Category Archives: Saturday with the Spark

Creative pursuits and life-related happenings.

Papercrafting Post #4: Quilling

For a change of pace, this papercrafting post focuses on a purely decorative craft instead of the practical papercraft I’ve been discussing in earlier posts. But quilling is quite lovely and fun to do; it’s something you can easily add to gift tags or greeting cards, and it can be done alongside ornare for an even more crafted look.

What is Quilling?

Quilling is the art of rolling paper into beautiful shapes for decorative purposes. First a distraction for the wealthy, it is now a very approachable art form for all people. Coiling, pinching, and twirling thinly-cut pieces of paper yield delicate and ethereal miniature sculptures!

Quilling basics @ Wikipedia.org

What is It Used For?

Mostly, quilling takes a low-priced medium (paper) and uses it to embellish other items for a very high-style look. You can add all sorts of rolled-paper decorations to handmade greeting cards, wall art, decorative trinkets, and even furniture! (I could definitely see a glass-topped table with colorful or metallic quilled paper underneath the glass in small niches, able to be seen but not squished.)

Types of Paper to Use

Printer/computer paper can work while you’re trying to learn the craft, but you can also use lighter-weight paper like origami paper (and possibly even tissue paper for a wispier look, though I haven’t tried this). Any paper seems to work well–just cut it into thin strips first so that the coiling process will be easier.

If you want to practice and you have no thin-cut paper to hand, even a straw wrapper will suffice. Get rid of boredom while waiting for your food at a restaurant AND practice quilling at the same time!

How to Start Quilling with Just Fingers

  1. Taking one end of your cut piece of paper, roll it as tightly and roundly as you can (i.e., no folding it over and over itself) until you get to the other end of the paper.
  2. Slowly release the paper so that the coil expands a bit.
  3. Holding the coil with two or three fingers, affix the last end of the paper to the closest side of the coil so that it won’t come apart. A small drop of glue (something a bit stronger than white glue, but no superglue, please) should work.

You now have a beautiful little coil of paper! Once you have mastered this design, you can start to make other shapes that work off of the basic circular coil.

More Advanced Quilling Techniques and Tools

For excellent tutorials and more advanced quilling work, these two websites show more than I could possibly do, being a novice quiller myself. Try this out–have fun coiling, gluing, and twirling!

More Quilling Basics and Intermediate Techniques @ HandcraftersVillage.com
Advanced Techniques and Quilling Tool Advice @ Craftzine.com

What Do I Write About?

“It’s perfectly fine to try my hand at writing,” you might say, “but I have no idea what to write ABOUT.”

Subject matter is important when you’re writing, whether you’re writing creatively or informatively. But you cannot let yourself get hung up on subject matter and stop writing completely. If you stop writing because you feel you don’t know what to write next, you risk hindering your creativity permanently–first, you’re afraid you don’t know anything to write about and you stop, and next, you’re afraid to start up again because it’s been so long since you tried, and so on.

So, how can you decide what to write about? The following blog article delves into the various ways:

Write About Your Life

No one can tell all that there is to know about your life except you. You are the one who has had the first-person experiences you have. Whether they are funny anecdotes, sad memories, wild and crazy tales, or even just small, wistful moments, they are YOUR stories, and they ARE worth writing about.

Why are your personal stories worth writing about? Because when you share about your life, you are sharing a story that could inspire someone else to get through a similar situation he or she is going through. Humans are social creatures, after all, and we like to know that we’re not alone in whatever tough or strange situation we get into. That’s why social media is so big right now–it’s suddenly very easy to uplift each other by sharing about our own experiences. When you write about your life, whether you choose to make it a Facebook status, a Twitter message, a blog article, or an email to someone else, you are taking time to reach out to someone else and tell them “Hey, I went through this, too. I understand.”

Write About One of Your Passions

It’s darned near impossible to write about something if you could give a flying flip about the subject matter. If you want to write something to interest your audience, write about something that you love–your very passion for it will draw others in.

Take this blog as an example. I write about six subjects I love, all week, every week (giving myself time off on Sundays, of course), and I have passion for each one. Because I love each of the subjects I write about, I’ve taken time to become more knowledgeable about each one, and I can write about being thoroughly involved in each subject’s activities.

Writing about things I’m passionate about even entered my schoolwork once–I was giving a presentation in one of my graduate English classes, which was part of my huge final project. I was covering how girls fare in education, and at one point, I covered a sub-topic about girls and gaming, which is becoming much more popular as more girls feel “normal” playing video games. After the presentation was over, the professor and several students commented that most of my presentation was delivered in a rather flat way, but that they were really interested to hear about the “girls and gaming” segment because I looked so much more lively and so much more interested in what I was talking about. I ended up making the “gaming girls” segment into my major final project, and I had a whole lot more fun writing about that than I had had working on the other, larger-topic presentation.

Whatever your passion is, whatever you love doing, seeing, or being involved in, that can be a source for your writing. Don’t worry about it, thinking “But no one else will find this interesting”–remember, in this age of the Internet, there are bound to be people who will find your digital writing VERY interesting!

Write About A Subject that Gets No Attention and Needs It

This is how social activism and social projects get started. From well-established groups like MADD all the way down to growing projects like Freecycle, these projects all began with someone talking and writing about a subject that had gotten very little attention and needed it. Whatever subject or issue you firmly believe in, whatever has gotten your attention and keeps you awake at night, write about it. The very act of communicating about it can start the social ball rolling and fix the problem, raise awareness, or just help people come together and share their personal stories with each other.

