Showing posts with label Randy McKee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Randy McKee. Show all posts

Saturday, August 13, 2016

Vintage Map

One mans trash is another mans treasure, and for my family it couldn't be more true! Few things in our home are brand new. Older things have dings, scratches, patina, wear, and markings that tell a story. Everyone loves a good story. These items have character. Plus, the thrill of the find is part of the fun! Every year for our anniversary we go on a hunt for a cool new-to-us old find to add to our collection. 

This year we had a vintage map framed for our walls. IT. IS. AWESOME. And huge. Let's focus on the awesome part...I've seen plenty of boring maps and boring wall art, but vintage school maps from the 50's and 60's had such rich colors they're hard not to notice. We came across a bundle of maps and gave most of them away. This map of the USA was the only one we kept. So much of the world has changed names, but we can talk with our kids about this map and it's relevant. Their future social studies and geography teachers won't scold us for confusing them. Maybe it'll improve their Scrambled States of America game skills!


Check out that gorgeous color! They're beautiful enough to inspire the color palette of a room! Those oranges and greens together are soooo goooood...The mountain shadows, the tints and shades, the fonts used, it's truly a winning aesthetic mix!


For our anniversary, Randy visited Marwin Cummings, known for his woodworking and framing skills, to tackle the best way to go about framing this map (40" x 48"!!!). Mr. Cummings is kind, generous, knowledgeable, and skilled


Mr. Cummings and Randy did a BEAUTIFUL job mounting and framing this! It will be a focal point and conversation piece in our home! Sincerest thanks sir!

  

Check out that font! We love this part of the map. Orange is Randy's favorite color, and I love green. What a great mix! Stunning map, fantastic framing, lucky eyeballs!

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Haitian Art

A few years ago I read about a couple that saved up their nickels and dimes to buy artwork. They invested in things they really wanted to look at, things that told a story, that inspired them, that they loved. In a world of changing fads it's a very personal choice. It means you're comfortable with your own taste, that you don't need others to like what you like, and that is freeing. Randy and I collect art and things we like to look at. Our walls are an eclectic mix of graphic design, old signs, metal bits and wooden things. And color. Lots of color. When I was younger my grandmother had a green room. It was her favorite color (it's mine too). I thought it was so cool that she chose it as the color of an entire room, not caring if anyone else liked it or not. I decided that when I had a house of my own that I would choose fun colors that I liked too, and I have.


Some of our friends think I'm crazy because our walls are sooo green, others think it's fun and whimsical, some say it's "funky". The most important thing is that my family loves it. It makes a great backdrop for all of the miscellaneous things hanging about the room. 


This is one of the newest additions to our funky walls. My mother-in-law and several wonderful folks from her church have made regular trips to Haiti to help a school there. They have done incredible things for children. Before her last trip my husband asked her to please bring home Haitian artwork, and she did! While visiting family this summer she invited us over to choose a piece of artwork to take home with us, and I fell in love with this bright metal tap tap bus! Tap Taps are brightly painted buses used as taxis in Haiti. They don't move forward until filled. I love that it has character, it's metal, I love the texture, and the colors are gorgeous. 


Each piece of art on our walls has a story. My mother-in-law would say that some of them are conversation pieces, and this metal tap tap bus truly is. Metal Haitian art is made by repurposing the steel from transported oil drums. The top and bottom are removed, the drum is set on fire to burn off any residue and paint, and when cooled they are cut open and flattened into a sheet. Then the art begins! My husband knew how much I loved this piece and chose it from the his mothers collection even though he really really loved a painting a bit more. When I realized he'd done this I arranged for the painting to be his Father's Day gift. He was thrilled!


Wood is hard to come by in Haiti so when you buy paintings from an artist they remove the canvas or painted material and keep the wooden frame it was painted on. You roll up your new painting and take it with you, they attach another piece of material to the wooden frame you left behind and do another painting to sell. The sizing isn't always a traditional frame size. In order to hang this painting Randy had to stretch it and staple it to a new frame (in this case, an old board). 



He added an outer frame that he made out of old barn boards, and it's PERFECT. 


The bold graphic colors really stand out against each other. It also pops against the bright green wall of the living room. Being able to look at inspiring things that we enjoy has made this tiny house a cozy home. 

Thursday, July 14, 2016

what I'm working on #1: redfish table

How does the art teacher spend the summer? Why, working on projects, of course! I even do projects while we're on vacation!



Each summer my husband and I take our two children to visit family in beautiful Matlacha, Fl (a little island in the Gulf of Mexico). Randy's parents are there, his brother and his family are there, some aunts and cousins are there, and lots and lots of framily (friends that are so close they become family). It's the only time of year we get to see them, so this visit is a pretty big deal. We rent the house next to Randy's parents, and it's awesome. The owners, Mike and Barb Peplinski, are the nicest folks you'd ever want to meet! Each year we do a project or two for them as a thank you for their kindness to our family. This year I painted a coffee table to match the two end tables that I painted for them last summer. 


I painted a snook (left) and a tarpon (right) last summer. Both fish are gorgeous in their own special way, but I'll save that for another day and another post!...


My brother-in-law, Captain Gregg McKee of Wildfly Charters, is an amazing charter fisherman, fish expert, and art critic. As far as brother-in-laws go, mine is the best. Gregg is my go-to-for-everything-you-need-to-know-about-Florida-fish guide. He should be yours too! Not only is he amazing at teaching people how to fish, he also takes incredibly beautiful photographs of the them and it's been an invaluable resourceHe shares his photographs with me so that I can paint them- it's like winning the fish reference lottery if fish are what you like to paint! 


I looked through several photographs of redfish, asked lots of questions...


Check out all of that glitter...


These fish are beautiful, and tasty...


Gregg and Randy are my best critiquers, offering advice on colors to use in the fins and body, the position and curve of the fish I'm painting, and little details that I wouldn't know to look for that a fisherman would notice right away. I'm fortunate to have so many great eyeballs looking at the things I'm making to help me paint my very best!


Florida redfish are one of my absolute favorite fish to paint. Depending on the season, their colors can be darker reddish oranges and rusts or brighter golds and bronzes. If the lighting is just right, you can see blue, green and purple iridescent hints in the fins. They are truly lovely...