
LOLOL! The site is called Someecards (over 18 please) and I'm pretty sure it's gonna be my first time next time I need to send a card to Sarah, LOL!

LOLOL! The site is called Someecards (over 18 please) and I'm pretty sure it's gonna be my first time next time I need to send a card to Sarah, LOL!
I somehow found this site when I was searching for vintage images of Smokey the Bear (don't ask). I love using these kinds of images in my collages and whatnot. Sometimes I pretend the people are my ancestors, but mostly I just enjoy using anything that is not a cute child with pretend angel wings. 8-) I like pictures of gritty settlers and rustic cabins. Even baseball and boxing (anything but poppet headed darlings...)
Anyway, here are a couple of my favorites, reduced in size for bloggish purposes:


Agnes Martin...my heroine. 8-) Alas, Wikipedia has no images, so try these pages for some of her work (soothing eye candy):~~~~~~~~~~


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Wow. Four out of five respondents are either not buying, or being more careful about what they can afford to buy. However, being one of the "every cloud has a silver lining" clan, I think it's wonderfully freeing and creativity-enhancing sometimes to make do with what we have. Somehow, limiting our choices to the materials we have on hand can simplify things and enhance productivity.
Another observation -- what would the poll results have been if I'd posted it THIS month? All last week was news of more massive layoffs. Supposedly, this has actually been good for the craft industry and artisans, according to a well circulated New York Times article. But that was the holidays, and now it's just cold outside (ok not so much here in New Mexico...I'm trying to be empathetic here).
One solution keeps springing to mind:
Recycled art. It's amazing what you can make with intriguing reused materials, like game pieces, book pages, unraveled sweaters, and cool things you find at yard sales or, in my case, in the back of my closet! I once cut apart an old pathwork silk robe from India and covered manila tags with the thin patterned silk. I also like to make envelopes out of heavy magazine pages and inserts out of old file folders.
I hope we can hang in there and keep on crafting. Well, I know we can.
