Archive for the ‘Musings’ Category

The Mad Hatter.

Monday, February 7th, 2011

The Mad Hatter

       The next print in the Wonderland series is The Mad Hatter.   This piece was difficult.  I didn’t start out designing him with a image in mind.  Just by randomly sketching I finally came up with this image.

The Mad Hatter is now on sale at my store:  www.badbird.etsy.com

Also, he will be featured at El Take it Easy, February 10th, 6pm to 9pm, 3926 30th Street San Diego, CA 92104 - (619) 255-8778

This is part of the San Diego North Park Craft Mafia Valentine’s Gift Bazaar.

Valentine Gift Bazaar

I want a Platypus, I want a Platypus! Okay, this months pattern is a Platypus.

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

Platypus by Andrea Zuill

 At my Flickr group Badbird Patterns I’ve had a couple of people ask for a Platypus pattern.  I don’t know if they where Aussies, but Australians have supported me quite a bit over the years by buying my prints.  The least I could do was dedicate a pattern to them.

Platypuses are very cute, in mixed up kind of way.  They are mammals that lay eggs.  Their young nurse from their mother not with nipples, but with milk that is released through pores of her skin on her abdomen.  Now this is the weird part,  both the male and females have spurs on their back feet that contain venom.  

Let’s see a show of hands.  Who thinks that a platypus should be called a Cobra Duck?   1. . . 2. . . . 3. . . . . . .          Okay, this is going to take awhile.  In the mean time please stitch yourself up a heaping cup of platypus embroidery.

Click on the pattern above to get the full size image.

Enjoy!

I now have T-Shirts at ExBoyfriend!

Monday, January 10th, 2011

NOTICE:  ExBoyfriend T-Shirts has shirts  for men, women and children!  There seemed to be some confusion.  

  I few weeks ago Matt from ExBoyfriend contacted me about  designing some shirt images for his shop.  Of course I said yes.  I designed two images for him.  The first one is a somewhat irritated squirrel and the second design is a irritated unicorn. 

Someday I will have to find out why the characters I create are so irritated.    I’m sure it’s something deeply seated in my psyche and very irritating.

Last blog of the year.

Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

On California’s Northern coast there is a fairytale town.

Each building looks like a cobbler or a candy maker should be hard at work inside.

Actually, there was a candy maker hard at work inside this building.  He was making fudge.

I mean they REALLY went out of their way to fairtale the place up.

Even their advertising was precious.  Humm, let me guess, I bet they sell  blue and white porcelain.

When does a town decide that they should be adorable?   And, when does a town decides that adorable for them is fairytale houses?

Then, as if  to say their town went too far into cute,  they elect Dirty Harry as their mayor.

It’s all a fine balance Carmel.

Holiday Hit List Craft Show

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

  As you know I did a craft show on Saturday and another on Sunday.  For the Sunday show I was a vendor at the San Diego North Park Craft Mafia - Holiday Hit List Craft Show. And guess what!  I forgot to take pictures!!!!!

This show was beautiful.  It was located inside the historic Masonic Hall.  A really cool old building.  The Ladies bathroom even had a lounge with a vanity.  The vendor area was highly decorated.  Besides the regular sort of Christmas decor one might see at this type of event they had men dressed as angels supported by wire hanging from the ceiling and a full size replica of the Nativity scene, which included a live donkey, camel and for some reason a tiger.  For the  finale of the show all the vendors and customers  joined hands and sang The Little Drummer Boy while a fake snow machine spit out chemical snow. I dare say not a person had a dry eye in the house,  but you’ll have to trust me on this since I forgot to take photo’s.  

When the doors opened there was a great flood of customers.  But the customers were not the only ones buying.  I think all the vendors made large strides toward finishing their Christmas shopping. I came away with jewelry (Artista Muerta),  soap (Meltdown Soaps) and a dog collar for Homer (Belle Pepper Couture).

I’m trying to get Homer a modelling contract with Belle Pepper Couture so I am submitting to them this ad -

Craft Show Report!

Monday, December 6th, 2010
 

My Booth.

 What a busy weekend.  I did my first craft shows!  The first show was on Saturday and it was the Red Rabbit Art and Craft Show in Glendale, CA   It was so much fun!  Everyone was very nice.  No evil to be found anywhere.   I  had sold so much work that when I got home that evening  I had to print up more images for the next show on the next day!

My Booth.

 So you know how I made a big stink about craft shows and how there booths looked all a like?  Well, I took the plain (some might say boring) route, with my booth.  I’ve got the bare bones of a booth, so now I can start decorating it with personal touches. 

I spent money too.  I bought some strawberry jam and pickled apples from Coldwater Canyon Provisions (their Etsy store is new so there isn’t much listed right now), some soap from Max’s Apothecary, and something from Sweet Little Things  (but I can’t say what it is because it’s a gift for my daughter so she shouldn’t go looking at their site.) .

I learned a lot.

