Friday, September 11, 2009

Toccoa Falls

It took me six and a half hours to glue down, hydrangeas, banana peel, mushrooms, cotton, onion membranes, bark, ferns, orange peel and various herbs for this picture. Of course that time includes pressing, figuring the picture size and finding a reference picture. That time does not include framing.


Monday, September 7, 2009

Untitled Picture

This picture is made of: bark, cotton, corn husk, skeletonized magnolia leaf, corn silk, delphinium, azalea, Lady Banks' rose and alyssum.

Friday, September 4, 2009

Aunt Laura's Cat

Here's what became of the pieces I posted last time.
This picture is made of: daisies, aucuba, pampas grass, maiden grass, cattail, delphinium, cornflower and mica.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

A Work in Progress

This picture is a work in progress. I'll post the finished piece after I've finished it but I thought you might like to see what a picture in the making looks like.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Dulcimer Picture

This picture is made of: forget-me-not, tendrils, brown hydrangea leaf, money plant and heuchera.

Monday, August 17, 2009

My First Appliance

The other day one of our good family friends asked if we knew anyone who could use a microwave. It turned out we did know someone who could use a microwave...me. I often press big batches of plant material in a microwave press. But I can't press in one long session because I know from experience that if I press in too long of a session and let the plate get too hot the microwave catches on fire and then you have to buy I new one (oops). I don't want to do that again so I press a few mushrooms and then come back later and then press a few more when I'd often rather be able to do more in a session. I thought about how nice it would be to have two microwaves so that when one got hot I could let it cool while I press with the other and just go back and forth. Well now I have access to the family microwave and one of my very own! God provides!

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Little Blue Lady

This picture is made of: delphinium, corn husk, bark, onion roots, Queen Anne's lace, aucuba, corn silk, cantaloupe, alyssum and spiraea.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Learning How to Make Shirts


We're starting to figure out how to use the heat press. Above are some of the shirts and the tote bag we've made. We're still working on centering the transfers and we've put pictures on upside down, crooked, had them come out dark and had them not completely adhere but it's a learning process.

I'll tell you one funny thing we did just after getting the press. We printed the image we wanted to transfer at 200 DPI like we'd been told, placed it on the shirt with the little protective sheet over it and pressed it with the heat. We counted to 20 and nothing happened. The transfer was not sticking at all. After a few attempts we realized that instead of printing the image on to the transfer paper we had printed it onto the protective cardboard packaging. It works better when the image is printed on the transfer paper.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Card Making

One thing two of my younger siblings greatly enjoy is making things. Recently we made accordion cards. It was a nice project to do with them and a great way to use up scrap flowers.


I made this one for my neighbor.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Mushroom Creek

This afternoon I finished my version of a class I took online with the World Wide Pressed Flower Guild. This picture is made of: mushrooms, onion membranes, pine needles, sweet potato, ferns, bougainvillea, iris leaves and some sort mossy stuff from China.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Now What?

OK, look at what we got! Now we just have to figure out what to do with it. This is a heat press for transferring images onto T-shirts, totes, sweatshirts, etc. So now as soon as the transfers arrive I can start putting some of my pressed-flower pictures onto shirts. It was nice to see it shipped in so much bubble wrap because now I can use it to wrap pictures.

Monday, July 13, 2009

The Wiese Home in the Wiese's Home

Last Saturday my family was invited to a renewing of vows ceremony where my brother played his mountain dulcimer. A reception was held afterward at the couple's home. They where the same people who commissioned The Wiese Home, the picture I made of the red house. So it was really neat to see my picture displayed like a real piece of artwork in their home.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Healthy Pictures

Last night I asked my Dad to pick up one sweet potato, a couple of onions and some mushrooms from the grocery store. What am I planing to make? A pressed-flower picture! I'm taking a computer class with the World Wide Pressed-Flower Guild about how to use onion membranes to create a stream and how to turn mushrooms into rocks. The sweet potato peel is for the banks of the stream. I plan to post the picture once it's complete.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

World Wide Pressed Flower Guild

This year the World Wide Pressed Flower Guild had a reunion in Jonesborough, Tennessee, and I got to attend! There where about 20 people who represented quite a few states. There was one lady who came from England and one who came from the Bahamas. We all gathered for two full days of classes, where instructors taught how to make ornaments and cards, how to make French mats, frame pictures and press onion membranes. I taught a 45-minute class on an assortment of things I've learned during my four years as a pressed-flower artist. Above is a slide show of some of the pictures I took.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Little Lady

This picture is made of: larkspur, aucuba, corn husk, Georgia blue, birch bark, corn silk, alyssum.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Sunset Class


(This picture is the result of a class I took online from a Russian lady with the World Wide Pressed Flower Guild, www.wwpfg.org).

This picture is made of: dogwood leaves, banana peel, orange peel.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Surrounded by Flowers

This picture is made of: hosta, fern, hellebore, passionflower, dogwood, bark, forget-me-not, poppy seed, pampas grass, delphinium, bougainvillea, cornflower, tendrils, aucuba, money plant, orchid and alyssum.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Winter Forest Landscape Class

(This picture is one I made in another World Wide Pressed Flower Guild online workshop. It was taught by the same Russion teacher as the picture below.)

This picture is made of: banana peel, corn husk, onion peel, seaweed, dusty Miller, sweet potato peel, beech tree leaves, eucalyptus, heuchera, maple, oak, corn silk, gray popolar.

Friday, February 6, 2009

Autumn Forest Landscape Class

(I made this picture in an online World Wide Pressed Flower Guild class taught by a Russian teacher)
This picture is made of: corn husks, iron plant, corn leaves, aucuba, birch bark, banana peel, eucalyptus, maple, Queen Anne's lace, nutmeg, savory, cloves, orange peel, cinnamon.