Results tagged “imagination”

Julia Loopy Art Doll
Photograph Property of Loopy Boopy Etsy Shop

I know this is two in a row but the very moment I laid eyes on these beauties, I had to show them off.

Using papier mache, paperclay, pulp, sculpey and acrylic paint, Colleen Downs lovingly handcrafts each one of these unique dolls and draws inspiration from her 7 year old daughter.  She doesn't use molds so every one is different from the last.

Colleen is a "self taught artist, working in sculpture for over 20 years."  She also comes from a long line of craftsters!  Here's her daughters shop, her sister's shop, her other sister's shop and her mother's shop.

If I had the cashola, I guarantee you I would be buying one of these to sit on my desk and be my muse.  These clearly come straight from imagination and as you know, that's what I'm all about here.   In fact, I was so inspired when I saw this that I might just go get my hands dirty in some papier mache!

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Fantasy Carriage PumpkinThanks to Neatorama, I found these amazing pumpkins.  Another incredible project that leaves me wondering, "Why didn't I think of that?"  Lucky us, Hallmark Magazine has the instructions for creating this and 4 other unique pumpkins for your doorstep!  They also provide visual instructions.

How-To Make the Carriage Pumpkin:
You'll Need
  • 3 ornate metal belt buckles
  • 1 pumpkin, about 12 inches tall
  • Pencil or marker
  • Knife
  • Craft glue
  • 1 ornate lamp finial
  • Cordless drill fitted with ΒΌ-inch bit
  • 4 gourds, about 4 inches tall
  • 2 quarter-inch dowel rods, cut to the approximate diameter of your pumpkin
  • 4 ornate drawer pulls
  • Heavy-gauge florist's wire

1. Trace the inside of each belt buckle on the pumpkin with a pencil and cut to create openings for two windows and a door. Glue the hardware over the openings. Remove or cut down the stem until it's even with the flesh of the pumpkin, and twist the finial into the top.

2. To create wheels, drill a hole through the center of each gourd. Insert one dowel rod into the holes of two gourds to create an axle, and secure with glue. Repeat to create a second set of wheels. Finish off all four wheels by inserting a drawer pull into the outside hole of each gourd for hubcaps.

3. Line up the two sets of wheels next to each other at about the same width as your pumpkin. Then wrap wire from one dowel rod to the other to fasten the axles together and to create a webbing for the pumpkin carriage to sit on.

4. Gently place your carriage on the wire.

How's that for some imagination?

photo property of Hallmark Magazine

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Into the Woods

The hardest part of this entire learning process I've been going through over the last 9 months or so is the attempt to reclaim my imagination. I mean, it's still there but not nearly as strong as it once was.

When I was a kid, I could view a place like the one pictured above and instantly see a hideout.  I loved hideouts.  I would have made mudpies, beds out of leaves, tables and utensils out of sticks and vines, pretended to fish out of the small pond just to the left (you can't see that...just imagine it) etc.

Now I simply imagine this because I have before, like an instinct. 

So, how do we let go as adults when we're so overwhelmed with the real world?  Especially in times like these when most of us want to rip out our hair. 

Well here's what I'm doing now, I'll let you know if it works:

  • Watching fantasy flicks and soaking in all the little details.  For example, last night I watched The Spiderwick Chronicles and said to myself "Why didn't I think of that?" when they suggest tomato sauce as the best weapon against a goblin.  Or perhaps Harry Potter is more up your alley.   If so, why didn't you think of a set of stairs that constantly moves and changes or a photograph that comes to life?
  • Reading books I've read before like Alice in Wonderland, Harry Potter, Eragon, etc. and paying attention to the little things I didn't before.  Books that are born completely from inside the writer's mind.  If you'd rather be a little more grown up, try Ursula K. Leguin's Earthsea series (even non-fantasy readers get a kick out of those) or George RR Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series.  The key is a made up world with completely made up characters and circumstances.
  • Playing games.  It's easy for us to play grown-up games like poker for instance, but when's the last time you played Hide N Seek?  Thinking about it, a game like that forces you to be creative and hide in a place you think you know every nook and cranny of.   Maybe you don't after all and there's a perfect hiding spot you never even considered before.  I mean, have you even been underneath your kitchen table without a broom and dustpan?  Probably not.
  • Last, being completely aware of my surroundings, like a child.  Trying to soak everything in when I take my walks in the park.  Like the hoof prints in the mud from a horse, or the group of mushrooms guarding a path, or the bush with leaves the size of elephant ears, or something as simple as how the sun hits a set of tall trees.
Turning off my grown-up brain is the hardest feat I've come across in this creative adventure I've put myself on.  Trust me, I'm the first person to auto-think "This is silly." when I'm forcing myself to do something 'weird' and different (like sit under a kitchen table which I have not done yet but now that I mention it maybe I'll write my next post under there).

The worst thoughts I've aquired over the years are that there's nothing left for me to imagine and doubting that I can ever be that creative again.

That's grown-up talk.  Remind yourself what you would have done if stuck in an empty room with nothing but a cardboard box and a box of crayons. 

Come up with anything interesting?  Tell me about it....


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