I almost forgot,  the organizer arranged for a Vietnamese food  truck to come by so we could get lunch.  It was every tasty.

Oh, and one more thing,  I would like to thank my blog readers that showed up at the show!  That was sooooo cool!  It made me very happy.  I think my head swelled up so much with pride that  by the end of the day I had trouble getting into my car.  But a little motor oil made the wedging much easier.

You’re such a card.

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

Go-Go Paperarts

 I was visiting San Diego today and I stopped by a fantastic little shop called, The Grove.   I was looking though their yarn, books, crafts and fabrics when I came upon on a lady working in a little nook up to her eyeballs in papery goodness.

Go-Go Paperarts

 Her name is Jo Madden and she is Go-Go Paper Arts, located in The Grove.   I don’t work with paper myself but I can see how there can be a addition similar to a fabric addiction.  Jo had all kinds of fun stuff that she uses to create her cards.

Go-Go Paper Arts creator, Jo Madden

I was drawn to her cards featuring little birds.  Her birds weren’t cranky, but I’ll forgive her.

Go-Go Paper Arts

 She had quite a few dog cards which I almost bought, but then I spotted some birthday gift cards and I snatch ALL of them up.

Go-Go Paper Arts

 See that pink bag (kind of in the middle & a little to the left).  Jo has been making bags but she is having a fight with the pink paper.  It’s not cooperating.  I believe the paper is evil.  I hope Jo wins.

Go-Go Paper Arts

 If you are in San Diego try to stop by The Grove and visit the lady in the back having a knock-down drag-out fight with some very evil pink paper.

Jo Madden: http://xoxojoma.vpweb.com/

The Grove 3010 Juniper Street, San Diego, CA / (619) 284-7684

I call them as I bury ‘em. Or, the Columbarium.

Friday, October 15th, 2010
Neptune Society Columbarium, San Francisco, CA

 First of all, I love to visit cemeteries. 

 Second, after discovering the existence of the Neptune Society Columbarium in San Francisco, about 10 years ago, I have visited it about 7 times.

Neptune Society Columbarium, San Francisco, CA

 The Columbarium is open for visitors.  During my last visit there was a memorial service going on.  The grounds keeper told us to go ahead and enter the building, go to left and up the stairs.  The interior of the building is a series of balconies with the center of the columbarium left open.  The further up you go the lower the ceiling is, which gives it a cave like feeling.

Friendly neighborhood columbarium.

 In 1902 the city of San Francisco put a stop to the selling of burial plots.  In 1920, remains in various San Francisco cemetries where moved to Colma, CA.  Here are some of the reasons that I have heard, but can’t substantiate, that the cemeteries where closed and bodies removed. 

1.  The various cemetaries in San Francisco where considered a health hazard in the highly populated city.  The Columbarium survived because the above ground ashes didn’t create a health problem.

2. Claiming health reason, but really wanting more real estate, the city declared the cemetaries  unhealthful.  The Columbarium was a loop hole that the city couldn’t call a hazard so it remains.

I bit of Lore I have heard:

1. Lots of ghost. One of the care takers at the columbarium has taken on the job of  being the keeper of legends for the building. I believe he has been interviewed many times.

2.  Because many people could not afford to reinter their deceased family members in Colma there where many bodies left behind in the old cemeteries.

3.  Sloppy or fraudulent reinterment practices meant that in the grounds around the columbarium some of the deceased, or at least parts of the decease, never made the move to Colma.

4.  When the present houses around the columbarium where being constructed, construction crews would often come across human bones.

5. Current residents often find bones when gardening or putting in new pools.

Looking across from the second level.

 It’s hard to tell from photographs, but the columbarium feels very real and special when you are inside.

Niches

 Some of the niches are covered with plaques, but the are quite a few niches that have glass coverings that let you see what the families have left with the ashes of their loved ones.  I like looking at the variety of items.  They tell stories of who the people where that are now at home in the columbarium. 

One of many Stain Glass windows.

 Lots of beautiful stained glass.  I couldn’t get many photo’s of the windows because of the memorial service.

Niche

 A Victorian niche with a metal cover.

Niche

 I believe the urn in the above niche is for a former member of the BOF, The Benevolent Order of Foresters.

A niche not yet repaired.

 With every visit to the columbarium I see new repairs.  This Victorian niche has not been repaired.

Visiting

 It’s getting harder to find cemeteries that allow the loved ones of the deceased to creatively express their feelings with decorations and artifacts, but the columbarium does.

 Come and visit.  Each niche tells a story.

Note – I didn’t photograph modern niches.  Even though the displays in each niche give you the feeling that the families want you to read and know their deceased loved ones I decided not to present these images.   Please visit and enjoy the creativity and love expressed in each niche.

I almost forgot.  There is a part of the bay where large blocks where used to shore up a bit of the shoreline.  If you look closely at the blocks you’ll discover that the blocks are actually broken up headstones from the 1920 removal of the dead for reinterment.