This doesn’t have to be for just solving problems, either–this can be about happy events, such as a new group of local moms working together to help each other with kids, or a new chapter of a family-friendly social group starting up in your area. Whatever you need to advertise about, tell others about, your writing can be a powerful, personal voice for that topic.

Summary

Writing does not have to be frightening–in fact, writing can be incredibly freeing for your mental “voice,” your thoughts, feelings, and dreams. I know I can say a lot more through writing than I ever could by speaking–I’d stammer and chase too many topic rabbits, while my writing voice flows as smoothly as water. I hope these three tips about choosing a subject matter help you figure out where YOUR voice belongs…and I hope it inspires you to start or continue your written communication with the world.

When Writing Feels Like Punishment

Sometimes, even for the best writers, writing feels more difficult than it should be. For people who don’t enjoy writing, just the very thought of writing is punishment enough at times. You hit what feels like an impossible hurdle (criticism from someone else, self-criticism or self-censorship, etc.) in the process of writing, and you go airborne for a few seconds, struggling to get yourself back into the writing groove. But instead, you end up landing hard, with all the mental wind knocked out of you. After something like that, it’s hard to feel like ever writing again.

I’ve hit walls in my own writing plenty of times. Sometimes, it was while struggling to complete/excrete a term paper in college (“excrete” is what it feels like to try to compose a 10-page paper from scratch 2 nights before it’s due). Other times, it’s been in my own creative writing or personal writings–some days, it just doesn’t pay to open Microsoft Word, because all I do is sit there, type a bit, Backspace it all, type some more, highlight and hit Backspace again, etc. It’s not fun to feel like you just flat can’t write.

But, as with all obstacles, there are ways around this feeling. Here are the ways I’ve developed over the years to getting back on the writing horse and trying again:

If You’ve Produced Something Terrible, Don’t Erase It

The worst thing you can do, when you start thinking how much your writing resembles something in a communal toilet, is to flush it away. Cut and paste it into another file and save it for later, maybe, but don’t just Backspace a whole page (or delete a whole file) of your hard work.

Even if you don’t feel like dealing with it right then, saving it as a separate file for later will help you remember to go back to it when you have more mental energy, when you have more time, etc. If you delete it completely, you’re likely to completely forget about it, possibly losing a great diamond in the rough sands of your life.

This is what I do when I’ve come up with a blog post that I suddenly REALLY don’t want to post anymore. I don’t completely delete it, but I save it in a new file and start writing on a different post. (I’ve got one file saved as “rant rant rant,” where I went kinda batpoo crazy on a topic and decided it wasn’t right for that particular article. I don’t know what I’m going to use “rant rant rant” for, but at least it’s there, lying like a fabric remnant in a dressmaker’s closet, ready to be used whenever I’m ready to go back to it.

If Your Writing Is Just “Off” Today, Stop for Today

Some days, even if you love writing like I do, you just aren’t feeling the “writing bug.” When you start to type the same sentence 5 times and end up Backspacing it, or you just stare at a blank page or screen and feel like SOMETHING wants to come out, but you’re not sure what, you need to stop for the day. I’m not saying stop for a lifetime–no, no, never stop trying to write permanently–but just take a break from it for the rest of the day, whether that’s a few hours or almost a full day.

This would happen a lot to me during college, when I would struggle to write papers–I just wasn’t feeling up to being the super-critical English major that day and the subject matter just felt too difficult to tackle. So I’d save what I had been working on and would go read instead, or get out of my dorm room and walk around some, or call a good friend and talk about it. Taking time away from the heavy task I was working with helped me get more relaxed and feel like I could write anything again, instead of feeling like there was some gremlin sitting on my shoulder who was critiquing everything I wrote as I wrote it.

Talking to others, reading, doing a little Internet searching or surfing, etc., can also give you new ideas on how to put together your written thoughts. It may be that the random comment your friend made about the book you’re giving a report on jogs your thinking: “Yeah, that IS a weird detail that the author put in…wonder what it means?” Then, suddenly, you may have a totally new direction for your paper.

If You Don’t Know Much about Your Topic, Learn About It

Yes, I know, seems kind of elementary. But you wouldn’t believe the number of times I had to coax my middle school students into writing about something they didn’t know about. They kept whining, “But I don’t KNOW anything about this!” My answer was always, “Then find something out about it. We’re in the library for a purpose, after all.” 😛

No matter what you’re writing about, whether it be search engine optimization or the Post-Colonial period, fractal geometry or painters in Florence during the Renaissance, if you know little or nothing about the topic, then research is your best friend in the world. I’ve written about research as a great tool for bloggers who want to write new and interesting content, but it also works for college papers, creative writing, letters to the editor, workplace presentations–everything. There’s nothing worse for your career, for instance, than looking plain ignorant in front of your boss and coworkers because you didn’t do your research.

Now, your research does not have to be done on those irritating formatted index cards. (God, I HATED handwriting all my research on index cards in school! So annoying and time-consuming–it made research feel like a special place in hell reserved just for me.) Remember, your research is likely going to be more internet-based, so just doing a thorough search of Google (i.e., not just the first page) could help you. Check out every link that seems like it relates to your topic, make sure the site is reputable (not just a blog-ish site created by a content robot), and then copy-paste the URL into a file to refer back to later as you write. Scanning through the content can also provide you a bit of preliminary information as well.

