December 10, 2012

You Might Be an Artist If...

News that Inspires Imagination! The Preferred Place for Clay Push Molds.  December 2012 Issue of My Molds Newsletter.
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The Preferred Place for Clay Push Molds
Dear Readers,

Tis the season to be jolly, give joy and love others. Here at Mad About Molds, we believe that now is also the time to give your molding creations to your friends a family. Handmade trinkets such as jewelry, gift toppers and ornaments will remind your loved ones of you for years to come. Did you read our newsletter last month, when we posted about Hand-made products? In-case you missed it, here it is again. Last months issue was chuck full of goodies, so it's worth another look.

This month we have a cute article that might remind you of your younger self as an emerging artist. Or it might confirm your suspicions of a child you know. Either way, it's a fun read and you are welcome to share this with a friend who you might have this in common with. This month’s article. “You Might Be an Artist If...

Please take the time to sit back and enjoy this issue of My Molds!

All the best,
Marjorie with Mad About Molds
News that Inspires Imagination!




"Let the Holiday Season Begin!"
 

Create Homemade Christmas Ornaments


With five simple molds you can make this beautiful angel. They make great ornaments, package toppers or even candle rings!
Instructions to make this beautiful piece can be found on our website here. (Larger pictures and easier to read.)

 



It's time to start thinking about personalized gifts for Christmas, and this is just the project to make it easy. All you need is a few molds and a little clay. Instructions can be found here. (Larger pictures and easier to read.)
 




Featured Molds:



Find the molds above here.






You Might Be an Artist If...

 
Some people just always knew they wanted to be an artist (I’m lumping craftspeople in here, too, because I refuse to discuss possible differences), but other people came to their talent late in life. They may have endured emotional hardship and isolation because their talents were misunderstood.
Maybe this guide will help you recognize your own inner artist, or help you diagnose a loved one before it’s too late.

You might be an artist if…

…when you were little, you drew/colored/painted to an extreme extent on your walls/bathtub/little sister or dog. Especially if this was an unusual event in your family—the idea that anyone would need much more than a couple sheets of paper to draw—and your family is still talking about it. Fifty. Years. Later.

…when you were presented with a food you didn’t like (canned peas, or sauerkraut), you didn’t just hide it under your napkin. You did interesting things with it. Like sculpted a mountain with a little road, and decorated it with tiny pieces of broccoli for trees. (maybe...)

…you heard the phrase, “Well, you can’t make a living with art” more than twice in your lifetime. Ask yourself: Why are people always telling you that? (not me)

…you liked to collect “cool stuff,” and your definition of cool stuff wasn’t baseball cards but rocks, shells, funky pieces of old metal, string, driftwood, etc. Bonus points if your family called it “trash” and kept tossing it out, leaving you broken-hearted. (I think so :)

…other girls played with “Barbie” dolls, but you made her house out of tissue boxes, made teensy ashtrays for her out of lumps of candle wax, and sewed her dresses out of socks. Bonus points if you altered Barbie dramatically for an art project. (totally!)

…your folks took you to a craft fair, and you spent all day in the potters’ guild tent, watching them demonstrate, and you even forgot to eat, and returned to your parents completely covered in mud…er, raw clay.

…you once got a paint-by-number set and wondered where the rest of the colors were, and why they only gave you enough to make one picture. (it's called mixing paint right?)

…after reading the story of how American artist Benjamin West made his very first paintbrush with hairs he pulled from his cat’s tail, mysterious bald patches suddenly appeared on Fluffy.

…your parents began hiding scissors from you at a very early age, and school pictures of your siblings always showed them with very odd haircuts. Bonus points if your guinea pig had a Mohawk or dreads.

…you never had a favorite color. Who could pick just one?! (I still do that!)

…the other kids in school were always asking you to draw stuff for them. Bonus points if they were willing to pay. (or in candy)

…you noticed things, like on sunny days, shadows on snow are…blue! Bonus points if you actually painted them like that. Double bonus points if you got in trouble in art class for doing that.

Be forewarned. Early intervention is helpful, but you never really lose the desire to simply make stuff. And remember—no one who truly cares for you should ever try to make you lose that desire! (for sure!)
 




 

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