I just wanted to post a few photos from my senior thesis exhibition. It was a great learning experience, but I'm glad it's over! It was about places from my childhood and how they've changed since then.
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
6.01.2012
10.01.2011
a l o n e by Mikko Lagerstedt
9.26.2011
Photo Inspiration
6.13.2011
Pottery
I have always loved hand-thrown pottery. There's just something so warm and personal about each piece. Last summer, I decided to take a pottery class at Genesee Center for the Arts. I've always wanted to try throwing my own pottery, and it was just as awesome as I'd hoped.
It was HARD. I was expecting to come out of the class with misshapen lumps of clay, but the instructor was really helpful and managed to coax great work out of everyone. I LOVE the pottery I made in that class, and I use a lot of it on a daily basis. My dad just bought a kiln to supplement the pottery wheel he bought a few years ago, and I'm excited to try it again!
Here are some other pieces I made:
7.08.2010
Henna
Last weekend was my first festival of the year! I have been doing henna body art at festivals for about 6 years now. It is very profitable and was a nice break from my day job. I missed Shea, who was at the AOS MiniCon, but I didn't really have a whole lot of time to think about that.
I started doing henna when I was 14 after getting some at a girl scouting event. My dad bought me a kit, and I played around with it and decided I really liked it. I bought more and did henna for my family at a reunion. Then my parents sugguested I set up a booth at a small local festival. I ended up making a ton of money, so I got a DBA and a tax ID at the age of 15, and have been doing henna ever since at several festivals a summer.
My first booth was outfitted with a small paper sign and some designs glued to a wooden board. I had camp chairs and a table. I have redecorated considerably since that first summer:
I started doing henna when I was 14 after getting some at a girl scouting event. My dad bought me a kit, and I played around with it and decided I really liked it. I bought more and did henna for my family at a reunion. Then my parents sugguested I set up a booth at a small local festival. I ended up making a ton of money, so I got a DBA and a tax ID at the age of 15, and have been doing henna ever since at several festivals a summer.
My first booth was outfitted with a small paper sign and some designs glued to a wooden board. I had camp chairs and a table. I have redecorated considerably since that first summer:
The chairs are actually storage crates with wooden reinforcements and cushions attached (made by my grandmother).
Here is my booth at the Batavia Picnic in the Park from last weekend:
I have a new tent this year. My other one was five years old and pretty mangled.
This festival listed their hours as noon to five. I was working straight from 11:30-5:30! I wish I'd had time to take more pictures, because I'm really proud of the work I did. Here is a small sample mostly taken to show the customers what their henna looked like if it was in a hard-to-see place, with a few practice designs I did on myself.
One of my photographer friends stopped by and took a photo too: http://www.flickr.com/photos/48741272@N03/4762135955/
I have some more photos from previous years on my website: www.phoenixhenna.com
It's back-breaking, thumb-numbing work, but I enjoy it and I make about the same in 5 hours that I get for a week at my other job.
6.10.2010
Etsy Treasury
This is what I would buy on Etsy if I could afford it all.
It's here: http://www.etsy.com/treasury/4c11126419246d910cfa91cd/sanguinity
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