Archive for August, 2008

What’s the best wholesale supplier for arts and crafts supplies?

Thursday, August 14th, 2008
arts and crafts
Donna D asked:


Dropshipping would be helpful but not necessary. Also, I would prefer to stock my entire online store using goods out of one location, but that obviously may not be possible. Can’t seem to find a large warehouse wholesaler online.

Allison

Can I major in “Arts and Crafts” in college?

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008
arts and crafts
­ revenginator asked:


I’ve always been pretty good at arts and crafts. For example, I can cut construction paper with both my left and right hands, I won a macaroni art contest once on 2nd grade, I can make a really killer fort out of popsicle sticks AND I have the fastest hot glue gun in the West. I was wondering, do colleges such as Stanford and Harvard had good arts and crafts programs?
Valkyrie, scrap booking is for amateurs, not for a&c PROFESSIONALS!

Gabriel

Art Lighting Products Simulate Natural Light

Monday, August 11th, 2008
arts and crafts
Denny Langston asked:


 

Since color does not exist without light, you must have true, full spectrum art lighting for your paintings. Special furnishings and speakers are created for you to enjoy every slight variation of good music and true natural light provides the same benefit for visual arts, particularly color in fine art. If the lighting on a painting is incorrect, you do not see what the artist was seeing when he or she painted the work.

The proper art lighting allows your favorite paintings to come alive with their true colors, unseen since it left the artist’s studio or gallery.  This is possible only with fine art lighting. From picture lights, art lighting of paintings and portraits, OttLite full spectrum lighting is a pioneer, as was our originator (Dr. John Ott), in the use of light as the applied science of illumination.

Art work lighting can only be accomplished with the correct application of the right art light. OttLite Truecolor Libson Art Lamp is an exclusive design for paintings of every medium, be it oil, acrylic, watercolor, or a combination. OttLite lamps also reflect the true colors, and vivid hues of original art work by using our exclusive technology of full spectrum light tube systems.

OttLite Truecolor Lisbon Art Lamp includes a 10 Watt OttLite tube that lasts up to 10,000 hours.  The full spectrum light lamp is designed to be discreet and never distract from or damage your framing. OttLite considers that the framing was an investment in and of itself, and thus designed the Lisbon Art Lamp accordingly. Therefore the Lisbon Art Lamp’s design has a 180-degree adjustable frame that will help you work with the angle of the light to avoid glare. Thus you can illuminate your interior environment with the beauty and splendor of your art collection.

Because lighting needs are diverse, the Lisbon Art Lamp will enhance your paintings while OttLite produces a full range of lighting products for the whole room.  The true light of full spectrum color will help not only your vision of your art collection, but OttLite desk and reading lights will enhance the colors of your furniture and increase the detail visibility of your reading materials. Just as the emotion of a painting can enhance your spirit, OttLite’s lamps, bulbs and art lighting will illuminate the interior “landscape” of your home, and your vision of the art you treasure.

OttLites are available at art and craft retailers nationally and internationally, as well as online for your convenience.  The beauty of your art and the vision of your home are well worth investing in full spectrum illumination. It has been said that “art is the heart of a home.”  Cast some light on that heart with OttLite.

 

 



Lois

Arts and Crafts: What is something creative that I can make my boyfriend for our upcoming anniversary?

Sunday, August 10th, 2008
arts and crafts
Gloria asked:


This will be me and my boyfriends five year anniversary! Over the years, I have made him very creative anniversary presents and I want to keep that tradition going! So, do you have any ideas of a creative anniversary present that I could make him that we could look at years from now! Thanks in advance!

Geraldine

Which Craft is Right for Me?

Sunday, August 10th, 2008
arts and crafts
Emma Snow asked:


Diana discovered the joy of pottery after suffering a terrible divorce. Taking a seat at the wheel with a lump of clay, she felt an immediate release. Her mind cleared and her heart rate slowed down. She was able to relax in a way she hadnt for weeks. Better than therapyand medication! she happily reported to her doctor after her first day at a community education class, where she went on to make friends with fellow potters, further enriching her life.

For Kris it was counted cross-stitch. The repetitive motion of the needle passing up and down through crisp cloth put her in a near-meditative state, the way yoga does for some. In this state Kris was able to work out solutions to her daily challenges. It was like the ideas dropped into my mind out of the sky, she told a close friend.

Shawn found furniture restoration to be wonderfully soothing after a stressful day at the office. The raw scent of wood loosened him up, and he was surprised how satisfying it was to sit down at a table he had restored himself.

Such is the world of DIY. Discovering the right craft for your personality and temperament can be a reward that transforms your life.

The crafting world is as wide and diverse as a tropical rainforest. Each crafting activity has unique benefits and challenges. You could spend your entire life just trying out different crafts. While this may be fun, it can be expensive and frustrating. Should you desire to narrow your search down, this article will act as your guide by investigating the world of crafts as they fit into five spectrums. If one activity doesnt suit you, take heart. Crafting is for everyoneyou are bound to find that perfect match.

