Showing posts with label crafty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crafty. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Free Veggieburgers!

So, I thought I'd post something for you to print out -- obv. a color printer w/nice card stock is best! Copy/save and print whatever size you like. Use as you will, just be sure to credit moi (Becca Kallem). Drumroll, please... I bring you: THE HAMBURGER LETTER. You can write a letter on this burger to mail or hand deliver to your beloved. Just don't eat it. But I guess it has lotsa fiber. Anyway, if you'd rather, you can also buy a pre-printed hamburger letter from my etsy shop.


don't forget the lettuce and bottom-bun:

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Preview! Becca's Holiday Sale 2011



I have been crafting and making small art pieces like a veritable machine. By purchasing my wares for all your holiday gifting needs, you'll be supporting my artmaking as well as the two awesome art spaces where my work will be for sale: The Washington Project for the Arts and Pleasant Plains Workshop. Stay tuned for more details!






































Monday, October 3, 2011

DC Guide

I am so impressed with Grace Bonney, who has become a huge success with her design blog (and book), Design*Sponge. In the relatively small art department where we both went to undergrad, she fortunately found a prof. who got her interested in design, decorative arts, and the like...now look! I especially admire the help she and her co-bloggers give to women entrepreneurs.

On Design*Sponge is a DC Design Guide. I love that people hee and all over are seeking out unique furniture, handmade decor, craft pieces, DIY project opportunites, and the like... I swim around in the (not mutually exclusive) ponds of 'fine arts' and 'craft' and 'design', and sometimes I wish that 'fine arts' might be a bit more accessible, locally, in the commercially robust way that craft and decor have become. (As an educator, I want art to be accesible in general, too -- a whole 'nother pond o' fish.) Ayway, I do love how "ambassadors" like Kristina Bilonick of Pleasant Plains Workshop promote local art and craft, how Chandi Kelley of Project Dispatch makes art collecting affordable and fun, while helping working artists support their creative endeavors.


For what is is worth, I added the comment below to the D*S DC Design Guide -- I know it isn't an 'art guide', but there is such an intersection, and the more the merrier in generating new and creative ideas and making DC a place where original visions thrive!!


***
Great guide, and I'm glad to see DCAC included and Crafty Bastards mentioned, above! I'm a DC artist and would love for more folks to discover our creative scene. Here are some other great spots:

Check out Pleasant Plains Workshop, an artist-run studio/gallery space/store near Howard University. Cool silkscreened items and other crafts and art by local artists: http://pleasantplainsworkshop.blogspot.com/

Industry Gallery features international design: http://industrygallerydc.com/Site/Home.html

52 O Street Studios is a decades-old studio building with dozens of artists and crafters, from painters to furniture makers to filmmakers and more. There are occasional open houses: http://www.52ostreetstudios.org/

Check out Pyramid Atlantic in Silver Spring! In addition to their awesome gallery and papermaking and printmaking studios for resident artists, they offer classes in letter press, papermaking, and more. Upstairs is the Washington Printmakers Gallery, with some beautiful (and relatively affordable) work. http://www.pyramidatlanticartcenter.org/

The annual Capitol Hill House Tour is great and occasionally also includes a peak into work spaces, like the one I share with decorative painters, custom furniture makers, photographers, and florists! http://www.chrs.org/Pages/1_Projects_11Tour/2011-chrs-tour-brochure.pdf

Flashpoint, Transformer, Civilian, Hamiltonian, Project 4, Harmon Art Labs, The Fridge (near Eastern Market), Heiner Contemproary (in Georgetown) and Conner Contemporary are some galleries that feature work by emerging and mid-career artists from DC and elsewhere, often inculding work at all sorts of price points for those interested in buying original art. There are also some artist-curated 'house galleries' and alternative spaces like Bloombars, and the Washington Project for the Arts presents the work of area artists. For an extensive list of art goings, the Pinkline Project is a great resource, http://pinklineproject.com/.

Friday, September 30, 2011

Help Us to Be Confident and Fabulous

My Tim Gunn Votive prototype -- instructions: print image (to be 8.5" wide), cut off extra paper, and tape or glue to a standard size Virgen de Guadelupe or similar glass votive candle. Will probably help you to "make it work" with persistence, hard work, and confidence. Will definitely be a fire hazard. Maybe next will be a yarzheit candle with someone's face emblazoned on it? Eh, that seems a bit in bad taste.


