all hallow’s

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A little bit of spookiness created just for you, dear readers, to put you in the mood for Samhain, All Hallow’s or Halloween, All Saints Day, Day of the Dead, Kekri or whatever you celebrate this weekend!

If this Pineapple Express we are having right now keeps up for tomorrow evening, the little trick-or-treaters may be washed away!

Hornby rock lace

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more Hornby rocks

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a few more photos of Hornby Island’s rocks

a busy week but in a good way, despite continuing insomnia
fall gardening, housework and much art making
a most heartwarming time with a friend here for dinner and breakfast
life is good

Paris: arches

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Arches beguile me,
these ancient architectural and structural elements,
these passages of invitation to something magical beyond…

(Should you have missed them, earlier posts about our spring trip to the UK and Paris can be found under travel.)

Paris: details #4

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Even in Paris, birds of a feather stick together. Even the lady has had a visit from feathery friends.

a murder of crows

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I just want to tell you about a fascinating sounding program airing tomorrow evening, Sunday October 11th at 9 pm on CBC-TV: A Murder of Crows. Check out the promo video. If you don’t have access to CBC-TV or don’t have a TV, the program will be available later to view online at the CBC site.

I look forward to seeing this program for it sounds like we may be in for some surprises. Crows and ravens are such intelligent birds and feature in so many of our myths, fairytales and legends and yet live around us in almost all parts of the world. I’m quite curious about the very odd term of a murder of crows for a group of them but there seem to be no truly definitive answers that I’ve found. I hope some of my crow-loving blog friends will see this program and give us some feedback!

By the way, the delightful drawing above is by Susan of Adventures, Ink and phantsythat. She has kindly given me permission to use it here. Please do read the story of how Crow met Susan as well as both her lovely blogs.

UPDATE Sunday evening: Just finished watching this – excellent! I learned so much. Highly recommended! But I still don’t know the source of ‘murder of crows’….

autumn at home

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surprise sunrise scene in the kitchen

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lovely blossoms still blooming madly but producing only plum sized squash babies

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from volunteers that appeared late in the summer and have grown like Jack-in-the-beanstalks in the new planting bed

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the best fall ever for the Michaelmas daisies

Hornby: more wildlife

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You saw the jellyfish.

Here are some more sea creatures found in the tidal pools on Hornby Island.

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This handsome bald eagle had a prize salmon in his claws as he flew down onto some driftwood. He seemed proud to show it off to us for a moment before taking off again. Times like this we wish our cameras had stronger zoom lenses!

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Less exciting visually yet impressive in size and industry are the huge anthills on Hornby.
Watch out if you stand too long on their ant highways!

William and Kate Blake

I have just finished reading a fascinating book about a famous artist-printmaker-poet and his wife. As a printmaker, I found this passage particularly intriguing to find in a historical novel:

William and I began to be real partners in Printing. He had been teaching me for a long time to assist him at the big wooden press. It was not usual for Engravers to keep Copper-plate presses in their houses, so we were proud of ours. It stood six feet tall, made of sturdy polished oak.

There were two other important tasks which went into Printing. One was the preparation of Paper, and the other was of Ink.

“We must print on the best paper we can afford,” William always said.

So we bought wove paper from James Whatman, which was heavier than ordinary paper and did not have the chain lines that usual papers showed from the mould in which they were made. We dampened our sheets of paper the day before we were to print, passing five or six leaves through a flat tub of water two or three times, and then stacking them on a flat board to keep them very smooth.

Ink was a big part of our lives: it was messy, but I loved it. We used to make our own, mixing powdered pigment with burnt linseed oil. Burning the oil was a smelly business. First it was boiled, and then set on fire. This made the oil properly stiff to mix with the pigments. Then we would grind the oil and pigment on a marble slab till it was the right thickness.

The colours of inks were wonderful. At first we only used blue-blacks or brown blacks, but later when William produced his own books, we used red ochre, yellow ochre, raw sienna, burnt umber, Prussian blue. William taught me how to ink a plate with a linen dabber and to wipe off the plate’s surface with the palm of my hand. What a mess! The Print is a Marriage of ink and paper, as Engravers always say. Or it is a baby, born from the marriage, under blankets on the Bed of the press. We hung the prints up to dry on a clothesline, like baby clothes.

This is quoted from pages 80-81 of Other Sorrows, Other Joys – The Marriage of Catherine Sophia Boucher and William Blake by Janet Warner. Here’s a good description of the book.

The story, mostly in the voice of Kate Blake as she was called, is part fiction, part fact and reveals the challenges of her marriage to this famous artist, her devotion to helping him in his work and how she became an artist herself but without the recognition as was often the case back then. The book includes many images of Blake’s work and interesting historical times and characters too! The late author Janet Warner’s web site* reveals that she was a university professor originally from British Columbia and had written an earlier book on Blake. I enjoyed the site with its brief bio, excerpts from the book and a few links.

This book was certainly a serendipitous find when I was in the library unexpectedly one day last month but without my reading wish list. I’ve always been intrigued by Blake’s work, even blogging about it once, so it was great to read about the challenges he met, with his helpmeet, in earning a living while still trying to remain committed to his own visionary work.

UPDATE October 5th: I’ve just come across this in my morning net wanderings and it feels too too related not to mention: Mad genius: Study suggests link between psychosis and creativity.
What do you think?

* Update Nov.16, 2013: Link has expired and has been removed.

Paris: details #3

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Sculptures everywhere in Paris,
an abundance of art in everyday life,
feasts for the eyes and the soul…