Collage on Canvas

Finnabair’s “Imagine” class – at last!

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2010 I started with papercrafting. It was an unusually hot summer. One of my closest friends wanted to make cards, so we took some papercrafting classes that very summer.

I was mostly drawn to make notebooks. But it was fun to make cards too. Then, just in the autumn, the same year, I bought a Swedish magazine called “Scrapbooking m.m.” and it had an interview with Finnabair. I’m not sure anything has been the same, ever since. I just can’t get tired of her, of her art, of her classes. Of her heavy body glue.

Anyhow. I missed “Imagination” class! The first time she came to Stockholm, I got to know about it too late. Just the very same weekend I got to know that she’d be teaching “Imagine”. I missed it with such a small margine… just a couple of hours… I could almost have been able to be there in time! (Hmm, but at that time it was sold out as well, of course.)

The second time she was in Stockholm, I attended to all her classes. Since then I’ve been to her classes many times, in Lund and Sjöbo (Sweden) as well. But for years, I still wanted to take the Imagine class. I finally did. Because it’s now online:

Imagine class (online)

This is how my canvas turned out. I made some of the acorns from a home made mould, the same used for sugarpaste and marzipan. I use paper clay instead.

When you use this much embellishments, paper clay is the trick. It’s not heavy. It’s not expensive. You can use a ton of it without it breaking your economy! If you mix it with chipboard, resin, grungeboard, lace, metal trinkets and even my grandma Elsa’s old worn kitchen towels (they had holes in them but I refused to throw them away – Come on, they had been my grandma Elsa’s!) my canvas transformed to a true Imagine canvas.

At last!

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Collage on Canvas

Making Magic or Where You Find the Unicorn

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My canvas from Wanderlust. 30×30 cm.

This is my canvas from Wanderlust 2017, from the lesson by Mary Wangerin called “Making Magic”.
(The quote is from Roald Dahl: “Those who don’t believe in magic will never find it”.)

I think this lesson was the hardest lesson ever! I felt a million times that this won’t be publishable at all. Filling the canvas with paint, over and over and over, tissue paper, coloured paper (with and without strucucture) and continuing…. (The hardest thing is not getting everything muddled up!)
But the magic happened… and then it just took over. (I couldn’t help all this painting! It just happend!) But that’s the magic that happens when you paint! Some call it inspiration. Sometimes it just starts with lots of hard work. Like now. But it did happen!

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Collage on Canvas

The Angel of Heart Whispers

Last year I bought Kelly Rae Roberts book “Taking flight”.

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“Taking flight” is about doing changes to your life. To be honest to yourself, especially when it comes to dreams. To stop and listen.

This year, I am taking her online course “Spirit Wings”, and it’s supposed to be a course following the book really close. Through the years Kelly Rae Roberts added rather much of her own ideas on spirituality to the material. The six lessons follow the book’s themes closely. The techniques are different, an extra bonus, and I enjoy watching the process of her making the paintings. Still, I liked the psycology approach in the book much better.

Here is my first painting. (I am republishing it from my old blog.)

This is my Angel of Heart Whispers. I call her “Kardemummabullsängeln från Odensbacken” (“The Angel of Cardamom buns from Odensbacken”). It’s a strange name, but it’s a strange painting/collage, all about dreams from my childhood unfulfilled, now being lifted up to the surface again by life.

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The writing says: “Dare to continue dreaming your “impossible” dreams. Don’t give them up, they’re a part of you.”

It’s a time of change.

A time to dream.