The winter is toying with us. It's almost February, and still no snow to speak of...just a heavy dusting that's usually gone by midday.
Monday, January 31, 2022
Crystalline Entities
Monday, January 24, 2022
setting the stage for average
I have a confession to make: I'm a quitter. My past is littered with ambitious projects that ultimately never got off the ground. Mutilated first chapters of short stories, edited relentlessly and then shoved away in disgust. Huge piles of rubber stamps, which somehow never assembled themselves into Hallmark-quality greeting cards. Nature journals, ripped to shreds after my first feeble attempts to sketch a cardinal. I approach ideas with great zeal: I make lists, spend days or weeks assembling information, and then organizing it in a pleasing way. I clear a spot in my day and in my office to work, pick up a tool, and then freeze. You see, I'm a perfectionist, and it's really, really difficult for a perfectionist to see a flawed output. I feel overwhelmed, or disgusted with my initial scribblings. In my mind, I know that it's rare to try something new and be instantly great at it. I know that "practice makes perfect." But it's hard to break old habits, even though that my photography, my quilting, my sewing, my writing, and all other hobbies are seriously affected by my inability to get better through real practice and learning.
Enter watercolors. I've always loved their look, but my little efforts have looked like something created in an elementary school art class. However, the desire to learn and practice perseverance has been growing for several years, and I decided to put it into practice by taking an online watercolor class.
I hated it.
I was terrible at mixing colors. I added too much, or not enough water. My teardrops looked like circles, and my straight lines were fat and uneven. "You should just donate these supplies," I told myself, but every few days, I picked up my brushes with resignation and submitted to another class. After a couple of weeks, I was shocked to see that my leaf shapes were starting to look like leaves!
(The classes are free on youtube: Jenna Rainey)
Even my knitting has been affected by perfectionism. I'd start a project and work for a while, get hung up on a technique or a less-than-desired output, and ball it up. I frogged so many old projects last year, but this year, I really wanted to keep it going. Kate Davies' Funchal Moebius was a great project for this. FIFTY-FIVE INCHES of tube-shaped stranded knitting. "Your tension is off! It's going to be puckered!!" my inner voice shouted, but I doggedly kept knitting round after round. When the monotony got to me, I picked up another - very quick - project: a bulky-weight hat for a friend.
Monday, January 17, 2022
(no) Izzy Tizzy
The birds must be loving this mild winter.