You can always go to the library or talk to a knowledgeable friend or family member about your topic, as well. Taking time to learn more about your topic is not just for school projects, but for anything you encounter while trying to write about a particular subject that you don’t fully understand.

For instance, I don’t know very much about the Tea Party political movement in modern America, except to know that if I saw a Tea Party parade coming down the street, I would likely soil myself and run in the other direction. However, I can learn more about the movement by research, and thus be much more informed when I hear about “Tea Party candidates” in the news, etc. Then, I can write more informed blog posts, and the Internet always benefits from more informed writers rather than more passionate writers.

If You Hate Writing, Write How You Talk

Maybe just a sentence or two, about something you have a strong opinion of. Maybe a paragraph on your Facebook status, indicating exactly what you’re going through physically and emotionally while waiting for a medical test result to come back. If you hate written communication, start by writing how you talk–write out what you would normally talk about, and focus on subject matter that you really care about.

At this point, if you’re very uncomfortable with the writing process, don’t let fears of bad grammar, spelling, or sentence structure weigh you down. Just WRITE what is in your head, in your heart. And if there’s nothing more in your head or heart after a few sentences, you’re finished, and you can move on to the next topic you want to talk–pardon me, write–about. Write for the feel of the pen moving across paper, communicating your thoughts, or the feel of the keys yielding under your striking fingers. Write for the sheer pleasure of telling your world what you think about something you really care about.

Now, if you’re still just horribly stuck and feel like you just CAN’T write, I have a story for you:

I had a young student in one of my classes who was what we would call a “screw-off,” a class-clown type who was more interested in disrupting the class and ticking off other people. But by the way he spoke in class (when he wasn’t smarting off to me, and even when he was sometimes), I knew he was a smart kid. He just didn’t respect school, didn’t care about it, and writing for class was about #90003 on his list of things to achieve in life.

One day, we read a short story in class, and I asked the kids to write at least five sentences (a full paragraph) about what they had read. I told them to answer five questions, one in each sentence:

  1. Who is the character you like the most?
  2. Why do you like this character?
  3. Does the character act in an understandable way throughout the story?
  4. How does the story show this character’s motivation?
  5. Do you think the author likes this character?

With each question, I was asking the kids to dive below the surface story and come up with some deeper answers about the story’s construction, the author’s possible purpose, etc. I wanted them to connect with the story as critical readers rather than passive readers. But the young man in question was more interested in tearing up blank notebook paper into itty-bitty pieces to craft into spitballs.

“Why are you not doing your work?” I asked–I glanced at his paper and saw that he had written “I Don’t Know” as the answer to each of the questions.

“‘Cause I’m done,” he replied, with an attitude.

“Nope, you’re not done,” I said. “‘I don’t know’ is not an answer, because you read the story–you DO know something. You’re a smart kid, you know?” He huffed and brushed his half-made spitball aside.

“You heard the story,” I said, trying a different tack. “Which character did you like?”

“Didn’t like any of ’em,” he said, laying his head down on his arms and muffling his voice.

“You sure? There wasn’t one that you understood the most–you could relate to what they were going through?”

“Pssh,” he replied. “Not any of the good guys, anyway.”

That left one character. “You liked the bad guy?” I asked, keeping any judgmental emotion out of my voice so he would feel free to express his opinion.

“Yeah, he was all right,” the young boy said. “The good guys treated him like crap and he was just gettin’ back at ’em.”

Gently, I pushed the paper of questions under his elbow. “Sounds like you have answers to questions 1, 2, and 3,” I suggested.

“Huh?” He raised his head slightly, looking at me for the first time. “Naw, that’s just opinions. I ain’t got answers.”

“In literature class, opinions are answers, if you can show me how you formed your opinion,” I nudged. “Write down what you just told me, in complete sentences. You remember how we do complete sentences?”

“Yeah, yeah, yeah,” he replied, waving away the rest of my advice. I watched the pencil tip and then the eraser dance in mid-air as he erased furiously and then wrote down actual sentences. “There, is them answers?” he asked, showing me the paper.

“Yes,” I said, nodding–indeed, questions 1, 2, and 3 had answers. “Remember, question 1’s answer needs to be a complete sentence, though. Rephrase the question as a statement: ‘I liked [villain’s name]’ instead of just the character’s name by itself.”

“Oh, okay.” For being such a reluctant student, he knew enough about what to do–he took the paper back from me, erased, and wrote again.

“Good,” I said. For question 3, I was impressed by the depth and empathy of his response: “[villain’s name] was just trying to live his life, and the good guys busted in and acted like he was living wrong. They made him feel bad, so he got back at ’em. I woulda done the same thing if I was poor like him.”

“Now, how did you know that [villain’s name] was poor?” I asked him. Now that he had answered 3 of 5 questions, he seemed to have perked up a little, though he was still toying with a tiny ball of paper in his left hand.

“Well, it had all that stuff in it about his raggedy clothes and stuff,” he replied, as if it was obvious. It was obvious, but I wanted him to see that he had more answers than he thought.

“And who told you about the raggedy clothes?” I asked.

He thought, and then looked embarrassed. “Oh, yeah, the author put it in there.”

“You’re right, the author describes how torn and dirty his clothes are,” I affirmed. “Doesn’t that sound like an answer to question 4?”