English Translation of the prayer: TIM GUNN, Our Counsellor and Wise Friend. Prayer of Tim Gunn, Guide, Counsellor, and Wise Friend. Oh, Tim Gunn, mentor, guide and wise friend; unblemished, honorable, prudent and full of pacience, I beseech you your aid in all of my artistic efforts, asking the protection of your heart for all of my friends and my works, watchover them for me and form style, honesty, and beauty in their hearts. Give us the joy of having confidence, integrity, and creative vision while contemplating the glory of Style and Grace, praising and blessing Elegance and Fabulousness with kind hearts for all eternity. Help us to live with humor, goodwill, kindness, and humanity, Amen.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Robot Monday


Love this and other projects on Made by Joel. Such inspiring creativity, sweet & simple modern aesthetic.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Lucha Libre

I had fun doing this embroidery at the WPA's Meaning of Making crafting social and panel discussion. An interesting discussion on the common threads between "craft," "art," cooking, etc. -- various kinds of creative practice/ways to make stuff.

Monday, April 19, 2010

going to the chapel

ha ha ha... an old Harlequin book cover


embroidery from a thrift shop tea towel that i am making into a wedding card for some friends


playmobil nuptials


Sunday, April 4, 2010

Letterpress DIY


My friend Nelson built his own press from hardware store supplies. This is so impressive, and the results (wedding invitations) are great!

Peeps

How to make Peeps sushi as pictured above...
And the Washington Post's 2010 Peeps Show. Below, 2009's winning diorama, Nightpeeps.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

New Zealand

My sister Mary is WWOOFING in New Zealand, so this post goes out to her! I hear she is having a fabulous time working on organic farms, traveling, and tramping. Her blog is here: http://kallemstravelogue.blogspot.com/.

Some cool stamps from New Zealand, part of an alphabet series:

Necklace Craft Idea


This project didn't turn out quite how I wanted, but I think it was at least a good idea... I cut the lace collar from a thrift store camisole (I'd used the lace on the bottom for another project) and sewed it onto felt backing, along with some clear beads. The shape's not quite right and it looks a bit clumsy, but still I think the idea was a good one!

Sunday, January 24, 2010

patches/pins in progress and profile portrait

my friend Devry took this really nice photo of me in my studio

here are some patches/pins I am making -- in progress!


Sunday, December 27, 2009

Playmobil Mega-Super Dr Who Set












Check it out! Yes, I am a dork...

There is some backstory to the Playmobil business: one Christmas in college, my friend Billy gave me a real Playmobil set featuring several monkeys and a veterinarian with little plastic syringes! Thus began a nuclear arms race of sorts as we both tried to find the weirdest Playmobil sets for subsequent Christmases. Great finds included a Hazmat team, a policeman and handcuffed punk, construction workers witha Port-a-John, and so on. Then I got the idea to make up my own sets -- I did a "Crazy Cat Lady" with a few real Playmobil cats and about 15 supplemental sculpey cats, a weird Playmobil calendar, and this year a take on the BBC sci fi series Doctor Who, much beloved by many of my college friends.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Friday, December 11, 2009

Holiday Crafts Workshop

I am teaching a holiday craft workshop for all ages. Here are some pics of my project ideas: clothespin family ornaments, snowflake-decorated tiles, rubber-stamp books, and holiday cards using templates (dreidel not shown). I'm also posting some pics of the lovely handiwork of workshop participants!








the middle one is a dinosaur (duh):


Monday, December 7, 2009

Coptic Bookbinding with Mary

I learned how to do chain stitch bookbinding in college. It is a cool way of making a book with braid-like stitching across an exposed spine. You use four needles at a time! My sister Mary, very crafty, wanted a refresher course on the technique. So we spent an afternoon making books, pictures of her work-in-progress follow. This technique is often called Coptic Bookbinding after the Egyptian Copts, and a there's a similar stitch called Ethiopian chain stitch. I think both were used to bind early Christian texts; for more history see:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coptic_binding

http://www.bookbindingteam.com/2007/10/chain-stitch.html



cool cover


Sunday, December 6, 2009

More Holiday Craftacular

Here are some pins and things I made recently... I made a bunch of the coin pendants as holiday gifts (and one or two for myself). They are very easy to make if you have some interesting coins on hand -- just polish them up (classic paste-y toothpaste usually works wonders!) and use a strong epoxy to glue on the bail, put on a chain or ribbon, et voila.





coins from hungary and spain





Monday, November 30, 2009

Friday, November 27, 2009

misc.

I made these critters for Mary; they are supposed to be her childhood imaginary friends, Swaswus and Rossossossoss.


I love this is a painting of a personal "genius" or deity from the Dumbarton Oaks Museum's late Roman/Byzantine art collection.



I wrapped these little boxes in origami paper for holiday gifts, cute!