Friday, December 23, 2011

Metal: Industrial Heritage, Plasma Cutters and the Joy of Salvage...

Sure, Metal looks promising from the outside. You've got a graphically strong, rusted sign adorning the upper edge of an industrial brick building, a glass block window adding gloss, but not giving much away; and a single, strikingly realistic stalk of corn, surprisingly graceful given its medium. I had visited their web site* before popping in for a visit, but I was still a little unclear...Well, about a lot of things. 

On the most basic level, this was my first encounter with a metal design and fabrication studio. Services provided span a broad spectrum, from automobile restoration, architectural and sculptural design, to exploring the idea of an energy generating merry-go-round**, to physically realizing an individual's concept of a piece of furniture. The tools they use range from the same kind of blacksmith's tools that have been used for centuries to a state-of-the-art CNC Plasma cutter, which has a blue shield around it, so no one is blinded.***
 
On top of that, Metal, co-owned by Claudette Jocelyn Stern and John Daniel Walters, sports loftier (though not unrealistic) goals of becoming a hub, a coming together of inspiration, intellect and expertise...To that end, they envision holding workshops, concerts and other events in the combined studio and gallery space. Text from the about page of their website announces, 
 
"We are a team of finders and makers who reclaim and repurpose metal objects, utilizing traditional and digital processes to fashion new lives for them. We are a hub of educators, inquisitive minds and problem solvers; 
a community of environmentally conscious inventors, artists, and metal enthusiasts."
 
* Gorgeous design, tons of photos. Prepare to drool, ohhhh, my graphic design buddies...

** They functioned in a consulting capacity for an institution; they did not develop said merry-go-round.

*** I think that's the reason. I may have made that up. And yes, that dubious snippet is about all that I absorbed about the plasma cutter, even though John was nice enough to offer me an explanation. In one ear...

So, no wonder that once I opened the door, I was blown away by all the visual stimulation crammed into the gallery space. I couldn't stop taking photos. Vintage signs, old school lockers (...bleh), timeworn tools, sculptures of undergarments and tin men, jars of evil looking hooks, gas nozzles, tool boxes and cast metal sculptures of tool boxes...

Beyond the gallery space, the studio space opens up beautifully: light filled, exposed rafter beams. Wish I was able to get a good shot of that! Resident canine and goodwill ambassador, Rosie, trotted between the two spaces, reminding visitors that she was ready to be friends and that really, the best possible course of action would be to please throw her ball. 




Has YOUR trashcan been inspected by UL? Didn't think so.

Love him!
Interior of "Blue Truck," by Andrew John Cecil







"Support System" by Susan Byrnes

I liked this more before I learned it was a nasal speculum.

"Tetanus" jewelry line by Terri Sarris. Heh. I love the collective impact: I'd fancy it as a wall hanging.
This ball's not going to throw itself, people.
For more photos, check out the flickr set here. Or, you know, look at actual professional photos on their web site.

Arbor web delves into Metal here, as does Concentrate Media

Both owners bring rich backgrounds to their business. Claudette Jocelyn Stern plays in numerous media, including iron casting, painting, collage, film, writing and fiber arts. Works that held special appeal for me: Baker's Dozen and The Hub. I also love this rusted caged bottle set with heart lock. I *believe* this sculpture from the Metal site is hers, though it is not labeled as such. [Nope! John Walters did it]. Pandora's soda? Last extant six pack of Mead of the Gods?

In a huge renovation project, she also transformed her home into the Nautilus House, which was only the second house in Michigan to be awarded a Platinum Rating by the LEED green building system in 2009. 

The University of Michigan's Explore Magazine featured John Daniel Walters when he was pursuing his MFA there. His artistic globetrotting includes stints in Chile, Ecuador, the Easter Islands and Cuba. Of Walters, Endi Poskovic, associate professor of art and design, said: 

"I have never met a person who has had, on one hand, extremely acute knowledge of contemporary art and critical theory… but at the same time have this passion for machines and objects that he has actually built. It’s remarkable. I can’t change a tire. Are there people like him out there? I’m sure there are, but I have never encountered any.”
A couple shots from his MFA thesis installation here and here.

Phew! Well, that's about all for now. It will be interesting to see how Metal will grow itself and the community. And hey, 2012 could be the year YOU take up metalworking...




Thursday, December 22, 2011

Sounds familiar, but I can't quite place it.

