Susan Dexter's Blog, page 12

September 15, 2013

Bridgewater BookFest

Picture    Bridgewater, Bridgeport, Bridgeville, Ambridge-- the Pittsburgh area doesn't make it easy! For me at least, these little Ohio River towns arereally easy to confuse. Here’s how I tell them apart—Bridgewater’s The one with the annual BookFest, a celebration of all things pertaining to the written word.

 

   We had a great day! Fine weather, a full “Author Arena” in the big tent, crowds of people interested in writing, reading, publishing. There were authors, publishers, artists, cover designers, and the street was lined with booths featuring used books, art made from books, paintings that could be book covers, pretty pens to sign books with, great food.

   Cathy Seckman, Darlene Torday and Teddi Black were there, besides me. Teddi took this photo.

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Published on September 15, 2013 06:41

September 1, 2013

Plein Air Update

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Published on September 01, 2013 04:26

August 30, 2013

Plein Air Painting Competition

Picture This is my entry in this year's Open Air Fair Plein Air Painting Competition. Five artists went out to paint whatsoever they chose in the heat and humidity of late August in Canfield Ohio, using oils, acrylics, pastels, markers. I went to the South Ring next to the Pony Palace and painted the ring and the barns. Waited for just the right pony to come in for a practice session--this Welsh pony reminds me of Max, my gray Arab. So yes, I painted the ring, and then I painted the pony into it. The judging is happening tonight, but whether I get a ribbon or not, I am very happy with my painting! Oh, I used chalk pastels. Size is 16" x 20".
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Published on August 30, 2013 19:31

August 26, 2013

Bridgewater BookFest

Picture    On September 14th, Bridgewater Pennsylvania will be pretty much given over to the printed word—I was very impressed with the 2012 BookFest, my first. I only knew Bridgewater as an Ohio River town full of restaurants. Imagine a huge tent filled with authors, fiction, non-fiction, fantasy, science fiction, children’s books, poetry—every book you buy can be signed by its author. Usually you have to pay a fortune to attend an event like that. This one’s free!

   Plus, the main street is lined with booths from local churches and organizations, selling art, tasty food—and used books! There are author talks in the 1810 Tavern.

   I’ll be there. I’ll have the entire Wizard’s Destiny trilogy available, plus The Wandering Duke, available at long last in print. I’ll have book marks to promote the revamp of Thistledown for Kindle and Nook. I’ll have a really coolo table display, including a model of a portion of Crogen Castle—see if you can figure out where Tristan sleeps!

   And, because she has designed the covers for all four of my CreateSpace books, Teddi Black will back me up at my table.

   So, not only will shoppers be able to buy my books without paying shipping—they’ll be able to have them signed by both the author and the cover designer. Key-chains, bookmarks, post cards and possibly a few one-of-a-kind t-shirts will be thrown in with purchase. Best deal you’ll get this side of Kovelir!

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Published on August 26, 2013 05:52

August 19, 2013

Canfield Fair

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One of my regular vacation activities is demonstrating art at the Canfield Fair. (Mahoning County, Ohio, for those in less blest parts of the world.) This year will be no different: artists from the Trumbull Area Artists will fill the gazebo behind the Palace of Fine Arts every day from 1100 Am—2:00 PM. We paint in pastels and watercolors and oils and acrylic. Colored pencils, wood block prints, weaving, hand-spinning will appear also. And I will have multiple opportunities to sample the wonderful foods the fair offers, and take many photos from which to paint my pastels. I also regularly exhibit in the Fair’s Art Show—wish me luck! The photo below is last year's Plein Air painting competition. Mine is the giant pumpkin lower right. (Pink ribbon, Homorable mention

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Published on August 19, 2013 18:25

Grape Leaves

Picture     What’s most prolific in the garden this year? Well, it’s not the tomatoes. Everyone’s garlic seems to have failed, so the garlic cloves I companion-planted around the roses have actually produced just as well as everyone else’s—or better. The blueberries are done. The peach tree is loaded, but slow to tree-ripen. (Great in Manischewitz Cream Peach though)

   But the grape leaves! Following a recipe from a Greek cookbook, I have been making “vine leaves”. Last year I started harvesting first whenever I needed to cut the wild vines back. I have never seen a single grape, but the leaves blanch and roll just great! This year I am preparing to paint the house, so I mixed up the rice filling, harvested leaves and got the pot simmering on the stove while I went out to cut the vines out of my Alba York rose bush, “Cecily”. They are delicious!