He glanced back at the paper. “Motivation? I don’t even know what that means.”

I reminded myself to break down definitions of words more carefully in the future. “Motivation means ‘why you do something.’ If you do something like steal, like this boy did in the story, you have to have a reason why you did it–a motivation to do it. Why did he steal?”

“Because he was poor.”

“You’re right,” I said, nodding. “Being poor was his motivation to steal, because…why?”

“Because he ain’t had nothin’.”

“Good, you got right to it; he didn’t have anything and needed things to live on,” I said, subtly correcting his sentence as I went. “And the author shows us that through describing his clothes, not just coming right out and saying ‘this bad guy is poor.’ Write down what you just told me,” I said again, giving him back the paper.

This time, he did this with a bit more energy and a complete sentence just like the first three answers; it seemed he was getting the hang of it. “Want to try question 5 by yourself?” I asked–it, like question 3, required depth and empathy to respond. He nodded, and the pencil eraser danced again, a merry fox-trot pattern in pink rubber.

I looked at his response: “No, I don’t think he likes him much. Maybe he feels sorry for him, but he don’t like him. He’s still the bad guy in the story.”

The young boy had struck right to the heart of the issue: the author tells a story about good guys and bad guys, but the good guys have the flaw of being too prideful and scornful, and the bad guy is worthy of pity and compassion. I disagreed with the young boy–I thought the author actually liked the bad guy best of all–but I understood where he had gotten his answer. After all, the author still classified the villain as a villain, even if he meant him to be a pitiable character rather than a character worthy of hate.

“You’ve done very well,” I praised quietly. “Look at this–you wrote even more than 5 sentences! Good job!” I grinned at him. “And you said ‘you didn’t know.'”

“Well, I didn’t think I knew,” the boy replied, finally laughing, and I got up from my position at his desk and returned to managing the classroom as a whole, with his completed assignment finally in tow.

Now, while that story was pretty long, it shows how you have to sometimes draw the answers and the subject matter out of yourself, especially if you hate writing or feel uncomfortable with it. Sometimes, you have to play the teacher as well as the student, asking yourself the questions and generating your own responses.

Some good questions to ask yourself when you’re beginning to write:

  • Who else is an important part of this story?
  • What are the facts that someone else would need to know?
  • Where can I put in details about my experience (sensory details, emotional details)?
  • Why should I write about this?

Knowing your characters, facts, details, and purpose for writing is key to communicating through writing, as well as speaking. These four parts are the heart of writing. Remembering this can keep you from feeling like you have nothing to write, because you most certainly do!

If You Keep Failing, Keep Trying

I do my best to write something, ANYTHING, creative every day. These blog posts count, because I’m having to create the content usually from scratch. My novel counts, because it’s definitely fiction. Random bits of poetry I come up with while driving counts (but I don’t write it while driving, for obvious reasons). Even the stories I write just for my own enjoyment, my own LOLs, count. Anything I can do to keep the writing juices going, I do. Generating writing, whatever it is, no matter what quality it is, is key.

If you don’t write a lot, it can feel like everything you produce is junk for a while. And sometimes you may have a “junk day” or a “junk week.” Heck, last month was “junk month” for my novel–couldn’t seem to write anything for weeks that didn’t just bore me to death. But I did not give up on it completely; I did put the novel aside, once I realized that I was hitting a brick wall, and then I engaged in some research, some question-and-answer scenarios, as well as putting aside some scraps of writing that I came up with while having fits and starts.

Once I was over the period of time where it seemed nothing was forthcoming, I went back and revamped one of the scraps with some new details, and suddenly, I could write again! Now it was interesting again, and the story began to move once more. But I had to keep trying.

And all the while I was struggling to write my novel, I was cranking out blog posts six days a week–that likely helped keep everything oiled up and running, instead of locking all the machinery down just because one machine was broken temporarily. Even if one of your writing projects doesn’t take off, if the subject matter just doesn’t work for you or it’s too hard, don’t abandon your other projects. If you juggle several, like I do and have done all my life, then you’ve always got something to take your mind off the failure of one project, and if you succeed at another one, you might be just inspired enough to come back and kick your older, failed project into a better gear.

Summary

Whether you love or hate writing, whether it’s natural or totally alien to you, these tips should help you, as they have helped me through countless bumps in the process of my own writing. The big ideas here are to keep everything you write, knock off for the day if it’s just too much, do research if you find yourself in unfamiliar territory, ask yourself questions and generate answers if the going gets really tough, and never, EVER give up on writing completely. Once you focus on the act of writing as being a pleasant thing, you’ll find that it comes more easily.

Papercrafting Post #3: Gift Tags

Yes, I know, Walmart and other big-box or discount places sell little gift tags you can tie onto your gifts. But who wants to spend $2 a pop for these little cardboard gift tags, when you can make loads of them yourself for a lot less money (and a much craftier, customized look)? This is part of papercrafting–making personalized items that cost less and also use up material that you might otherwise throw away.

The reason I chose to cover gift tags on this Papercrafting Post is because it’s a useful item that could easily save you money if you know how to make it yourself. You just have to be willing to break out a little creativity and spend a bit of time putting it together. Not as hard as it might seem!