"He sits in the sun rearranging the past, and tries to keep warm. He knows words, says them, but has forgotten their meaning. They hang all about, sparkling, just out of reach, the crystals on a chandelier he can't light. His memory rings like a wind chime, sounding clear and bright, then dwindles to random jingles and clinks."

-- Another from Lou Beach's 420 Characters

While AV Club reviewer Rowan Kaiser appreciated what Beach did within the character limit, s/he thought it wound up being somewhat gimmicky and fell short of being satisfying -- maybe it would have been better if it were geared more towards jokes. On my end, I liked how clever and funny he could be, but I also really fancied the in medias res ones, which tended to have more heft to them. 

420 Characters provides a nice accompaniment to the following: waiting in post office lines, taking a hot bath, eating bi bim bop. Con: speed readers are done before their tea has cooled.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Lou Beach, You're Killing Me.

While I'm on a Hunger Games jag, I suspected it would be exceedingly rude to bring my borrowed copy of Mockingjay into the steaming bathtub with me last night. So I mussed up 420 Characters instead, which is also a shameful choice, since the packaging and production is so very nice. The paper itself has a lovely, smooth finish and the red bookcloth of the hardcover (imprinted with spare gold lettering) is just the kind of the thing that urges you to  carry it around, even though there's no need. But, at the tail end of the last show/market I have scheduled for the season, I was feeling wiped out and scattered. Would I really absorb more details from the (first volume of) biography of Henri Matisse, abandoned a few months ago? Hell, no. Super short tales it is.

With respect to the collective brevity of the volume, it could easily be read in an afternoon. But I don't want to be done. I haven't wanted to share so much of a book since I was all about My Mother She Killed Me, My Father He Ate Me. Lou Beach's diminutive narratives are tantalizing and weird; darkly humored and sporadically peopled with hard-edged gangster types and hostile women. Phrasing gems made me laugh and exclaim. Take this:

Her ferocity left him indisposed to fight back and finally even to listen. She squinted, eyed him like a pot of boiling water watches a raw egg. She filled the salt shaker. "What's
the matter, Jerome?"

That's it! You can build it from there. But he has given you the heart of it, the volatile dynamics that will likely span the life of that unfortunate relationship. It'll all end in tears/rage/violence. Things, if not people, will be (/already are) broken. I love that the question superficially speaks to care and potential understanding, but is clearly a hostile challenge.

Elsewhere, a longer one (nine lines, whew!) begins: "The road clutches at the side of the mountain as if it's afraid of falling." A landscape instantly conveyed as dizzying and  precarious. Love it! These began as Facebook status updates. I wonder how many friends he gained, throughout the development of this project? I'm surprised to see he only had 161 subscribers. 

An NPR interview with him underscores my growing suspicion that practically all art I'm drawn to springs from collecting and layering. The piece informs listeners that his "inspiration for the stories comes from people walking down the street, hearing bits of conversation or seeing something on TV" before quoting him directly: "Because I'm a collage artist in my visual work, this is sort of the same way — the process of taking bits and pieces and putting them together until a narrative forms..."

But here's the one that caused me to burst out! Repeatedly! As if a rat-sized spider had just shot down to the bathwater:

I HAD NEVER used a chain saw. When I plunged it into the neck of the tree, it stuck and I pulled hard, fell backwards. The saw sliced off part of my scalp, deli style, on the way
down, then sputtered, scuttled away like a mad crab. I passed out, woke later to a low     growl. Lucky was lapping at the pool of blood next to my head. I was glad to see him, his
yellow eyes.

Aiiiiiigggghh! First, what a great setup! The first sentence has you grimace and shake your head. And then! the descriptive "deli style" and "scuttled away like a mad crab"!! Perhaps because I worked at a deli during college summers, it was especially effective for me: ohhhhh, those smooth, spinning blades peeling through *everything* like butter... And then the finish with the new threat from a loved pet...Kudos!

{This also reminded me of one of my favorite stories from Laurie Anderson's "The Ugly One With the Jewels" -- "The Geographic North Pole." Do check it out. And if you've never listened to the whole CD, you're in for a treat. Trippy, intellectual tales from an impossibly cool life.}
 
You can read more here and listen to Ian "cocksucker" McShane lend his rich voice to "Ikea" and others here.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Hello, I'm Snow White/Hello, I'm Ariel

Well, Hello Stranger.