   Today, I took the bigger vines I had set aside when I trimmed, and I made two nice bag rustic wreaths. This is actually much moiré fun than what I did next, which was scrape the old paint off the walls in Cecily’s corner—she’s safely trussed up with a couple of rubber tie-downs—and clean out the gutters above, which can’t be reached when the corner is full of grape vines and wild morning glory vines running through the rose bush, Sure, it takes longer to harvest rather than just ripping out things before I paint, but those grape leaves sure are tasty! Also organic—and free!

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Published on August 19, 2013 18:10

August 16, 2013

Thistledown

Picture    I have improved the formatting of Thistledown for Kindle and Nook and since I just painted a large pastel of a unicorn, I’m going to add a new cover by Teddi Black. We plan to have new, really cool promotional bookmarks ready for the Bridgewater BookFest on September 14th.

   I still believe in my heart that Thistledown can find traditional YA publication—even in these days of teen vamps, were-everythings, avatars and Game of Thrones wannabes, there is room for the kind of Fantasy that led me into the field in the first place. (And let me just say here, I am a huge Game of Thrones fan—the books, and the HBO series, not entirely the same critter at all, no indeed. Books, always give the fuller experience. TV can rise and fall on the casting and costumes.) Not every reader likes to read the same thing

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Published on August 16, 2013 19:40

WoolFest

Picture    Possibly the best thing about joining the Canfield Spinners Guild was the almost immediate invitation to the annual Woolfest at the Lake MetroParks Farm Park outside Chardon Ohio. They sell raw fleeces from their shearing demonstrations—straight off the sheep. I bought my first Jacob sheep fleece the first year—Jake’s who turns out to be a regular at the Woolfest, since he is the babysitter wether (neutered sheep) for the FarmPark rams. No secret—I like Jake’s fleece! (Jacob sheep are spotted, so their long wool is white, black, gray and brown—all from the same sheep. When you over-dye it , you get amazing variegated yarns.)

   But this year, when I heard they’d be shearing Pete, the Jacob ram, I was ready to cheat on Jake. (I’d already bought Janice’s fleece, and Jake’s had gone to another spinner in my guild) It’s not just because Pete has 3—of his original 4—horns, while Jake has only 2 little horns, like Janice. (Yes, girl Jacob sheep have horns too!) I got to photograph Pete before, during and after the shearing—and I got to help shear him, when I accepted the call for volunteers. Hand clippers, like giant Japanese grass shears. You hold the blades!

Here’s Pete, his fleece is now scoured (washed) and dyed. It spins great.

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Published on August 16, 2013 19:32

June 5, 2013

The Wandering Duke Launches!

Picture No fanfare. I had the proof ordered before I went to New York, and Teddi and I did such a good job on the pre-production, there were no changes. I approved the proof, and for the first time Book Four of The Warhorse of Esdragon is available in print! Look for it at my signings, or on Amazon.

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Published on June 05, 2013 22:07

Tristan Does the Big Apple

    What can I say? It was supposed to be spring. It was cold and windy.  Tristan’s kind of weather, and upstate New York did have a great deal of snow that weekend. I’m glad I wore my “It’s Gonna Be A Long, Cold Winter” Channadran tee—it matches a nice wool cardigan, and layered nicely under a raincoat.. And so I took Tristan to NYC.  And we encountered Valadan in the window of the Lladro store!

    Highlights: The Chelsea Market, and the Food Art. Grand Central Station and spotting Orion painted on the ceiling. Visiting the Society of Illustrators to view the Student Show, and getting to see the third floor dining room and bar, going up the stairwell past an N.C. Wyeth Robin Hood oil painting. The booths in the Union Square Farmers’ Market, displaying everything from morels to Saxon Merino yarn to maple sugar candy from Deep Mountain Maple. Going to a Garage Sale—in a parking garage! Fresh-squeezed grapefruit juice and a chocolate croissant at City Bakery. Trout stuffed with oatmeal at St. Andrew’s Scottish Restaurant. The Empire State Building lit Red, White and Blue for Memorial Day. My new Nikon Coolpix performed well.

    Saw a nice big Barnes & Noble. Ignored it.

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Published on June 05, 2013 21:31