Daily Prompt: Remembering Summer

Theoretically, summer will return to the polar-vortex-battered Northern Hemisphere. What are you looking forward to doing this summer?

Summer Dreams

Mornings at the cottage

sitting on the deck with a good book

and a cup of coffee

Long walks on the beach

soaking up the sun

running through the waves

Puttering in the garden

turning the warm soil

picking fresh herbs

Starting up the barbeque

sharing food with family and friends

warm evenings with a glass of wine

in the backyard

Painting in the great outdoors

Listening to the CBC

Marathon games of scrabble,

Rummikub and euchre

Car trips to the country

farmers’ markets, antique stores

ice-cream parlours

Dreaming of summer

http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2014/04/06/daily-prompt-in-the-summertime/

Daily Prompt: Express Yourself

Do you love to dance, sing, write, sculpt, paint, or debate? What’s your favourite way to express yourself, creatively?

People who have been following me for awhile know that I love to paint and experiment with new art forms. I loved drawing when I was in elementary school, especially when one of my teachers took the time to teach us about perspective and shading. It opened a whole new world for me.

The unfortunate part is that once I went to high school I no longer took art classes. There was no room in my timetable for it. I knew at an very early age that I wanted to be a Family Studies teacher. That meant taking a lot of science classes in high school and of course my one and only elective I had went to Family Studies classes.

Once I started teaching I spent the next 17 years working side by side with the art teachers because we shared an open concept space or were only separated by a door. At the time all middle school students took Unified Arts, which included visual art, shop and family studies. I loved watching the creative process that happened in all three disciplines but I didn’t venture outside my own comfort zone and try my hand at woodworking or painting.

Once my own children approached adulthood the yearning to paint grew stronger and in my late 40s I took my first art class. I loved it. I started with folk art and then moved on to watercolour. In recent years I’ve experimented with acrylics and just recently tried oil painting. This year past I also took a pottery class and loved that as well and last week I attended a 6 hour workshop on dyeing fabrics with indigo dye and of course I’m crazy about that too.

As you can see I need to try new things all the time. Recently I took on the job of teaching art to grades 2 to 5 along side my library duties. I have the best job, books and art. What a perfect combination.

Here is a small sampling of some of the art forms I’ve played with:

Thank Goodness for the Weekend

….it couldn’t come soon enough

Have you ever had one of those days that felt like it would never end?

Today was one of those days. It rained most of the day. All recesses were cancelled. The kids were indoors all day. By the afternoon they were more squirrelly than normal and it didn’t matter what you did or said they just couldn’t work without bickering at each other.

I knew I was in trouble when my last art class arrived at my door and their teacher apologized in advance for their behaviour. I sat them down and explained that I understood how their pent up energy had no avenue to be spent on this rainy day but we needed to try and focus on the lesson ahead if we were going to have a fun and productive double period of art. I said I was willing to let them go in pairs for a walk from one end of the school to the other if it would make a difference to their productivity. Most of the students were excited to be able to do that so I organized them into groups and one group at a time ‘went for a walk’.

I’m not sure it made any difference. Not two minutes after I demonstrated the lesson and gave precise instructions students started coming to me and asked what they had to do even though there were students already engaged in the activity. I couldn’t believe it. I looked at the kids that were working and asked them, “Didn’t I just explain what to do?” They nodded in the affirmative.

Day 2 is hard enough as is because I teach art back to back to grades 2 and 3. We have three or four projects on the go and I’m trying to get students to catch up so that we only have one common project that we’re working on at the same time. We didn’t quite reach that goal today. Next week we should only have two projects on the go and hopefully by the end of that class everyone will be on the same project. Of course that means some of the students will be finishing their big weaving project while others will have barely started.

At the end of the day I took some time to put up more art projects around the school. I must have been pretty tired because as I was leaving for the day I realized that I hadn’t taken any pictures of their work. I didn’t have the energy to turn around and go back to take a few shots. I apologize for the lack of photographs today. I’ll make it up to you next week.

Hope everyone has a great weekend. I hope to get some rest, read and get out for a walk, weather permitting.

Cheers!

 

A Word A Week Photograph Challenge – Contrast

….a challenge from Sue Llewellyn

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To me contrast is not just complementary colours, side by side, but anything that makes something else stand out. Black and white and neutral colours make bright colours stand out and unusual groupings provide contrast. I love the dachshund surrounded by the bright pink flowers over the black and white stripes.

For more photographs that feature contrast go to A Word a Week Photograph Challenge.