1. Short-term projects vs. long-term projects.

Do you have a need for immediate gratification? If you do, you might prefer cake decorating, ceramics, candle-making, lotions-n-potions, or cut-n-paste projects (scrapbooking, collage, and decoupage), which deliver results relatively quickly. Conversely, if you are known to possess the patience of Job, needlecrafts and quilting may be your thing. (Although quilting by machine cuts down the time dramatically). If you like long-term projects, pottery and gardening are also excellent choices, since they involve several steps.

2. Fastidiousness vs. playfulness/ looseness

Needlecrafts, baking, and jewelry-making require a meticulous and careful eye, whereas cooking, gardening and cut-n-paste projects are more appropriate for the playful type. Keep in mind that many activities can go either way or are best for those who can balance a bit of each quality.

3. Planner by nature vs. spontaneous to the core

If you dont mind doing a little math, counted cross-stitch, knitting, and crochet are great activities. Needlecrafts, quilting and sewing also require planning and pattern-reading. If all this sounds too boring or frustrating and you prefer to jump headlong into projects as soon as you feel an urge, cut-n-paste, candle-making, ceramics, or pottery may be a better fit.

4. Space available

Do you affectionately call your apartment a cupboard? If you need an activity that takes up little space or can be cleaned up in a jiffy, yarn and needlecrafts can be tucked away in a basket or a drawer. Baking and cake decorating use what you probably already have in your kitchen, and jewelry only needs a modest tackle-box with little compartments for beads and tools. But perhaps you have a room or a whole basement where a hobby could take up a permanent residence? Pottery is such a hobby. If you quilt by hand you will need a room where a fairly large frame can be set up (unless you only want to do baby quilts). A table for laying out and cutting patterns is required for sewing, and most people dont appreciate having to lug out the machine every time you want to work on a project. (However, it can be done.) Lotions-n-potions, and candle and soap making can be done in the kitchen as long as precautions are taken, but ideally they need a separate space, since you are using dangerous chemicals that you dont want to accidentally mix with food. Gardening is ideal if you have a nice-sized yard, but many green-thumbed apartment dwellers find cultivating the space around their windows, on their patio, or even potted indoor plants a satisfying diversion. Dont lose heart if you dont have space for an activity that interests youjust sign up for a community class!

5. Available funds for expenses

Each craft has a range of what you could pay for the activity, depending on your taste and willingness. If you are picky about using only hand-dyed, organically grown 100% wool yarn, you are going to pay a lot more than someone who works with an acrylic yarn available at the closest Woolworths. It is a good idea when just starting out to borrow someone elses equipment, or use inexpensive supplies until you know it is an activity you are going to stick with. Then you can slowly replace your supplies with quality items that you appreciate. On average, pottery and sewing require more expensive equipment to begin, while you can garden, cross-stitch, or cut-n-paste on a shoestring budget. Yarn crafts are the cheapest activities to try, since they dont require a lot of expensive equipment to start. Again, a class might be the best investment for the more expensive hobbies.

If you still aren’t sure which craft is right for you, talk to other crafters about why they enjoy their craft. Ask if you can join them one day to see if it is something that appeals to you. Be patient with yourself as you begin each new activity–nothing kills the excitement of trying something new more than impossibly high expectations. Don’t worry–as you continue, your skills will improve. You will also know better which activities suit you best.



Ruben

The Glades Arts and Crafts Community of Gatlinburg, Tennessee

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008
arts and crafts
Darryl Payne asked:


By Darryl Payne

One of the south’s lesser-known treasures is nestled in the hills adjacent to a popular village. What is it? The largest group of independent artists and craftsmen showing their skills. The Glades Arts and Crafts community is comprised of an eight-mile country road loop where over one hundred artists and craftsmen parade their trades. You’ll find a wide variety of art galleries, pottery barns, active workshops, independent artist showrooms, basket-making studios, and many more authentic local artisans.

Originally begun in the 1930’s, a visit to this unique location is still a visit to an earlier era, absent of industrial machines and computers. This was a time when a family community came together to share their talents with one another. Watch a master potter throw and spin clay into one-of-a-kind works on a wheel. Observe artists painting with various forms of art media, and then discover a mother/daughter team making beautiful jewelry they’ve designed together. Here originality and creativity occur daily.

Over the years this has been a place to come and discover the history and heritage that make up the Great Smoky Mountain legacy. What is so interesting about the artists and craftsmen is that they are continually seeking new and innovative ways of capturing their art form for today’s generation. Each year new artists are arriving to share their gifts and talents with the community to make it one of the most unique places to visit in the Smoky Mountains.

To visit the Arts and Crafts Community, simply get on Hwy. 321 in Gatlinburg and turn onto Glades or Buckhorn Road then follow the signs marked for Great Smoky Mountain Arts and Crafts Community. (It’s a very distinctive sign that has MEMBER written at the top.)



