things into…

Jonquil Construction 3

I finally found my Inktense pencils and played with adding some greenery to the cards… I really wanted to stick with mostly circle shapes for these, and maybe NO flowers… I tend to put flowers in or  on everything…. Well… after a bit of scribbling and playing, I ended up with a row of lollipop looking flowers on each card.

Painting Jonquils

A bit more digging for supplies later, I found some pearlescent paint and fine markers to add a bit of interest to the suns with.  They received bright sunrays and a little swish of pearl to give a bit of depth to them. I was liking them a bit more, but they still were calling for More!  Hmmmm….  Maybe some glassy looking clear embossing???   More digging, and I found my bottle of Ultra Thick Embossing Enamel powder and the heat gun…  Now I had not used the UTEE much at all, but knew it was supposed to be able to be used to create thick, glossy puddles if that was wanted… That is what I wanted….  Glassy, shiny suns…. I had read that I would need more than one coat to get the effect I wanted, so I began…. Layer one results in a quite bumpy look. Not knowing the proper way to add layer 2, I added more embossing ink and more powder and aimed the heat gun…  the pink embossing ink didn’t disappear like it did in the first coat… Ikkkk!  More heat added caused bubbling and a bit of smoke… OOPS!…  more ink, more powder, more heat… More bubbles, more pink sealed inside the molten mass and no glassy smooth surface….

First Jonquil with UTEE Melted

Above is the result of the first couple layers of the melted UTEE… I also added it to the lollipop flowers… You can see the pink embossing ink “nicely” encased in the melted enamel… Not the look I was after… The sun was sadly not smooth or shiny…  Time for Youtube… After realizing I was in over my head, I found a few tutorial videos and learned how one was supposed to use this stuff….  So THAT’S how it’s done!  I finally learned what I needed to do… Use the embossing ink for the first layer Only, then add the powder to the still molten goo immediately after heating the first layer, heat CAREFULLY again (avoiding smoke and boiling bubbles) and repeating until I had the look I wanted…  WOW!  That worked!  Now why hadn’t I gone to the tutorials first??  Yea, I’m a stubborn rock-head who tries things on her own first…  NOT always a good thing….

Jonquil Art Cards

FINALLY! I had my cards pretty much done… The photo above shows a group of them after the UTEE was successfully added. (Note: upper middle card was the “guinea pig”, you can see it still has a deformed sun.) I was happy to finally have the thick puddles of gloss I was looking for!  Now this wasn’t the end of the story for these cards… I did finish the edges with a stamp pad, then tried to flatten them out a bit since they buckled a bit with the heating….  OK, I learned another thing…. Pretty, thick glossy puddles of plastic will crack like glass if bent too much…  I really got frustrated, but they were done and cracks and all were sent to their new owners…

Even projects that don’t work out the way you wanted them to can be learning experiences… Now I know how to work with UTEE, AND I know that it is much better to find some tutorials online when learning to use a new supply….  I guess one thing is for sure… I know this will not be the last of my lessons learned by trial and error (and more error)…. I have LOTS to learn :)

Fun in the Sun Under the Big Top

Saturday, September 1st, 2012

I finally had 3 nice days in a row that were nearly perfect for painting and sunprinting fabric.  This is the first year in a long time that I have put up my 10ft x 20ft tent outside the front door for painting fabric.

Paint Tent aka the "Big Top" Outdoor Studio Space

In order to do the sunprints I love so much, I need to work in the shade and have easy access to a sunny area for drying fabric.  In my early years of puddling with paint on fabric, I used my Easy-Up canopy to give me the shade. I would have to set the thing up in the morning and take it back down when I was done since those are not reliable in gusty, stormy, rainy weather.  My “Big Top” is made to be left up all summer for use as a carport or whatever and is shown ready for a painting session above. Securely staked into the ground and attached to the wall of our mobile home, it behaves pretty well. I am able to keep  my supplies outside ready to use with very little time or effort.The plastic drawer units and a couple plastic tubs hold most of my supplies.

I have been finding myself playing with much brighter and clearer colors than I used to work with.  This has been a wonderful change from the last big painting sessions a few years ago when it seemed all I ended up painting were muddy, mucky, mossy colors. I called it my “mud and rocks period”…  I would try to start a painting session with “pretty” colors, but seemed to end up with the browns, and mucky greens.

Day's Work 7-25-12

The photo above shows one group of fabrics painted back in July. I have been using my Dye-Na-Flow fabric paints which allow me to get deep, bright colors without adding the plastic feel of some other paints.  The Strawberry red, hot pink color is a new one for me to use… The light pink piece with the flowers was the first sunprint of the season, done with Phlox florets scattered over the painted fabric.  The green and yellowish piece was made for the Arts in the Cards “Cucumber” challenge… I printed it using titanium white and a zucchini cut to resemble a cucumber.

Ferns and Phlox Flowers Sunprint in Orange and Pink

I’m not exactly sure why I started playing with the hot pink and orange together, but I have done a number  of sunprinted panels with this color combination, am I am finding I like it.

Orange Lizards, Ferns and Frogs

This piece was one of the fun ones I did using foamie lizard and frog shapes along with Ferns for the sunprints on bright tangerine shades. I did end up playing with other bright colors as you can see from the next photo.

Aug 25 2012 Painted Fabrics Hanging on Tent

This photo shows the finished fabrics done on August 25th which gave the “Big Top” a tropical feel.  I started out playing with the Orange and Pink, then only Pink, then moved to shades of blue. I even did a couple landcape-ish pieces that are on the far right to use as backgrounds for some botanical applique art quilts.

It has felt so great to actually be playing with “pretty” colors again!  I like the bright tropical shades much better than the “mud and rocks” of the past!

 

Flower Art Friday- July 13

Friday, July 13th, 2012

Happy Friday the 13th!  Not a day I fret about for me… it has been more a good day in my family than something to worry about…  Today I am showing a photo that asked to be taken and what I have done with it in Photoshop Elements.

I woke early one morning this week with an achy body that wasn’t happy, and when walking to the kitchen for pain pills, I looked out the front door and this is what I saw….

Front Door Garden in the Fog

The fog was pretty thick and  the Phlox in the garden seemed to glow, so I grabbed the camera and took a few photos.  The fog gives a mysterious look to things as it hides the expanse of lawn beyond the garden.  I then decided to see what would happen if I played a bit with it in Photoshop and what I ended up with is  next…

Foggy Morning

I did a bit of cropping and tweaking of the color saturation to bring out the glow in the Phlox. Then to see what would happen, I played with some effects and liked what I got with the Artistic- Sponge (at whatever the settings were that it defaulted to). I liked how it added some graininess to the photo and intensified the mystery of the fog.  I added the effect to a duplicate layer, so I could then lightly erase some of the graininess from the Phlox, bird houses and a few more flowers to get the brighter colors from the original layer to make them pop a bit more.  I have tons more to learn while playing with my photos in Photoshop Elements, but at least the playing I am doing is something that is getting me doing something creative more often now. Maybe a few little quilts will be inspired by my playing with the photos…

flowerartfriday
I have linked this post to Flower Art Friday where you can see lots more gorgeous flower photo art.