What You’ll Need

  1. Card stock of any color OR unlined index cards of any color
  2. Any colorful or patterned paper you have lying around (crumpled-up tissue paper, old wrapping paper, etc.)
  3. Solid-color printer paper OR construction paper
  4. Double-stick tape OR a glue stick
  5. Single-hole puncher
  6. String, thread, ribbon, OR yarn

Eight Steps to Your Own Gift Tag

  1. Cut out a piece of card stock or an index card in the desired shape. Doesn’t have to be square–you could even cut it into a really fun shape if you want to!
  2. Using your cut-out shape as a guide, cut out a piece of your selected patterned/colorful paper. Make sure that your paper’s shape is about a centimeter/half an inch bigger around the edges than your card stock/index card shape.
  3. Wrap your paper shape around one side of the card stock/index card, taping or gluing down the edges as you go, kind of like wrapping a present. You will end up with one side of the tag completely covered with the paper and one side just covered around the edges. This is what you want.
  4. Get a piece of your solid-color piece of paper and cut out a smaller version of the shape of your gift tag.
  5. Affix this to the back of the tag (the side that is only partially covered) with tape or glue stick.
  6. Use a single-hole-punch tool to punch out a hole in your gift tag, for the string to be threaded through.
  7. Sign your tag on the solid-color side as appropriate (better to write on it now rather than wait until after you’ve tied it to your gift, trust me)
  8. Thread string, thread, ribbon, or yarn through the hole and tie to your gift, and you’re done!

Resources

Available at Office Supply Stores

  • Card stock
  • Index cards
  • Printer paper
  • Double-stick tape
  • Glue sticks
  • Single-hole punchers

Available at Big-Box Stores’ Craft Sections

  • Wrapping paper
  • Construction paper
  • String, thread, ribbon, and yarn

Likely Available In Your Home
Don’t forget to shop your home first–you might have more crafting materials hidden in your junk drawers and recycling bins than you’re aware of.

  • Old giftwrap/tissue paper
  • Scraps of printer paper and construction paper
  • Random bits of thread, yarn, string, or ribbon–even a twist tie can work!
  • Index cards that have been barely used and could be erased

Digital Cut-and-Paste Art

No Elmer’s School Glue or scissors required! Just a mouse and a simple art program on your computer can create some wild and fantastic artwork.

This instinct-based, haphazard-looking way of making art is not really new–think of Jackson Pollock’s artwork–but doing it digitally instead of with a paintbrush and palette is a little newer. No longer are we constrained by the tools we can buy or the paint colors we can find–you can create any color and use almost any type and texture of brush. You can even cut pieces out of your picture and put them somewhere else without hurting the canvas! Check out the process below:

The Process of Making a Cut-and-Paste Digital Artwork

(In the following demos, I’m using Microsoft Paint.)


Start with a blank white canvas, sized however you like.


For this art piece, I dye the background completely black. You can choose to dye the background any other solid color or make a pattern in the background if you wish, too.


I use “Calligraphy Brush 2”, at the widest width available, and choose the basic bright red available by default from the Paint palette. Then I paint rather randomly and haphazardly all over the canvas.


Then I choose the default yellow, again with the wide Calligraphy Brush 2, and paint randomly again, trying to cover different areas from the red, and a little less than the red.


Then I take Turquoise from the default palette and paint once again, still trying to cover different areas from the yellow and red streaks.


Now, I choose the “Select” tool, with a rectangular shape instead of the free-form shape, and cut out a small, nearly square shape from the piece. Then I move the cut-out piece just a little down and to the right, to reveal a white corner edge.

I follow the same procedure (except moving the cut piece down and to the left) with the second cut piece, below:


You can also resize one of your cutout pieces if you like–here, I’ve resized the bottom-left cutout piece to be much larger than its original size. It makes it almost pop out in 3-D, to my eye!

You could leave it like this if you like the white part of the picture; in my case, I want to recolor those white parts black again, to match the background.


This is a look I’m happy with, but you could also dye the background to match one of the other colors you’ve included in the picture. A shot of solid red, yellow or blue in this picture, for instance, would be striking!


This is my finished example. Yes, I know, it might look a little kiddy still, but I just wanted to show you the technique with as different a trio of colors as possible.

Other Examples of Color and Cut-and-Paste

If you like this haphazard abstract look but don’t want a ton of bright colors, you can also do something like these:


Here, I’ve used a gray background, with turquoise, pale blue, white, and purple sprays on top instead of the Calligraphy Brush. Then, I used the free-form selection tool to cut out and move some shapes to create sinuous and strange lines within the piece. At bottom right, I blew up one of the small shapes to a larger size.


In this piece, I used first a rose-pink Watercolor Brush across a sand-colored background, then added pale yellow Natural Pencil, then a creamy Calligraphy Brush on top. I didn’t cut anything out from this piece because it looked fine the way it was.

Doing Something More with Your Creations

If you have access to a more sophisticated graphics editing program, like Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro, you can do all kinds of fun stuff with these types of creations. (I used Photoshop Elements 8.0 for the following edits.)

Look at the two different looks I created out of my example piece, just by Motion Blurring it in two different directions:


Motion Blur going down from left to right brings out a lot of the blue lines and makes the red and yellow fade a little more. Reminds me of a ribbon dancer’s movements!


Motion Blur going up from left to right brings out a lot of little red and yellow streaks, almost like shooting stars.


I used the Liquefy filter to swirl these colors and sinuous shapes together. I know it doesn’t look like much right now, but this technique is all about seeing potential. This, for instance, could be useful as the beginnings of a website header (a little more blurring, cropping, and some text in a beautiful font and color, perhaps?).


