Friday, 30 December 2016

A Farewell to 2016

Snowman / inspired by Michael

Hello, dear readers!

It's about time ... to say farewell to 2016 and welcome 2017. My 2016 has been throughout gentle and supportive. Sigh. Too bad it ends tomorrow night. I will keep 2016 in good memory.

Looking around, hearing other people's stories, I must have been very, very lucky to experience such a good time in 2016.
 
Thank you, 2016!


Now that all the photo calenders have successfully been passed to all my friends and family, I can show in public what 2016 was like. I removed photos that include portraits. Still, 2016 is looking good.
 


January 2016 in Maria Alm

Vienna in February

Lido di Venezia in the Fall


Italianità, this time Pellestrina, close to the Lido di Venezia
Lido di Venezia in Fall season, faking Spring. hehe



Venezia as seen from S. Giorgio Maggiore

The village of Fresach seen upside down. turned 180°. You geet it? ;-)

Staycation, my Love.

A typical vacation looks like this.

Carinthia in October

Carinthia in November

Cemetery in Fresach

The lagoon in Venice was meant to become the month of Decembe, until ...
... well until snow fell just a few days before Christmas. Success!

The photos picture the gentle air of 2016.
There is a lot of water, almost no mountains. What an unusual year!


Hope to see you in 2017,
Paula

Friday, 16 December 2016

Shortcut on Calligraphy

Hello again!

Well, this ended surprisingly early.

On my route to becoming a highly passionate calligraphista, I forgot one important detail : My left hand! Gothic lettering does not support people like me: Lefties. I can manage fountain pens almost worryfree (after some practice). But writing Gothic lettering with a nib that needs to be pulled from left to right in an exact angle of 40°? No way!

What to do? Become right handed in my mid 40's?
Learn a language that moves from right to left?

I opted for the third option and returned to the playground where passionate hobbyists like write with flexible nibs, no education or training needed.
"Tintenfaxi" was the breaking point where I quit Gothic lettering. (I thought the term Tintenfaxi is familiar in German, but I could not find a single entry online. Seems I was wrong! Tintifax it is - a character from  the Kasperl stage).

pictured above:
1st row: this was all I could write after an evening with the calligraphy nib, blame it on the left hand writing.
2nd row: writing with a flexible nib and black ink ("Pilot" = not the profession but the name of a Japanese Company which sells phantastic inks)
3rd row: Happyness comes with the flexible nib and black Pilot ink.
4th & 5th row: exploring the variations this flexbile nib offers

New adventures to come. Without lessons. Yes, all those lessons in the Calligraphy book did chase me off.

A simple flexible nib alreasy creates awsome results. All I have to do is: Write! The ink flows and so do my thoughts, which I bring to paper.

Black ink and a flexible nibs work as a phantastic trigger for writing/painting/drawing illustrations. I am surprised writing with a pen has not become a trend yet, with all those adorable illustrations surrounding us these days in magazine, on shop windows and online. My guess would be, that as soon as the ongoing hype "Colouring books for adults, mandalas etc" passes, illustrating will become really popular.

After all the excitement I chose to relax tonight and dedicated the evening to ... Christmas cards. No experiments. Simple watercolour.
Watercolour LOVE -  in capital letters.
Oh, I almost forgot: Yes, I did return the calligraphy-book. I bough envelopes instead. It's time to finally ship some cards.
Have a good night!
Paula






 



Tuesday, 13 December 2016

Highly Efficient?

Hello!

I have been having a good time lately. A good health plays a big role. So far no cold, no flue has caught me. The days have been incredibly sunny, almost everyday we have blue skies. Maybe not all day long but at least for a few hours.

Spirits are high, perfect time for mastering a new hobby. Calligraphy. Also known as: The slowest possible mode to reach a goal called "sending Christmas cards" by the end of this week.

Lets get started .. by looking at nice photos. Almost like watching YouTube tutorials. Well, more like looking at thumbnails. Still, entertaining.
 Whoa, progress!
The progress I will have made by the time I reach page 19 - vertical strokes - brings up the idea of binary Christmas greetings. Yep, I could do that. Just give me 2 days. Maybe 3.


This is how I manage to write and ship Christmas Cards by the end of this week. NOT. ^_^
The first word on page 41. How cool is that! "ma". Need to get to make it to 41 Probably not tonight. 
LOL
As a true serial hobbyist, I don't "just do it". Getting ready is an important step. These days you get ready by watching YouTube videos (people who write letters aka Calligraphy), reading book reviews on amazon, watching more videos (All those nibs! The pretty inks!) and a few nights later it's done. Well, should I say "the set up is done"? 11 days till Christmas. Chances are that cards will make it ... until New Year's Eve maybe?

Not only is the craft art of calligraphy tricky, but the writing as such is tremendously sloooooow. Hahaha.

Before I took up this new hobby, I spend an eveneing speed-painting:
Very, VERY important utensil, not pictured: Michael's YouTube tutorials.
4 cards per evening. aka Christmas cards, the highly efficient way to do it. This was fun.
I want to give June, The Serial Hobbyist Girl full credit for the term I just can't stop repeating, because I like it so much: Serial hobbyist. This woman knows how to do a FOX HAT! And not just fox hats and mittens and sweaters ... I think I might have found her through - Black and White photography! Welcome to our world, the world of serial hobbyists.

Now to you: There must be more of our kind? Come clean, share your hobbies, please.
No passion too short-lived to be loved from the bottom of your inner child's heart. 

Spend your evening with passion and fun,
Paula