Sunday, December 28, 2008
Pitchers going up tomorrow on Etsy
My Hope (HOPE!) is to get more pictures of pitchers up on Etsy tomorrow. Didnt get to post anything there today. Luckily, I think we're done shooting images of pots and lampworked beads and earrings and pins today. I took down the slide-shooting display earlier in the day. Alas, I found that our studio ceiling leaks, leaving a nasty drip along most of the seamless paper backdrop. Not quite useless but a good 8 feet of it are toast!
Saturday, December 27, 2008
And then things warmed up
Today our white Christmas became Mudville. Our driveway had been heading for status as the biggest glacier in the lower 48. Today all is gooey sticky mud. Not quite impassable but CLOSE!
As a result, the short little jaunt we have between the studio and the house has become an exercise in slipping and sliding and glopping mud everywhere. So much for a clean house after the holidays!
Nancy and I spent most of today working on getting her Etsy site to work. That meant LOTS more pictures and tons of image manipulation, data entry and making sure we could find everything afterwards. Now it's all done and her site is live. NancysEarCandy.etsy.com
If all goes well, by the end of January we hope to have the Etsy site linked to our website so that folks can buy things directly from the website. Should be fun!
Friday, December 26, 2008
Merry Christmas
Thursday, December 18, 2008
More stuff up on Etsy
I put more pots up on Etsy last night and this morning.
My goal is to add 3-5 or so at a time.
Hopefully each week I can find a little time to shoot new work.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Our Etsy site is finally live
There's precious little on it yet, but after shooting more images tomorrow, there will be plenty!
I am curious to hear how folks maintain their Etsy sites.
Here is our Etsy link: ColdSpringsStudio.etsy.com
I am curious to hear how folks maintain their Etsy sites.
Here is our Etsy link: ColdSpringsStudio.etsy.com
Joining Etsy
This has been our strangest year to date. We had a very strong summer, weak fall, and so far our holiday shopping has been stop and go. Kind of odd. The sales we have had, have been great. It's always excellent to reconnect with patrons and to meet new customers.
To that end, we are branching out into new territory. At the suggestion of some potter friends, we are going to give Etsy a whirl. See if we can't turn it into our studio's website shopping cart. Anyone with advice/warnings about Etsy out there?
To that end, we are branching out into new territory. At the suggestion of some potter friends, we are going to give Etsy a whirl. See if we can't turn it into our studio's website shopping cart. Anyone with advice/warnings about Etsy out there?
Monday, December 15, 2008
Head Cold
Sunday, December 14, 2008
Thursday, December 11, 2008
Hockey to the max
When I started shooting pictures of Aurora on the ice five years ago, they were typical parent pics. Shot of the kid watching the puck go by, pics of the kid falling down, pics of the kid getting back up. Otherwise they were pics of empty greyish ice.
Last year during the TGHA tournament there was a fellow taking pictures with a cannon of a camera. Top of the line Nikon D1 with a MASSIVE 400mm f/2.8 lens... a photog's orgy of gear. His pictures were fantastic in terms of his ability to get high speed shots of players on the ice under horrid lighting conditions. Really a testimony to how far technology has come.
My only beef, was that his eye didn't follow my kid. Ever. Out of 200 pictures there were two of Aurora. Ugh. So this year I sought to change that. I took a LOT of pictures during the first game of the tournament. Here are a few of Aurora doing her thing!
Last year during the TGHA tournament there was a fellow taking pictures with a cannon of a camera. Top of the line Nikon D1 with a MASSIVE 400mm f/2.8 lens... a photog's orgy of gear. His pictures were fantastic in terms of his ability to get high speed shots of players on the ice under horrid lighting conditions. Really a testimony to how far technology has come.
My only beef, was that his eye didn't follow my kid. Ever. Out of 200 pictures there were two of Aurora. Ugh. So this year I sought to change that. I took a LOT of pictures during the first game of the tournament. Here are a few of Aurora doing her thing!
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
More Learnin' Stuff
I have been trying to work on my photography skills this week. I spent most of today and all of Monday shooting images for Mary Ellen Salmon. I love her pottery. Rich red sandy clay, full of texture. Very different from the porcelaineous clay we use. Her textures are a joy to shoot because the light plays off all the nooks and crannies so well! To that end, here is a preview of Mary Ellen Salmon's latest works.
When I say I have been working on photo skills, I really do mean it. Try as I might, this camera is still showing me tricks and pitfalls I never knew or understood. This week's lessons have centered around light. How to get shadows to fall exactly where you want them? How do you get light to bend around little corners, just enough to give you an edge to a form? Oy veh!
I spent a good chunk of time looking at the photo shooting setup of John Tilton's on his blog : Contemporary Art Porcelain. I am continually blown away by the richness of his images and the contrast between background and foreground. John was kind enough to show us all how he does it. (see this blog posting) I may be slow, but it took me over a week to finally figure out that he was basically shooting into a tunnel. Then the light in my head went on. Ah hah! So today's fun has been trying to figure out a way to do something similar on our end.... but minus his strobes and bouncing stuff off the ceiling, etc. Working with the lights we have.... here's what I was able to pull off. Thank you John Tilton. You not only opened my eyes to a new way of seeing shadow and light... you also gave me warm washup water! That aquarium heater idea has made me one VERY happy man.
Labels:
John Tilton,
light,
lighting,
Mary Ellen Salmon,
photography,
pottery
Monday, December 8, 2008
Where things lead
I have been wanting to flesh out this idea of where we derive our pots. I think in general potter's best pots are amalgamations of other pots, digested and regurgitated over time. So, for today's posting.... a rumination on how feet and twisty forms came together to become our footed mugs.
The footed squared mug was from a student of mine at Utah State. I love the gesture in her markmaking, and the sort of off-kilter wonkiness the feet give the form.
The tumbler was the Utah State incarnation of a tumbler idea I had been playing around with for about 5 years at the time.
By the time my daughter was about 5, she asked if we could make pots that looked like they were walking. All of these ideas, rolled together became, over the past 8 years or so, the footed mugs we make today.
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Another tune that keeps me rockin' in the studio
This is Run Runaway from Great Big Sea. Actually a cover from the 80s band Slade. This is a MUCH better rendition! Great Big Sea turned us on to the myriad musicians in Newfoundland and throughout Canada.
Music in the studio today
I always wonder what other potters are listening to in their studios.
I love this tune.
I love this tune.
David Byrne - Sax and Violins (Live at Union Chapel)
Getting ready for the weekend
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
More platters
A few more platters for a midweek posting.
These smaller platters with the ultra thick rims were a fascinating experiment. Really gave the platters MUCH greater mass and depth. I wish there were more of them. I think only four of them survived the firing process.
Monday, December 1, 2008
Details and ideas for the future
Here are a few detail shots of some recent platters. We've had a great reception to these platters this summer and fall. Lots of folks anxious to see more of them! To that end, we're steadily plugging away at getting images of ALL the platter onto our website. Hopefully by the end of January, we should be able to have them all on ONE page, and all their pricing and sizing info to boot. Might even make it possible to buy them through Etsy or some other storefront.
Here's to the New Year (which seems just around the bend...)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)