Susan

Bonsai - Introduction to the Living Art

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008
arts and crafts
Malcolm Scolding asked:


Read ‘art’ and most people will have in mind a painting or sculpture. In that respect it is a kind of sculpture, though, that takes for its raw material not stone or wood but a living tree. That is the art of bonsai.

From the Japanese word for ‘tree in a tray’, Bonsai is the artistic creation and product of shaping trees by careful deliberate pruning along with trimming to develop a miniature tree or bush. Not acquired from genetic dwarfs, bonsai are the result of years of unhurried shaping of ordinary species by master artists.

Because Bonsai are grown, matured and shaped in a small pot, but created from ordinary species - pine trees, maple trees with numerous others - uttermost attention is called for to keep the delicate bonsai plants healthy.

Soil type along with temperature must be just so for bonsai - conditions that are solely within the artist’s control within a certain range. Bonsai pruning and trimming techniques take years to master and are only accomplishable to a certain kind of temperament. Potting and re-potting practices must be learned for bonsai and they are numerous and wide-ranging.

Watering alone is a difficult science for these small bonsai plants. Too much and the bonsai will become water-logged and develop fungi and root rot. Insufficient and the soil rapidly gets dry and foliage wilts and the bonsai perishes.

Soil and potting practices for bonsai converge with watering requirements as drainage is critical to bonsai. Pruning habits interact with bonsai shaping techniques, which in turn are impacted by soil maintenance and watering practices.

Bonsai are among the most challenging products of living art to create because all these elements and numerous more have got to be accomplished to near perfection just for the Bonsai to survive. Add together complexity the goal of creating pleasing shapes, styles and colors for both Bonsai and pot and you have a high artistic bonsai creation.

On top of the inherent horticultural difficulty of learning and mastering a dozen sub-sciences, there is the requirement to master the artistic imaginativeness and skills to bring about any of several basic or advanced styles of bonsai.

There are five primary styles for bonsai alone: formal upright, informal upright, slanting, cascade and semi-cascade. From that base branch out a dozen advanced bonsai types, including the literati and additional difficult forms of bonsai shaping.

A living art of that kind is not mastered in a month.

Craftsmen labor for years to create an individual bonsai tree, which could last one hundred years or longer. The trees are then often handed down from generation to generation, each sequent artist contributing his or her own distinguishing style. As the tree is lovingly shaped according to the individual aesthetic of each caretaker, past efforts are revered and learned from.

Years of training and experience are needed to become a masterful bonsai grower. Ordinary horticulture is by itself a challenging craft. But to acquire a miniature bonsai tree from ordinary species calls for a lifetime of patience and learning.

The results are widely looked on as well-worth the effort, though. Bonsai are admired the worldwide for their uniqueness, their longevity, variety and beauty and for the skill that goes to create them.

In an age when brilliant engineering can mass produce global cellular phones and self-diagnosing automobiles, these bonsai,individually designed and hand crafted, miniature works of living art continue to inspire awe and admiration.



Crystal

Sports Art – Fashionable and Sporty

Friday, August 1st, 2008
arts and crafts
Robert Riles asked:


Sports Art is all about creating products or craft items using the sports stars as an inspiration. When a person visits Disney land they find a store that sells T-shirts, mugs, caps and many other items with Disney characters on them. Similarly, in a sports store, we will find equipment and other fun items, which have sports art on them. These could be a simple logo or other forms of sports art like a signature of a famous sportsperson on it. Such products have high demand as everyone from children to adults enjoy wearing a product showing off their favorite player. Depending on the game a person is fond of, they can pick up products related to that or wear a T-shirt with a picture of a lead player on it. Whenever cricket season is on, all stores stock up on a range of products with various teams’ colors and players’ names on them, and hope for a sell out. Similarly, Football also draws many fans around the world to buy and proudly wear them while going for the match. It is their way of showing their loyalty to that team and support for them as well. Some fans are noted for their face painting; they will have the colors of their team done on their face and wear a team cap and T-shirt. Sometimes fans make elaborate flags or banners using fancy sports art products.

Players like Michael Jordon, Kobe Bryant, Ronaldinho, David Beckham and Mohammed Ali are so popular that one finds many endorsements and memorabilia with their picture or signature on them. These are displayed and sold in most sports related stores through the year, infact there are some stores in that sell fake products as well. Some fans who can’t afford the original will go for the fake item and be proud of what they own. Sports art has become a rage off late and a way of promoting a sport or a player. This also helps companies use them as ambassadors and add their name along with the star’s names while selling goods. Most of the products are available on the net as well, and one can sit at home or office and choose an item of their choice – a Bag, shoe or maybe a bandana that sports their favorite football player’s name on it and buy it from there. All this adds to the value of the player and gets him more recognition and fame.

Sports Art ranges from $10 to $1000, depending on what the item is. In case of things like watches and shoes, they are a bit pricier than T-shirts and wrist bands as the material used in making them in of higher grade. But there are people around the world who would give anything to have that piece of sports art and collect many other items of the same player. This shows the amount of interest a person has for that sport and the way he idolizes that particular sportstar.



Willie