Sheila Landry, based in Nova Scotia, Canada, is one of the most prolific scroll saw woodworkers, designers, and artists today. She has been a Contribiting Editor to Creative Woodworks and Crafts Magazine
for 15 years. The variety and scope of patterns available on SheilaLandryDesigns.com, is astounding. Be sure to stop by and pick her latest catalog.This article is also available in a printer-friendly pdf.
Inspiration.
When I was first approached to write an article on the subject of inspiration, I thought it would be easy. There are many sources where I find inspiration and I am constantly full of new ideas. It seems that my biggest challenge that I experience is finding the time to implement all the ideas I come up with and convert them from ideas into reality. But as I sit here and begin to write, I find that talking about what inspires is a somewhat daunting task, as I realize that because there is no one single thing or place inspires me, it is a bit difficult for me to organize my thoughts and present them to you in an orderly manner.
Inspiration is all around us. We only need to train ourselves to sit back and observe and allow our senses to recognize it for what it is. That is not always automatic or easy.
Some of us are born with the longing to create.I know I was. Some of my earliest memories from my childhood are of me sitting on the porch of my Chicago home and embroidering designs on my grandmothers tea towels. I was always a busy child and my grandmother had some iron-on transfers and pretty colors of DMC embroidery thread and she taught me all the basic stitches in hopes of keeping me busy. To this day I still remember her telling me that good embroidery is judged not only how the front of the piece looks, but also how neat the back looks. It is funny how those words have followed me all throughout my life, and to this day I take care with being sure that my projects not only look good from the front side, but from the back as well. It was an idea that was instilled in me at an early age, and it became something that set a standard for my lifetime.
As I grew up, I found the satisfaction of making things. From coloring, to bead work and even sewing - the more I made things, the better and more accomplished I felt. We didnt have a lot growing up, but we always kept busy by doing assorted crafts and making things to play with that we didnt have the money to buy.
During my grammar school days, my best friend and I would also spend hours making things. We drew flip books and made hand-sewn toys and puppets out of scraps or old clothing, or we made jewelry out of bead kits that were inexpensive and easy to find. It was then that I discovered painting too and found that I liked to replicate things through painting. There was something amazing about being able to re-create things around us and creating became an important part of my life.
It was at this time that I began to look at the world around me in a different way. No longer were clouds just clouds. They were soft transitions of colors and they had depth and thickness and soft shapes. I would look at a sky and think of the colors I would need to paint them in a painting. I would look at the transparency of a cats ear and wonder how I would translate it to a painting or even a drawing and still show its sheerness and delicacy. These were all the types of things that began to fill my mind on a regular basis.
Looking at wood differently
As I began woodworking, I looked at wood differently as well. The beautiful curve in the legs of a table. The intricate pattern of the crown moulding in an old building. The inlay work on my old bedroom set that was built in the 1940s. I noticed so much more than I had previously when I looked at something, and I found it made me want to learn more and create more and replicate what I had seen.
I started doing scrollwork over fifteen years ago. Like many, I began using patterns that were created by others. One of the first projects that I decided to make was an 18 spandrel for my best friend who was remodeling her kitchen. I had just purchased a scroll saw and couldnt wait to see what I would be able to make with it. I found a pattern for a jewelry box in a book and the pattern on the lid of the box was just what I was envisioning for the spandrel, so I enlarged it and used it for the project. Little did I know that would be the beginning of my career designing woodworking patterns.
There was much to learn with scroll sawing. During those first years of woodworking, each project brought with it more valuable knowledge that enabled me to advance. As my skills improved, so did my dissatisfaction of patterns that were available. Soon I began changing others patterns more and more to suit my needs and before long I was designing projects completely on my own, using my own ideas and techniques. Without realizing it, I had crossed an imaginary line and went from being a student to teaching others. I set up my website and began selling my patterns and contributing designs to woodworking magazines.
Fifteen years later, I am still here designing. I have more ideas than ever and I only hope that there will be enough hours in each day for me to accomplish what I set out to do. Many times I have people ask me where I get my ideas from, and the only way I can truthfully answer them is with one word - everywhere!
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar