Saturday, August 28, 2010

Turquoise for Mini Boss Maeve and A Blueberry


This is the pattern, thread and beads I will use to finish the trim - by default.  I wanted to use the same turquoise that is in the motif, but ran out.  So, I picked this colour, from the giveaway stash, as it is  the closest match.

I had planned to tat Ruth  Perry's edging,  but it is overwhelming for the little hat.  Nice pattern though.

 Motif Challenge #10

Once again, the coffee shop helped alleviate the tedium of the simple border.


 It was there that I began to think of this, while I was tatting the border:


A number of years ago, I took an Arscura art course about colour from a local Beach artist; it was illuminating.  Though I was not into an art, (except always photography) or craft-type endeavour, I was hoping the lessons would stimulate my writing as that is what I was immersed in at the time. It did.  I learned a lot about my craft, and about myself during this amazing course.

Lately, those lessons have been popping back into in my thoughts, and all the stuff that I learned in an unusual way - as this is Rudolph Steiner's methodology -  is becoming useful all these years later in a completely different medium.  

The blueberry was on the table and I kept looking at it, wondering what it was trying to say to me.  Then, I realized that the problems I have been having with purples and lilacs and mauves are all solved by that little berry.

I know when I add berries to my oatmeal and they heat up, the oatmeal around the berry turns blueish  till I further disturb the cereal with a spoon to reveal the pinky-lilac colour leaking out closer to the berry...

Aha!  BLUE + RED = PURPLE!

I realize that regular colour class will teach this as a rule, but I learned this experientially, and so I now know that when I mix the oatmeal, I actually see the blue and the red in the porridge. The infamous blue-purple and red-purple dilemma is now solved for me, as I never could figure why purple was a cold or a warm colour, a red tone or a blue one.!

It all makes sense and oatmeal is smart.

Anon,

5 comments:

  1. Ah, blueberries! And I thought they were just delicious! Who knew there was a lesson to be learned? : )

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  2. Eating oatmeal is good for the mind!! Neat thought!!

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  3. Love the edging and the colours go really well. As for Blueberry's one word YUM!

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  4. Hey Fox!
    My husband is in Canada tonight (way out west) and will have a cup like yours in the morning. He mentioned going to Tim Horton's and was surprised I even had a clue about the place. Thanks for keeping us apprised on the local flavor (blue berries included)!

    That's a pretty edging for the hat! I really like the Ruth Perry edging, but can see that it would be too much for that tiny hat.

    :) Ann

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  5. lessons learned when you figure it out for yourself will stay with you longer and mean more then lessons learned by listening to a teacher talk. congrats on figuring out the differences in purples. the same goes for greens too- yellow, or blue.

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