Crafty Camping

This was our 3rd year as guests to a crazy camping phenomenon called Lake Pillsbury. A family and friend tradition since the 60s. I decide that where I lack in outdoorsmanship, I would make up for it in creativity. So while doodling around on a stick, I became sort of a carnival side show. Next thing you know, I was the local tattoo artist! Kids wanted flaming baseballs, and clothing brand logos, adults wanted SF Giants emblems, wiskey labels, american flags and a Cornholio design -to get an edge on the tournement competition. (Cornholing, look it up!)

Last day we were there the “Watermelon” came out. I was commissioned to carve a 15 minute design, as shown here by the lovely Fushi. (GILP: God, I love Pillsbury!)

But the best creativity of the week for us was the suture/stitches my husband gave my 11 year old daughter on her shin after she split it open on a rock jumping off the jet ski! (Sorry, the only photos I have are post-op, band-aid removal…not pretty.) She’s healing beautifully.

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Goodbye Mrs. Rinaldi

Who doesn’t remember their favorite teacher? My son’s was Rosemarie Rinaldi at Dunham Elementary, in Petaluma. She taught him in 4th and 6th. And this spring she retired to enjoy a well deserved trip to Italy in August and looks forward to traveling with her husband one day with an Airstream trailer in tow. All that taken to heart, I created two special farewell journals for her.




The wonderful image of the Airstream trailer for the Happy Trails journal came from Hilary Hitchcock Photography. Please visit her Etsy store for more AMAZING work! She was very generous to grant me limited usage rights for a minimal price. Mrs. Rinaldi was so happy with her gifts.

The journals were made using my technique of printing on fabric from an ink jet printer:
Iron laundered, thin white cotton and cut a few inches larger than your 8.5″ x 11″ paper. Using 3M Super 77 Spray Adhesive, spray a medium coat on a sheet of printer paper. Adhere paper to fabric and cut down fabric to size. It’s best to cut just a bit over and into the paper so that the fabric doesn’t fray through the printer. Then pass through your ink jet printer. I set mine for a glossy finish so that it doesn’t oversaturate the fabric with ink. Some fading may occur, so you will want to play with different settings on smaller pieces. Allow to dry well. Then either remove the fabric from the paper or use the two intact as I did for the added weight of a journal cover. (More on fabric printing for journals in this post .)

Through the years, I also made the school end of year certificates for all the kids, caricaturing each teacher, their specialty (hers was California State History), added a gold seal & ribbon and bordered them with the classmates’ names and special memory words from the year.

Have a wonderful retirement, Rosemarie! No one deserves it more.

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Designing My Own T-shirts

Having designed dozens of T-shirts in my career as a graphic designer, it’s a good thing as my husband would have nothing to wear if not for all the free logo shirts. None of the shirts are my style, or that is, cut to a shape I like to wear. So lately, I’ve decided to just design my own, one by one. I have a few with my Home Grown Logos truck on them, but for some reason, black and white graphics seem a little cool right now.
I’ve used cafepress and spreadshirt in the past for ordering custom shirts. Both with different results, and I tend to make my decision based on ease of art uploading and editing, but have been happy with the printing of shirts from both. Last night I used spreadshirt, as I wanted to make my images as large as possible, and print on the back as well.
I chose a gorgeous script typeface I took from a vintage show card book. The font was created in 1898 by John Smith, copyright of 1903, London. So I’m feeling pretty good about it being public domain at this point. (You can see more about my collection of such books on my other blog, Farm Fresh Creative.)
I have been in love with typography since I began my commercial art career in 1983 as a junior art director at an advertising agency in the midwest at age 17. Back then, (before computers,) to comp up anything, ie. ads, brochures, logos, etc., we had to trace type from a type specimen book to create a layout. I’ve traced a lot of type in my day, and one can’t help but appreciate every curve, serif and characteristic of a great typeface. So that being said, I couldn’t resist but design a shirt with a beautiful script as this. I placed half of the alphabet on the front and the rest on the back.
My other shirt is a silhouette straight out of a vintage clip art book, though I cleaned up a few lines. How cute is a jump-roping cow? Kind of gives a new twist on “Happy California Cows”. And did I mention I live smack in the middle of a dairy belt? Ah, Petaluma.

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