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This was the state of my studio as I prepared to finish this painting.
To purchase my workshop DVD to learn how to paint your own mixed media portraits, please visit my Etsy shop --> PauletteInsall.etsy.com
See more of my current work on my blog
Check out my painting in progress videos on YouTube to see the entire creation of this painting (original sold, prints available soon)
Episode 1 ~ The Background (Part 1)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=zl9rnc8fRsA
Episode 2 ~ The Background (Part 2)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ry9iiE9mP-k
Episode 3 ~ Painting The Face
www.youtube.com/watch?v=LmBKd0SlDSU
Episode 4 ~ Finishing Touches
Coming soon...subscribe to my videos on YouTube so you can view it as soon as it's available
Blogged at www.pauletteinsall.com/blog
oOo Studio - Bridal poses
by Olaenka Chesnokov ♥
Taxi to her great shop
I would like to thank all my models friends who accepted to pose for this project, thank you for your kindness, your time and your great styles!
A special thanks also to Angel Dessous, Fellini Couture and Morea Style who lent some of their beautiful creations to models and made this project possible ♥
Our 4,000 sq ft. studio in Nashville. My office is the Studio 3 image. We're remodeling some of it to include a 20 foot wide cyc wall, which you can see under constrcution.
Welcome to my CrEaTiVe Space!
HOW IT WAS BUILT
A few years ago my husband offered to build me an art studio for my birthday. What a great gift! Little did I know at the time that I would be hammering with him side by side, getting splinters and into frustrating arguments (and we’re suppose to build a home together someday!). Anyhow, the spot we chose was an old concrete slab that existed as a foundation for a pig pen some years prior. It was amongst the bamboo forest behind our house so, the first project was to clear some land. The materials came from an old garage which we tore down in exchange for all the wood and old windows. The older Japanese man whose garage this was said that it had been there for some 80 years and that it could have also been built from reclaimed wood. We began to build…First the heavy, wood plank floors went in followed by the framing, walls, and roof which was reclaimed also from a roofing job up the street. The used windows still have the old hand blown glass which has that wavy look to it with bubbles in it. At this pint the structure looked dark and dingy, thus began the task of cheering it up!
TAKE THE TOUR
My studio is located above a creek which only flows during heavy rains. When it does I just love the sound of easy flowing water. Half of it lies under a gigantic avocado tree which drops melon size fruits like bombs onto my tin roof. Then of course there are the four swaying palm trees where the inspiration came for the name Palm Tree Princess.
It’s just a short walk from the house where you would find yourself on my cement threshold which has been inlaid with sea glass to read “E Komo Mai” (welcome in Hawiian). Along the way you may have spotted a hidden fairy or gnome hiding in the jungle. Open the (old closet) door (which has an old porcelain knob and skeleton keyhole lock) and you step inside of my oasis. It’s a place where no one has a say but me. For it is completely and totally my realm. It is a place where the monogram of my name and my name only can adorn the walls (with a crown on top!). You get the picture. Look to the right and you will see an old reclaimed bedside table which I have done a mosaic on from tiles I found that had washed ashore on an Italian coastline. Resting in this space is my self titled booked “Desiree” (because everyone should have some great historic novel with their name on it!). On this side of the studio is my day bed. Perfect for reading, contemplating, daydreaming, or just staring out the window which looks into our dense bamboo forest. It is also a great spot for a guest to spend the night (don’t look under the bed because I use it for storage). There are two bookshelves hovering over each side of the bed (which has too many pillows on it). One shelf is completely and only for my collection of fairy books. The other shelf has a mix of art and mermaid books. Which by the way I adore Mucha, Waterhouse, Maxfield Parrish, and Tadema to name a few. Next to the bed is another reclaimed piece of furniture, an old wooden pantry that I painted and now houses wooden bird house, my journal collection, miniatures, and more. The top of it is adorned with glass apothecary jars holding my seashell and sea glass collections (labeled by color, I am such a geek!). The other half of my studio consists of my main countertop workspace, my funky writing desk and chair, my grandmothers old Singer sewing machine and table, and a cool piece I picked up recently which swivels on wheels. One half of it is a desk and the other has drawers and shelves. Storage is key in a small workspace and so is designated spaces for each specific project. And, things on wheels are cool too. Hanging from my ceiling are an ever growing collection of paper lanterns in all colors and sizes. Some light up for a vivid nighttime atmosphere. I have a section on my wall with my fancy papers draped on rods like you would see them displayed in a paper store. Then there is also my ribbon collection which are on two rods as well above the window. I have also another reclaimed wooden cabinet which is home to odds and ends. Everything has a spot and most everything is labeled. That in a nutshell ladies and gentlemen is my studio. It truly is a dream come true.