Wow, a week since my last post. Really? I have folders of photos to base other posts on, but work has been busy-busy and I have lacked wherewithal by the time night rolls around. And that night is rolling around earlier and earlier, innit? Well, no matter: roughly a week until the shortest day of the year. Then we begin the slow climb out. Right? One of these years I'll buy little ice cleats to wear for runs and then I'll be a little less skittish of the icy spots/resentful of those who do not clear their paths.

Today had some lovely bright spots to it: first, I got to meet a customer who bought several prints for his two year old's room, after seeing the framed versions hanging in the hospital. Yay! Those were his first art purchases, to boot and he was pretty excited. The girl characters in some of my designs reminded him of his daughter. "Before I had kids, I didn't love them, but once we had her, she's just amazing. And her personality is like mine, but she looks just like my wife. She's a risk taker, more of a tomboy, loves animals." I *love* to think of a little girl, growing up with my woodblocks around her, feeling they are hers! What a fun idea. And she'd probably have completely different ideas about them than I do: different rules, names, back-story, etc. Or maybe they'd merely be background to her and she would barely notice them on a conscious level, but later in life, having been within the fabric of her younger years, they'd surface, unexpectedly. 

I also had the opportunity to spend time with a good friend of mine. For the first hour, a babysitter entertained the little girls downstairs, while we got to catch up, sip wine and nibble on olives and havarti. Songs and vehement protests periodically drifted up, at which point, we'd pause and raise an eyebrow; nothing escalated. Eventually, the sitter ventured off into the night and the little ones hung about the stairwell. They know me, but there's usually a gap between visits, rendering me something of a disruption.

The younger of the two looks at me somewhat wonderingly. "I didn't know you were HERE."

"Well, I came when you were downstairs. Here I am!" She blinks at me. They both have luxurious, curly hair and wide eyes; they are dressed in matching red velour play suits with gingerbread houses on their tops. The younger one blinks her eyes at me again.

"I am 3 or 4." At first I don't understand her, so she has to repeat herself a couple times. Her elder sister grows impatient and horns in: "I'm FIVE. I can pick her up!" Oh, really? I say. "But I'm not supposed to," she adds.

"You can pick me up," says the younger one. And so I do. She watches the side of my face as I talk to her mother; one little hand reaches around to feel my fingers and navigate my silver rings. I love when little kids do this. Many years ago, in a different life, when I worked in the children's section of Borders Books in downtown Ann Arbor, I would periodically do children's story hour with the wonderfully warm and irreverent Helen Smith. Helen knew how to make all the kids feel liked/loved (well, and really the whole staff for that matter); and could also turn around and deliver some wonderfully wicked cracks. So anyway, she always let me read aloud the picture books I was super excited about. On a few occasions I temporarily inhabited one of those traveling full body character costumes.*

These things are shipped from store to store in a crate type thing, with nary a cleaning between locations. The heads are heavy and have stiff wire underpinnings. Most are too tall for me (try finding someone to play Clifford the Big Red Dog~~). The moment you zip up and hoist up the head, you start sweating bullets. You exude dampness, which calls forth the miasma collectively created by all previous occupants. You feel like you can't get enough air -- but the air you DO get, you don't really want. Think gym socks and remainders of a hoagie, abandoned in the bottom of a gym bag. Your vision is impaired. Your fabric arms are too long, so your "hands" flop about below your proper hands. Someone helps you onto the elevator and you wonder what kind of crowd there will be and what the overriding tone is.

*Ok, so I did an image search and I could only find totally creepy ones. I swear I wasn't creepy. There is also an unfortunately named costume rental place in Philadelphia, called Rent-A-Body. Um, no.

When the little seating arena is full, it's akin to a toddler rock star experience: some pogo with excitement, others shout the character's name -- joyfully/gleefully/emphatically. Some stand immediately in front of you to share the most exciting thing of the moment: new shoes/little brother/they know you/ their age is, their name is. The older attendees were more problematic. The more brazen among them would stand nearby or stride over and without pretense, try to yank off your gloved paw. You'd counter, in your clumsy fashion, though not like you could say anything. If you were lucky, your handler hadn't wandered off and they'd intervene. I never had one successfully reveal me.