I used the Paint Daubs filter, increased the width of the brush, and changed the brush to “Sparkle” to create this effect. The creamy swirls almost look like rippled water reflections on the bottom of a pool.

Summary

This kind of art requires us to be instinctual in our process. Choose the colors and shapes we like most in this moment, and just start going at the canvas until you have something beautiful. And if you don’t have something beautiful at the end, no worries about wasted paint or wasted canvas–you can just hit the “New” button and start again!

Engage with Your Story’s Events

Sometimes…*sigh* ideas just don’t come out of your pen (or flow from your fingertips into the computer keyboard) as easily as you might wish. Sometimes, you sit for hours trying to write; sometimes, you even bore yourself with the text you’re producing. Like the scene I’d been trying to write for the last six weeks in my novel: true, my computer’s been out of commission and I’m trying not to hog the family computer, but I found myself at a loss as to how to go on with the scene. It was stuck in dreary mundane details, and yet I felt I simply HAD to write those details in order to explain the scene properly.

I’m sure, as writers, we all face that type of difficulty–it’s not exactly writer’s block, but it’s something akin to hating what you’re producing and not understanding how to proceed. But how do we get around it?

…How about actually trying to DO the event you’re writing about?

Sounds novel (pardon the pun), and maybe a little strange. “You mean I should act out what I have the character doing?” No, not just acting it out–actually get up from what you’re writing and change your activity. If you’re writing a cooking scene, get up and whip something up in the kitchen, even if you’re only a master of the microwave. Being in the kitchen, preparing the food, smelling it cooking, can jog your senses and remind you of what’s really important in the scene. What scents arise from the food in your story? Are they pleasant or repulsive to your character? If they’re actively involved in cooking, how does the process of cooking feel to them (are they slaving over a hot stove, etc.)?

What about an action scene? Well, if you’re not afraid of knocking over priceless artifacts in your home, you can try out some of the kicks, punches, and dodges you’ve scripted for your character. See if that Chuck-Norris-esque roundhouse kick works for your character to do, or if it’s simply too awesome for your novice fighter to try at this point. And if you can’t do the motion for yourself, try watching some videos or asking knowledgeable friends. If you’re working with an unfamiliar weapon in your story, research is especially important, so you know the “proper” way the weapon is held, how it is used in combat, etc.

The point of engaging with your story’s events in a physical way is to pull yourself out of the mental rut you’ve gotten yourself into. If you’re this stuck on a story, something’s got to change, and actively trying out the event you’re writing could reveal just what it is about the event that is bothering you.

In my novel, for instance, the part of the story that dragged was a “packing up and leaving” scene; I tried tidying up my cluttered mess of a room to try to reproduce the event, and found that I was not writing about the FEELING of packing up–the feel of the items passing through my hands as I packed them, the heaviness of the bags in my hands and looped around my arms. The event felt dead to me because there was no physical sensation involved in the telling of the event. Once I added some sensory elements, the event of packing up came alive; it felt more involved than ever, and no longer was I so bored that I wanted to cry while reading the paragraph. It was a small change, but it helped get me over a hurdle!

Summary

Doing what you’re writing about can help you keep your interest in the story, as well as lend some real-life experience and sensory elements to your scene. While you might weird a few people out (especially if you try out that roundhouse kick in public), you’ll be doing yourself a favor if the act gets you out of sitting fruitlessly at your computer for hours!

Keyboard Musing

keyboardmusing
Learning to play piano, for me, came entwined with the desire to create my own music, which I often began to write while just “playing around” (pardon the pun) on the keyboard. I call this “keyboard musing”…just playing a snatch of a song here, a few bars of a melody or bass line here, until BAM!–there’s a new melody or chord progression, and my brain is off to the musical races!

If you’re a beginner to piano, or if you’re a frustrated composer, I would highly suggest doing a bit of keyboard musing for yourself. There’s a whole lot of wonder and magic still left in music, and this process proves it!

Keyboard Musing, Step 0: Don’t Try to Be Perfect. SERIOUSLY.

I have heard fellow composers often say that they’re stuck on a piece of music, saying that all that they play sounds “trite,” “overused,” “not good enough,” and doesn’t “flow.” For that matter, I’ve thought those same things myself about my own music.

Keyboard musing fixes that. After all, there’s no “right or wrong” way to play around on a keyboard when you’re not going by any sheet music! Before you even get started musing on your keyboard, don’t constrain yourself to what sounds “good,” or what sounds “original.” Just play SOMETHING. Play a few measures of a favorite song for inspiration; poke around playing notes together until you run across something that sounds COOL. Then, allow yourself to go further, exploring deeper into the melody or chord progressions you’re enjoying.

Step 1: Play Along with Recorded Music to Get You Started

This is a trick I use when trying to learn new music, but this is a great way to help you recreate a favorite melody, too. Listen to a favorite song using a CD, MP3, Youtube/Spotify/Pandora, etc., and figure out what note the melody starts on…and your ear should be able to take you on from there. Get the notes right first, then match the rhythms and tempo till you can play it pretty close to the recorded song.

The reason behind doing this? Once you know how to pick out the melody of various songs, then you’ll be better equipped to pick out the melody that’s been bouncing around in your head!

