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Garden viewing through the lens

by Jane - 0 Comment(s)

Nitobe Memorial Garden in Vancouver June 2012I love taking pictures of gardens, both my own and others that I visit in the city and when I travel. On the left is a favourite photo of Nitobe Memorial Garden which I took earlier this year in Vancouver.

Gardens and photography are mates; taking pictures helps capture the transitory beauty of gardens with the changing seasons.

The Photographic garden: mastering the art of digital garden photography is a new title to help you hone your skills. The author, Matthew Benson, lectures widely on the topic and publishes his work in books, magazines and catalogues.

He begins with light and its impact on the garden scene. He talks about its qualities at different times of day and in different seasons. He offers tips on how to shoot into the light through leaves and behind tree limbs to soften the impact.

Photographic Garden book cover

The very large chapter on design covers many important elements beginning with the principals of design and selecting a point of view. He shows how to use props and add narrative to your photographs. Pets and people enliven your garden scene.

The last chapter looks at the ways you can improve or manipulate the captured image with the computer using software such as Photoshop.

If you’re looking for comrades to share tips and tricks, check out our photo club which meets at regular intervals throughout the fall.

-Jane

Our House is a very, very, very fine house

by Jane - 0 Comment(s)

Canyon of Dreams book cover

I have always loved the cozy domestic atmosphere evoked by Graham Nash in his famous song, Our House. The song describes the home he shared for a while with Joni Mitchell in Laurel Canyon and celebrates some quiet and soul-satisfying moments of everyday life.

“The house had a large, life-size, wooden carousel pig in the corner. Bricks, wooden floors, lace curtains, a couple of stained-glass ornaments in the window, which were the jewels that I was talking about in the song.” Nash tells the story behind the song and shares his happy memories of the place in Canyon of Dreams.

The book, by Harvey Kubernik, is a compilation of stories about the famous musicians that came together in Laurel Canyon in the 60s to create a magical and creative place that continues to inspire artists today.

There is a picture of zoned-out Eric Clapton staring at Joni Mitchell who is playing guitar while David Crosby in the background is trying to make a point. In the foreground, baby Owen Elliot placidly watches the circle of adults. They are all hanging out at Mama Cass Elliot’s place.

According to Nash, her house was a gathering place, like the salons of Gertrude Stein in Paris – that is Gertrude Stein with acid. The book tells of parties and people, the politics of the entertainment business, love and lust, and all that wonderful music.

Fans of Randy Bachman’s Vinyl Tap will love this book.

- Jane

Make your own coffee-table book

by Jane - 0 Comment(s)

Our tour of Rome included the coloseum and arch of Constantine.

Today's blog comes from David Ramsey, Central Library staff:

In this era of digital photography, when you are snapping shots of everything (because you can), what do you do with all those pictures? If you secret them away in a computer file, they are soon forgotten. And huddling around a monitor to see all those family photos isn’t everyone’s cup of tea.

However, if you compile those images into a printed book, you’ll have something unique to grace your coffee table. It is not an inexpensive venture - but think of the money saved by not having to print every picture before seeing it. There are local photo shops and online companies willing to help you and a new book in our collection to walk you through the process.

Create Your Own Photo Book is the new title by Petra Vogt. She starts by providing all the good reasons for making one and suggests project ideas. She gives an overview to photo albums in general and lists the pros and cons of working with different publishers and service providers.

Vogt goes into every aspect of production, including shooting and selecting pictures, scanning old images, and creating page backgrThe courtyard of the convent where the band festival was held is reflected in a tuba on the cover of my photo book.ounds. She talks about the addition of text and graphic elements and provides tips for quality control. For those wanting to sell their work, she gives advice. The last chapter is devoted to concrete examples: 5 photo books using a number of the previously discussed publisheCreate Your Own Photo Book book coverrs.

After a European trip with the Calgary Concert Band last summer, I discovered photo books and used an online publisher to compile my own. The cover of my book, on the left, shows a convent where the band festival was held reflected in a tuba. Above right, you can see some pictures from our tour of Rome. Note the natty airmail-paper border.

It was an interesting and rewarding project that produced a wonderful memento of my trip that is easy to share with family and friends.

- Dave

Weekend paint projects

by Jane - 0 Comment(s)

 

Make it your own paint and color book coverIf you’re looking for quick ways to add a little pizzazz to your palace, check out the new title from Sunset: Make it Your Own Paint & Color: 50 easy weekend projects. For the most part, they mine familiar DIY veins; but some of their projects are eye catchers. All of them are well illustrated with step-by-step instructions. These are some of the things I liked the best:

  • A painted stair runner pops some colour to the climb and coordinates with the area rug at the foot of the stairs.
  • A pretty, girlie room has a floor painted with broad pink, rose and mauve stripes.
  • The blackboard wall is a staple that is more or less attractive depending on what has been chalked onto the surface. Here they offer a formula for creating a chalkboard with any colour of paint and show a lively chalkboard wall in soft green-gray.
  • A simple leafy branch is stenciled onto a plain white roller blind.
  • Maps cover a wall like wallpaper in a patchwork pattern. (I’m always attracted to projects featuring maps.)

 

I’ve said it before and I still believe it: happiness is a can of paint and a brush.

- Jane

More splash than cash

by Jane - 0 Comment(s)

Water fountain built from pottery pieces, bamboo and water pump

A dear friend recently celebrated a significant birthday which called for a gift up a notch or two from the usual cheesy trinkets I toss her way. She had often admired the home-made water fountain on my balcony; so I settled on the idea of making one for her.