My favorites however, were the shy ones. If you waved, they couldn't quite bring themselves to wave back. They were excited, but not sure how to proceed. They held their excitement quietly. Once Helen had settled them down and story hour began, a little one would sit nearby. Sometimes they would start a few inches away, but they would slowly whittle the distance down. A small hand would snake over to pet your furry arm, or a torso would slowly lean until a tousled head was resting on you. Listening to a story, sucking one's thumb, petting the story book character next to them.

Back at the house, the clothing was thankfully less furry and cumbersome. Adult conversation alternated with show-and-tell episodes. I was introduced to Disney princesses and my little Ponies, a Barbie house that was way more substantial than my sister's Malibu beach house or the teetering townhouses of yore. Threeorfour grew dismayed with my lagging Lego attentions. "Looooook. Watch me, this is going to be AWESOME." She combines a pony-tailed figure with solid bricks and wheels. We appreciate the wheel action.

The time for leave-taking arrives. While my friend gathers things elsewhere, I pop into their coat closet. Threeorfour eyes me suspiciously: "What are you DOING?"

"I'm getting my jacket. I'm not leaving this minute. I'm leaving, but you're leaving, too."

"You're leaving with US in OUR CAR."

"No. But I'll see you soon. You're going to decorate a gingerbread house with me." She furrows her brow. She is clearly weighing the situation. Gummi bears redeem the moment. She remembers eating candy at my house. "I eat gummi bears at parties!" This is lovely, this is joyful. I think to check for gummi bears. Shoes are retrieved and freedom of choice is granted.

"I'm wearing POOL SHOES!" Threeorfour happily kicks up her feet. "What?" Mom says, "No~~"

Older sister and I stand a few steps back, observing. Five has appropriate footwear. She leans over to me, to gleefully confide, "She's doing everything WRONG." Her eyes shine. It's good to be five and to know what's what.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Catalog Madness, Part Two: Less Ranty, More Talky.

Feeling pressed for time and no notion what to buy for those truly important people in your life? Have you sworn off Amazon because of their nasty little $5 anti-local campaign ? Luckily the catalogs keep rolling into my mailbox and I feel generous enough to share with you. Because I am *that* generous and you are *that* special. Nothing to top Butler Santa or furring your entire living room, but perhaps you have discovered your own pockets of gold in the meantime. Here a few items to fill in the holes:

1.) Is your spare roll of toilet paper normally hiding beneath a crocheted doll skirt, with the doll standing in the hole? Have you begun to feel this is a bit passe?
Look no further than "Paper Pots."

According to Uncommon Goods, these transform your tp or tissues into "a sculptural statement." More spares=more art! Let's hear it for the easily accessible.

2.) Like sands through the hourglass go the days of our lives... Uncommon Goods wasn't lying here: never seen these before. Honestly, they are a bit mystifying to me. Possibly it's just the logistics -- the hourglass seems like it would make holding it a bit difficult. And then when exactly can you turn them? The text says each sand shift takes 10 minutes. Perhaps it could be the host way of ordering you to slow down? "Whew, already done with the shiraz? OK: flip your glass. Consider yourself in drinking time out. No pouting." To the clumsier among us, it's a cruel taunt about potential accidents: broken glass, staining wine AND colored sand. Grrrrreat. Also available as awkward martini glasses; $75 for set of 4.

I confess to a fondness for the phrase "bottle sweater"
3.) And speaking of wine...While you like your
wine chilled, how do you think your wine feels
about that? You've never stopped to consider it, have you? Typical.

Show your wine a little cozy love this holiday season. Why should scary holiday knits be limited to (scarily festive) people? Maybe next year there will also be reindeer knits and tree knits with sewn on jingle bell ornaments. See also: cork hat.   

Bottle sweater, bottle sweater, bottle sweater, bottle sweater. Bottle Sweater. UK version less fun: Bottle Jumper.


4.) Do any of your friends suffer from a plague of flies? Less dire than Amityville Horror or Damien (were there flies? there must have been flies), but enough for fly swatting to become REALLY tiresome? Utility and humor dovetail like pb and chocolate in the talking fly swatter.
With gems like "flight cancelled!" and "hasta la vista!," this swatter "will have your whole household buzzing with laughter!," or so says Crown House of Gifts. Move over, Damn You Auto-Correct!

5.) More things that shouldn't talk: Football beer mug. If I were in the same room as this, this stein's presence alone would indicate the day (or week? month.) had taken a horribly bad turn.

