Sherry Meidell's Blog, page 33

October 8, 2016

#inktober Day 8

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#inktober Day 8 Sherry Meidell


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Published on October 08, 2016 06:50

October 7, 2016

#Inktober Day 7

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#inktober Day 6


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Published on October 07, 2016 06:07

October 6, 2016

Inktober #6

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3inktober Day 6 Sherry Meidell


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Published on October 06, 2016 07:30

October 5, 2016

Inktober #5

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Inktober #5 Sherry Meidell


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Published on October 05, 2016 07:21

October 4, 2016

Inktober Day 4

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#inktober


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Published on October 04, 2016 06:35

October 3, 2016

Inktober Day #3

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Inktober Day 3


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Published on October 03, 2016 07:04

October 2, 2016

Inktober Day #2

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Inktober #2 2016


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Published on October 02, 2016 07:18

October 1, 2016

A Little Bit Of Ink

I have found a place to do art where ever I have lived. That included when I was living at home with my parents. Higgins indelible black ink came in these great looking bottles with droppers on the top. Drawing in ink with indelible, permanent black ink on a little lamp table might not have been the best idea. Eventually the indelible ink became a indelible spot on the living room rug. My parents were very supportive of my art. We moved the table a little to the right and covered the spot.


This month is inktober, thanks to Jake Parker so every day I will be putting up an ink drawing and yes I will still be dipping a quill tipped pen into some ink. I hope it will not involve moving any furniture.


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#inktober Day 1


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Published on October 01, 2016 06:59

September 5, 2016

To Puppet or Not to Puppet

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A book on how to make puppets


Sometimes when you are doing one thing, you get thrown something else that sends you off on a new adventure or project. This happened to me when I was presenting at the WIFYR, Writing and Illustrating for Young Readers Conference this year. Amy White met me at the door, helped me with my class and and took care of me. I got a chance to see her book, “ Dressing the Naked Hand” by Amy White, Mark H. Pulham & Dallin Blankenship. It was one of those books that you like the looks of, so you buy it and later on it sucks you into a project with both feet.


 


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Hauling out the old Singer sewing machine


I have many different ideas blowing around in my head and when two of those ideas collide, look out. “Dressing the Naked Hand” tells you how to make puppets and that idea collided with our family camp out trip. Wouldn’t it be nice to make puppets for all the grandkids so they could finish putting on hair and clothes up at the cabin? It seemed like a fairly harmless idea to begin with. At some point you realize that you have 12 grandkids and it’s going to take a long time to make puppets and you only have so many days left before you leave for the family adventure. By this time your only choice is to buckle down and bring out your old sewing skills which have lain dormant since junior high home economics class where your teacher said to the whole class, “I don’t know how to grade Sherry because her work is exact but it takes her too long to do it.” You don’t have “too long to do it“ because you can’t give one grandkid a puppet while the next grandkid looks up at you with those big eyes and says, “But grandmother, where is my puppet?”


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Puppet mania


You can get a lot of sewing done between 10 p.m. and midnight. My husband could hear raucous laughter coming from the kitchen. When you put eyes on those puppets they come to life. I was tending a three year old grandchild who was watching TV. I put a puppet on my hand and held it behind her right shoulder and in my best high puppet voice (which in retrospect might have been a bit creepy) said, “Hi, little girl.” She took one sideways glance, stiffened up, stood up, and looking straight ahead walked down to grandpa who couldn’t understand all the words but understood “Grandma, creepy, puppet.” Well now I only had 11 puppets to make.


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The reward


It is fun to stuff twelve puppets in a box with blue hair, odd buttons and an assortment of clothes. It is even more fun to watch the creativity that occurs once the grandkids get their hands on the puppets. And the greatest of all joys is seeing a grandchild with one of your creepy little puppets on his hand and a smile on his face.


My sister said, “Oh how fun. I think I would like to do that.” I told her. “Great. It takes hardly any time at all. I’ll lend you the book.”



Above is the video of the finished project.


 


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Published on September 05, 2016 20:51

June 19, 2016

Who Knew at the End of the Day

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I woke up early on Saturday. I had to head out to the SCBWI and WIFYR Pro Day. I had my ipad and had prepared my presentation on Picture Books from Spark to Book Dummy or from Spark to Book, Dummy.


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Who knew that at the end of the day I would end up at the Great Salt Lake with two people I didn’t know, and hadn’t met until that morning. But here we are at the Great Salt Lake: Rotem Moscovich, the Senior Editor from Disney-Hyperion, in New York City, Claudia Mills, a great chapter book writer from Colorado, and me, a children’s book illustrator from Utah. To make things even more interesting, the picture was taken by a Navajo from the four corners area who said he had given up his canoe and had bought a yacht.


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Rotem and Claudia wanted to go to the Great Salt Lake. They just wanted to touch it …until they saw the swarm of brine flies that covered the shore line. So I touched the lake, and they touched the hand that touched the lake, then quickly washed their hands. Sometimes you get connected to people. You hear them talk about their publishing house. You hear them read from one of their chapter books and you chat while you are driving out to touch the Great Salt Lake.


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Published on June 19, 2016 20:05