Step 2: Try New Variations on an Old Familiar Melody

Now that you know how to play a favorite melody like it was originally written, try varying it up. Extend that short note out a little longer, or put in a little playful riff here and there–innovate and see what new creation you can make. Allow yourself the freedom to play in a musical sandbox.

I suggest this not to condone plagiarism, but to give your imagination a jumping-off point. Put that favorite melody through some permutations, find new chords to put with it, and eventually you will be inspired to create your own song!

Step 3: Keep Trying if You Come Up with Nothing the First Time

You may not come up with anything on your first keyboard-musing session–but then again, you might come up with something AWESOME! Allow yourself more chances to dig down into your imagination, even if nothing appeared the last time you tried.

Step 4: Listen for Inspiration in Weird Places

Especially if you’re stuck and feel like you have no “inner song,” allow your environment to inspire you. Keep your ears open for beautiful new melodies, neat chord progressions, etc., wherever you go. Sometimes even non-musical sounds like car engine roars, bird chirps, refrigerator hums, crowds of people talking, fan blades, etc. can inspire a new tune. (Don’t look at your screen like that, I’m not crazy! LOL)

When you hear inspiring sounds, try to record them if you can, or at least get to your keyboard as quick as you can. Then, try to replicate the sound you heard with the musical notes in front of you. It might feel a bit stupid at first, but don’t give up on it, even if you have to walk away from your keyboard and try again later!

Summary

Keyboard musing is a magical retreat for me, a way I can reconnect with the sheer joy of just playing music for music’s sake. If you’ve never tried music, or if you’ve found yourself stuck for a long time, just give this a shot. You might be surprised what you come up with!

“But I’m Not Good Enough to be an Artist”

butimnotgoodenough
Okay, first of all, I want to refute the statement in my title. When someone says “But I’m not good enough to be an artist,” I want to say back, “Who says??”

Breaking the Art/Artist Stereotype

For too long, art has been given this elevated, almost holier-than-anything status in our culture. And people we call “artists,” stereotypically speaking, are people who dress in “artsy”-looking clothes (all black and berets are the cliche), who claim that no one understands their art, who seem to be just a little bit unhinged at times, who rarely go out into the world so as not to disturb their “creative process.” Right?

NOPE. Artists are everywhere, talented in many different art forms, and they are not all intensely focused people, or all hoity-toity about their art. And art can be found in all parts of life. In fact, Grandma’s herb garden is just as much an art form as any painting or dance performance.

Art is Everywhere

Our whole culture is full of art. Art is self-expression, not just talent in a particular subject that seems “artsy.”

It pains me to say this, being a math-phobe as I am, but even math has artistic qualities–ever heard of fractal geometry, for instance? And even the symmetry of a perfectly-solved equation has beauty in it (even though I might have no idea how in the world it got solved that way). People who create beauty in their worlds are artists, whether they are organizing the clutter out of your apartment or rescuing your workplace’s database from certain cyber-doom.

Art is Approachable

Art does not have to be created in a vacuum void of anything except your own thoughts. In fact, art can be created as a result of human interaction, even as a result of crowds of people. The susurrus of many people talking can sound like a bumblebee’s whirring wings, which might just put you in mind of “Flight of the Bumblebee,” and inspire you to create something based on that, for instance.

You also don’t have to be a particular kind of “focused person” to create art. Sometimes, the random doodles you make on a paper napkin could be inspiration for a design you end up using in your home office, for instance. Art is everyday and yet it transcends the everyday. I like to think art just makes regular life a little bit spiffier. ^_^

Art Can Be Done by Anybody

You can become an artist even if you don’t think of yourself as creative. Anything you do well, whether at your job, at home, or out and about, can be art. Shopping can be an art. Fixing computers or cars can be an art. Whatever you do that you have great instincts for and a large amount of technical knowledge of, you can transform that into art by lending your passion for it into every action and thought. If it expresses who you are (like if your ability to organize and save money lends itself to shopping on a budget), that is part of your art.

And you don’t have to have just one type of art in your life, either–I am expressed by many different kinds of art, from songwriting to blogging, from beading to web designing, and on beyond.

Try a Little Art for Yourself

Even if you don’t think you’re creative, even if you think art is for elementary school kids, how about trying some of the artistic pursuits available to you? The following list is a starter list, but feel free to come up with your own!

  • Jewelry designing (beading, etc.)
  • Painting and modeling gaming pieces
  • Fabric crafting (sewing, fabric painting, etc.)
  • Woodworking
  • Painting
  • Gardening
  • Drawing/sketching
  • Interior designing
  • Acting
  • Cooking
  • Car detailing/finishing
  • Composing poetry
  • Couponing (just not the “extreme,” lawbreaking kind)
  • Short story writing
  • Organizing
  • Computer building
  • Novel writing
  • Web designing
  • Dancing (ballet, modern dance, etc.)

C-Sharp (aka D-flat): A Key of Many Moods

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As I’ve related in earlier posts, C-sharp/D-flat is my favorite key to hear music played in. Since I am a sound-color synesthete with perfect pitch, I experience C-sharp as sparkling crystals on deep violet backgrounds, and the feeling of velvet. It feels like HOME. Strange word to describe a musical key, I know, but it just feels stable, strong, resonant…beautiful. F-sharp is a nice place to visit, a vacation home, perhaps, but C-sharp is truly home.