At any given time my studio is a mess with projects! From painted onesies piling high for wholesale orders to some sewing job still laying out needing to be finished, something with paint on it drying over here and a tutu in the process over there, my space always is alive with creative jobs.
With Etsy being such a glorious place for so many artists, it would be such a great thing to see other creative work spaces. There should be some area to showcase this. I thought I’d make mine a listing to share with others. Maybe I can encourage others to do the same and open up their spaces of art for others to see. Whether it’s a nook in a kitchen or a separate barn turned into a dream studio, every artist deserves their own realm no matter how big or small to call their own and let their imagination and ideas soar.
THANKS FOR LOOKING!
Studio 54: Night Magic
Ausstellung im Dortmunder U
Die glamouröse Geschichte der berühmtesten New Yorker Discothek aller Zeiten. Diversity und sexuelle Toleranz treffen auf Stars, Styles und Dekadenz im 1970er Discobeat.
Geldermalsen, 17 februari 2016.
De AB bak van treinstel 2646 welke als trein 16059 onderweg is van Utrecht naar Den Bosch.
Vanwege het tekort aan 2e klasse zitplaatsen in Sprintertreinen met name SLT''s heeft men besloten om van 6-wagentreinstellen de eerste klasse middenin om te bouwen tot tweede klasse, hierdoor verminder het aantal 1e klasse plaatsen met 16 en vermeerderd de 2e klasse met hetzelfde aantal.
Binnen afzienbare tijd zal dus het afgebeelde middenbak van aangezicht veranderen.
Utilisation de lumières en arrière-plan et d'un papier parchemin, créant ainsi un jeu d'ombrages sur des statues africaines.
Un rendu aux couleurs africaines...
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Finally got my old 16'x24' detached garage finished into the studio...so happy now!
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www.flickr.com/photos/1764/sets/72157664204044610
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copyright: 2017 © R. Peter 1764.org All rights reserved. Please do not use this image, or any images from my flickr photostream.
More of the stunning Chloe from our recent studio shoot.
Strobist: SB910 into 5’ shoot-thru umbrella, camera left. Large silver reflector below. Fired by cactus v5s
I had to photograph the studio this morning to go into a promo mag for the section of Contemporary Istanbul Art Fair 2010 in which I'll exhibiting as part of the Dukkan stand at Contemporary Art Fair in Istanbul this weekend alongside Sarah King, James Joyce, Le Gun and Julie Verhoven among others. If you're in the area stop by for a variety of visual treats!
DUKKAN
Contemporary Istanbul Art Fair
25 - 28 November 2010
ICEC, Istanbul
Website:
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Unless otherwise stated all work copyright of Von 2010 / www.shopvon.com
Now open for business through the summer, promoting Musicians In Jackson, my new community portrait project.
These are some old photos, but they were from an Industrail Design, Design Communications class. This was my first time in the studio learning how to do product photography.
Architect: Alvar Aalto
Built in: 1955
Client: Alvar Aalto
“ Alvar Aalto designed the building at Tiilimäki 20 in Munkkiniemi as his own office in 1955. Because of a number of large commissions, the office needed more space to work in. The building is only a short walk from Aalto's own house, where the office had previously been located. Studio Aalto is one of the best of Alvar Aalto's 1950s buildings.
The white-rendered, wall-like, closed-in mass of the building conceals a garden shaped like an amphitheatre in its inner courtyard. The office staff could sit on the slate steps of the amphitheatre, listen to lectures or watch slide shows projected on the white wall.
The principal space in the building is the curving studio which has a view opening onto the courtyard. Horizontal battens fixed to the high walls of the studio allowed drawings to be displayed there. The rear wall is covered with climbing plants reaching up to the high-level windows and prototypes of light fittings designed by Alvar Aalto are hung in front of the wall. The slanting bay window of the conference room with its rooflight creates the perfect conditions for examining models and drawings.
The building is designed to be used as an architect's office. On the upper floor there is a drawing office on a narrow plan, beautifully encircled by natural light from a band of high-level windows. In 1962-1963 the building was extended by building a dining room for the staff, the 'Taverna', in the courtyard behind the high brick wall, with an office above it.
Alvar Aalto ran the office until his death in 1976. After that, the office continued under the leadership of Elissa Aalto until 1994. The building came into the custodianship of the Alvar Aalto Foundation in 1984 and today it houses the Alvar Aalto Foundation, the Alvar Aalto Academy and the Alvar Aalto Museum Architectural Heritage.”
Source: Alvar Aalto Museo – Studio Aalto