She can’t manage storage for a large heavy pot like the one that forms the base of mine. Hence, I decided to look for smaller pots that would fit together and then disassemble for winter storage.

I gathered up parts from many places. The pump, two of the dish containers, flower pot and bamboo came from Golden Acre. I found the heavier vase-shaped pOur newest book on fountains and water features.ottery piece at the Crossroads market and a sack of polished black stones at Canadian Tire.

I cut the bamboo into suitable lengths with a handsaw and mitre box and lashed them together with garden twine that I had on hand. The piece of bamboo with the largest diameter became the spout which fit snuggly onto the plastic tubing (left over from building my own fountain).

You can find step-by-step instructions for fountain making in my earlier blog. From the picture, you can see that some of the parts function simply to make the fountain taller. The upper part, which is the heart of the fountain, could sit on a table top.

The Sunset book pictured above - our newest on the topic - includes a lovely container fountain on page 118 with a bamboo spout and a miniature umbrella water plant.

Recently, my friend told me that she has been rearranging the parts to give it more splashes, setting stones on the bamboo to prop up the spout. I like that. The best part about home-made fountains is you get to play with them.

- Jane

Artistic Courage: Matisse and Picasso

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Matisse on Art book coverToday's blog comes from Candace Weir, Central Library staff:

How do you enthuse about a book that is black and white, except for the cover, when it is written about Matisse, a master of colour? Matisse on Art is a new book where the artist’s language provides the colour. It arrived at the Library at the same time as the lavishly illustrated new book, Picasso and Maria-Therese: l’amour fou.

What have the two books to do with one another? I believe that Picasso owed a great debt to Matisse. It was Matisse who wrote, “The effort needed to see things without distortion demands a kind of courage; and this courage is essential to the artist…” Both artists had a great deal of courage when it came to creating bold and innovative styles of expression with paint. It was like developing a new language and having to educate the viewers.

After all, paint is paint; it is never the object it represents. Therefore, it has to be true to the artist’s vision and not the preconceptions of the viewer. Matisse worked on some of his paintingsPicasso and Maria-Therese book cover through hundreds of hours until they arrived at a stage where they spoke truly to him. I believe that slowly and methodically Matisse broke down boundaries in art.

Learning from this approach to truth in painting, Picasso explored it through a prodigious number of works. Some of the most captivating were paintings of one of his mistresses, Maria Therese Walter. They remained remarkably gentle in ways that the paintings of his other mistresses – or wives – never did. These are just thoughts, but don’t take my word for it. Check it out for yourself.

- Candace

Small space pizzazz

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Living in a Nutshell book cover

Have you heard the one about living in a place so small that you have to step outside to change your mind? Well Janet Lee has. She is the author of a new book, Living in a Nutshell: Posh and Portable Decorating Ideas for Small Spaces. Lee is an expert at finding or developing unusual DIY projects that make the most of little homes.

“In a nutshell, my mantra for small space design is to delight, dazzle and divert,” says Lee who describes herself as a serial small space nester. Her concept is to turn the quirky demands of small space living into appealing decorative features.

Got a refrigerator that lives in the hallway because there’s not enough room in the kitchen? Cover it with a pattern of vintage bottle caps and clover decals and drape a bold curtain that can make it disappear completely.

She wraps a file cabinet with adhesive plastic that mimics the pattern of expensive designer luggage. A folding screen wears a graphic stripe on one side and is hung with shoe bags on the other; it becomes an instant closet. Snappy orange industrial C-clamps are mounted on the edge of a shelf to hold coats, bags and umbrellas. A refurbished chair stores books; the ends of its legs are painted bright red to dance on top of a boldly patterned rug.

Where colour ends, whimsy begins. The heads of stuffed animals are mounted to make “faux taxidermy” and poetry peeks from mirrors.

These fun-filled projects are sure to bring joie de vivre to tiny rooms.

- Jane

My Green Life

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Green Decorating and Remodeling book coverToday's blog comes from Linda Bolstad, Central Library staff:

I went through a period a few years ago when I was quite obsessed with being green. My husband and I purchased a Smart car, installed solar hot-water heating and bought new energy-efficient appliances and low-flush toilets. We got an energy audit done on our home which led to a new efficient furnace and triple pane, low-e argon filled windows.

I refused to go on a holiday that involved air travel because that was one of the worst things you could do in terms of participating in the emission of greenhouse gasses. I tried to use public transit as much as possible and planned the use of my car so I could do many of my errands during the same trip. I stopped using my dryer and began hanging our laundry to dry. I continually hunted for ways to reduce my eco-footprint.

Well, lately, I’ve decided to lighten up. In the past months, I have used the dryer a few times. My mother is in a care facility where I drive to visit and take her out two or three times a week; so I often end up driving from there to work.

We’ve also come to realize that some of our sustainable choices are not as great as we thought they would be. Our solar hot-water system has not really saved us much as we don’t use a huge amount of hot water – mostly because our new energy efficient washing machine and dishwasher pre-heat the water! Those planes are still flying whether I’m in them or not.

Green Interior design book cover

Do I think it is still important to be green? Of course, but in what I would call a gentle, non-obsessive way.

Here are some books which may interest the eco-friendly crowd:

Green Interior Design by Lori Dennis

Green Decorating & Remodeling by Heather Paper

David Suzuki’s Green Guide by David Suzuki and David R. Boyd

Green Made Easy: the Everyday Guide for Transitioning to a Green Lifestyle by Chris Prelitz

- Linda