C-Sharp: Expressive and Flexible

I also find C-sharp to be a wonderful key for exploring and expressing all different types of moods, more so than any other key. I’m a composer (have been since sixth grade), and I’ve loved using C-sharp major and minor for many of my songs, because it just seemed to fit them. For me, the keys of F and B-flat seem stuck in celebratory modes, while G and E are for country songs, and C is so ubiquitous as to be too simple. (Of course, there are exceptions to every rule and every perception, but I’m speaking rather generally.) C-sharp, by contrast, seems to be endlessly flexible in every emotional direction, which delights me.

(This preference of one key over another may seem to many like a preference of spaghetti over linguine–isn’t it all still music, just as spaghetti and linguine are both still pasta? Well, like the kids who insist that the two types of pasta just TASTE different, I insist that a song played in a different key lends the song a whole new “vibe,” an entirely different feeling. When radio stations play songs a half-step higher to speed up the song slightly, it changes the song, however subtly.)

Examples of Musical Moods in C-Sharp

When I was considering all my favorite aspects of C-sharp for this blog post, I listened through my iTunes playlist of “C-sharp Major and Minor” songs (yep, I’ve set aside an entire playlist for it). As I listened, it occurred to me–it seems I’m not alone in perceiving C-sharp as a flexible and beautiful key, at least among composers and musical artists! Take the following list, compiled of several of my favorite songs in C-sharp major of minor, that describe vastly differing moods and sounds:


Anger: “Harder to Breathe” – Maroon 5


Joy: “Uptight (Everything’s Alright)” – Stevie Wonder


Drama: “Hindi Sad Diamonds” from the Moulin Rouge soundtrack


Love: “All I Ask of You” from Phantom of the Opera – Sarah Brightman & Steve Barton


Pleading: “Goin’ Crazy” – Natalie


Tranquility: “Rainsong (Fortune’s Lullaby)” – George Winston


Fear/Anxiety: “Somebody’s Watching Me” – Rockwell


Passion/Drive: “Fantaisie Impromptu” – Frederic Chopin


Desire: “Whine Up (feat. Elephant Man)” – Kat DeLuna

There’s a fairly wide range of genres and subject matters in that list, and that’s just taken from my personal song collection. Who knows how many other composers have found C-sharp to be as lovely a key as I do?

Making My Own Movie Soundtracks

makingmoviesoundtracks
I’ve been doing movie soundtracks since I was about 10 years old–it was a natural outgrowth, for me, of watching movies. Sometimes I’d be sitting in the movie theater watching a movie, and think, “Wow, this scene would be AWESOME with [insert title of song] playing in the background.”

(Note: Before you are overly awed by my prowess, let me say that I haven’t actually dubbed any film over with my own choices of music. Rather, I have done personal movie soundtracks in an easier and much lower-tech way, detailed)

When I had long summer days to kill, I’d often spend them doing endless retakes of movie soundtracks, over and over again until I got just the right timing and just the right song. I’d lay across the bed, headphones on and CD player running, remote in hand, pausing either the music or the video to sync them together so that the climax of the song went perfectly with the action onscreen, or so the meaningful lyrics melded seamlessly with the characters’ faces and dialogue. (Several of my old VCR tapes are a little damaged from being paused in the same place over and over again…yeah, that’s how into this I got.) It was a great thrill to me to match music and visual together, to heighten the movie’s effect with cool music (that was also cool to listen to by itself). Here’s how I did it:

Tools:

  • TV
  • VCR/DVD player
  • CD Player/iPod
  • Remote control with pause button
  • Movie of your choice
  • Sense of what music goes with which scene the best

I don’t do this as often anymore due to time constraints, but over the years I’ve refined a couple of my music choices to be presentable enough to other people (LOL). Though this has been a largely solitary craft for me, people generally find my choices to be appropriate (if perhaps oddly fitting).

Some Examples from My Personal Soundtracks

  • Movie: Mary Poppins
    • Scene: Mr. Banks (David Tomlinson) walking the darkened street to the bank, where he knows he will be fired
    • Song: “Hello” – Evanescence
    • Why: The song is brooding and dark, beautiful in its sadness; the scene is lonely and just as darkly filmed. Mood and lyrics both match up well.
  • Movie: Super Mario Bros.
    • Scene: Mario (Bob Hoskins) and the missing Brooklyn girls escape King Koopa’s Goomba force by sliding down a frozen heating pipe on a mattress.
    • Song: “Wipeout” – The Surfaris
    • Why: A surfing song for a mattress-sled-ride? Why not? This is ABSOLUTELY HILARIOUS when matched up!!
  • Movie: Disney’s Cinderella
    • Scene: Cinderella is trapped in the attic room while her stepsisters try on the glass slipper, and all the mice and birds try to help her escape while her stepmother, stepsisters, and Lucifer the cat want to keep her trapped.
    • Song: “C*m On Feel The Noize” – Quiet Riot
    • Why: This is a rousing call-to-arms song (for partiers, anyway); this scene falls right before Cinderella is finally vindicated, and all her mouse and bird friends are trying to help her, so it works as a fist-pumping anthem. Not to mention that there’s a lot of noise going on as the mice and birds fight Lucifer the cat! The drum-and-voices climax of the song can match up beautifully with either Bruno (the dog) finally chasing Lucifer out, or with Cinderella finally being freed.

Summary

If you’ve never tried making your own movie soundtracks, I find it a lovely and fun pastime to try. All you need is a song you think would match up to a movie scene, a way to play both the song and the movie, and a few minutes to set it up!