"Dishwasher safe, the mug cleans easily once the voice box is unclipped." Yeah, I wonder how many mugs will be deliberately dishwashed, voice and all. If it were in a John Hughes film, you'd hear the chipper Go-team! voice slowly bested from within "The Fans Are Going Wild!....Touchdooooownnnn~~"

Better options that I have listened to and not thrown across the room: Homer Simpson beer bottle opener, saying....what? Something stoopid yet somewhat endearing. Policeman cookie jar who says, "STOP RIGHT THERE!" when you lift his top half for said cookies. Come to think of it, that may have helped me with those evil maple sandwich cookies. That, or I would have developed a really nice rapport with cop jar.

Well, hopefully these suggestions help. In a pinch, there's always the hand-drawn personalized coupon book option. Be sure to include expiration dates.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Snacks, Both Caloric and Invigorating. Nourishment.

In the name of all that is holy, someone remove these cookies* from my house. I made them before an event -- and then ate so many I had to make more. Vanity urged me on: Come on, this was the best this time around you can't NOT serve it.  And then the event was smallish, or people were magically restrained. And there they waited, in their unassuming beigeness, within their little tin. I thought to freeze them...but no. I decided to check on them and pried off the lid. Mapley butter fumes wafted up, like they do from evil cartoon food, luring kids into witches' homes. Well. Maybe just one. Or two. Or four. Which is really eight, what with the sandwiching.

And me with the remote working, shackled to the computer, listening to the fridge sounding off like it's going to be laboriously ill all over the kitchen floor. Despite the unappetizing noises from my belabored fridge, I think of the interesting tidbits within...Meanwhile it's venturing into the damp-cold neck of the season, where I have even more excuses to not go for an outdoor run. Helllloooo, Dark and Flabby Winter. And so, we meet again... The dishpan grey not dissipated by sparkly tree lights (though they help). 

*These are originally from The All American Cookie Book, by Nancy Baggett, which rocks. Other recipes solid, but luckily less addictive.

I worked at home all day yesterday. Peered out through the living room window periodically, though nothing was coming, or staying.  Any street activity? Nope, nuthin' much. Even the squirrels were keeping a low profile. Had a few extra cups of tea later in the day, to separate the hours. Even forgot about the mail, though I usually look for it -- and as you know, I mainly get crap catalogs.

What would salvage the day? Snacks. Yes, after all that: snacks. In this case, of the less caloric and more stimulating sort.  

Oh wondrous stimulation, distract us from the Winter's tiresome yawning maw!

A few hours past mailman time, the rusty mailbox popped into my head. And here! A present from the day (or more specifically, from dear CG): three Richard Buckner CDs and the newest Adele. Plus a nourishing card. The card stands on it own -- and you know I'm fond of symbolism. I asked another good friend why listening to Richard Buckner doesn't depress me --  even when I am depressed -- and even though his songs frequently tell of love lost, lives ruined, desire paired with alienation -- and his reply went something like this,

"I think it's because no matter where you are, I don't think it's possible to plumb the depths of where *he* is~~ That, and he's so frickin' talented." He originally introduced me to his music, through The Hills (Spoon River Anthology, set to music-- cool, hunh!).

His music is like a day where the rain is steadily coming down. Maybe at first you were disappointed by the weather, but you open a few windows beneath overhangs and the slight, slight chill is pleasant. And your home feels cozier for it. It's a quiet day, with undertones of longing, which you observe as much as you feel. The witness of the passing day has its own importance. Maybe you'd have someone else near, but only someone you knew really well, who could enjoy the quietness. What the heck am I even talking about? Why didn't you stop me? I think I was listening to the above YouTube link too much. I haven't listened to all *THREE* CDs yet (the bounty! the bounty!) And now I have put Bloomed back on. The opening song Blue & Wonder makes me think of Summer, in a dry heat. And that mandoline! Clearly I need to just listen more. Which I will...


By evening I got to feeling a bit penned up and ventured to the neighborhood bookstore (a few remain, knock on wood) to get outside of myself. More snacks! First, a bit of bizarre: 420: Stories, by Lou Beach.

Here's one:

"Zuma Pedley hailed from Lubbock, came to L.A. in '02 with his guitar, some songs, and an ugly dog. He didn't think to change the world, wasn't built that way, but thought music might lessen the burden of those with hearts. He was looking for an army of smiles, but settled for a girl with corn hair and a bungalow in the hills, grew tomatoes. The dog is still ugly."

C'est fini! They're all oddities, packaged in a slim, pretty red hardcover. With collaged illustrations-- apparently Beach is primarily an illustrator, with CD covers and appearances in Wired, the New Yorker, etc. I figure this will be good to dip into during my low concentration times, for remaining days at Rust Belt Market. 

I discovered that Lane Smith's new picture book is gorgeous, magical. The illustration combines quaint delicately lined pen and ink figures, with lush (photoshopped? painted?both?) topiaries telling the past life of the boy's Grandfather. Check out a book trailer for Grandpa Green here.

On that note, the whole picture and children's book promotion on Youtube had pretty much escaped my notice until Ginger posted the minimalist and quite fun teaser for Jon Klassen's "I Want My Hat Back." It's like a whole new land to explore! In a search for another Klassen book, I happened across "White is for Witching," by Helen Oyeyemi. I challenge you not to be creeped out.  Even MORE paired down, and quite effectively done. "Where is Miranda? Miri is gone, just gone..."

Also bought: The Essential Rumi, translated by Coleman Barks. One of my first favorites:


My Worst Habit

My worst habit is I get so tired of winter
I become a torture to those I'm with.

If you are not here, nothing grows.
I lack clarity. My words
tangle and knot up.

How to cure bad water? Send it back to the river.
How to cure bad habits? Send me back to you.

When water gets caught in habitual whirlpools,
dig a way out through the bottom
to the ocean. There is a secret medicine
given only to those who hurt so hard
they can't hope.

The hopers would feel slighted if they knew.

Look as long as you can at the friend you love,
no matter whether that friend is moving away from you
or coming back toward you. 

Well, I can't really think of a better way to end than that. A super early morning tomorrow, so I best go to bed. Good night, All.



 

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Business in Your Backyard: Pot & Box

As you may or may not recall, due to lolling about my house last Saturday afternoon, I almost missed the safe scurrying time afforded by the hordes watching the U of M vs. Ohio State game. Almost! It wound up being perfect -- downtown was deserted, I sailed through intersections and even took a few snaps of one of the frequently graffitied bridges on the way home.

But to where did I wish to scurry in the first place? Primarily to Pot & Box, on the tip from a friend who *always* knows about intriguing people and things. And also to the neighboring Metal, though it was unconfirmed they would be open. As it was, I arrived at the Charming Pot & Box a few minutes before the stated close time, though proprietor Lisa Waud was chill, "Oh, I'm here, working, and a couple is due to come in a bit..." Lisa is warm and down-to-earth; and we established that we have both volunteered at nonprofit fave 826 Michigan*, which means extra points right there. Uh, which is not to say any point assigning is occurring. Gold star? Gold star.

* Hey! new this year, check out their online store catalog

Lisa's floral love goes deep. The home site announces: "Rooted by her education in horticulture, her fingernails have been dirty for over 15 years through service & retail experience." Her original concept was focused on container gardens and boxes, to the exclusion of providing floral arrangements. "I actually thought I would contact all the restaurants in the area and keep their boxes filled, and you know, I could barter for food, how great would that be?...But then friends kept approaching me to do flowers for weddings and things like that..."

Without abandoning the idea of the former, she folded cutting gardens and floral arranging into the mix. The flowers she doesn't grow herself are sourced with an eye to organic/natural and local (lots of visits to farmers' markets). The container garden services include original design, planting and regular upkeep, based on clients' wishes, which strikes me as cool since it potentially encompasses businesses, homeowners and black-thumbed individuals operating on less of a budget.

The business itself was visually stimulating enough that I was happy Metal would require a separate trip -- my camera battery steadily lessened, though it thankfully held out for the visit itself. I puttered about and Lisa returned to an in-process floral arrangement. Ko, her beautiful chocolate lab, was content to lounge on her puffy dog bed in the work area, after displaying her favorite bone.

 
In the right when you enter is a selection of work by local artists
Festive holiday bottle "lamps." 

Nifty illustrator Nicole Ray/Sloe Gin Fizz, among others

Sharp pillows by Salt Lab
Mysterious Organic Forms. Possibly gecko eggs.
To the left of the entrance is an airy space dedicated to event rentals. Both the space itself, as well as the shelves of mason jars, iridescent glassware. And equines under glass.






The work area is homey, purposeful and also reflective of a fondness for collecting.

Birdcages originally bought for a wedding
O, Happy Succulents!

Still want more photos? Click here.