Saturday, November 10, 2012

glass, art, and life.


hand made glass dogwood flowers for a project in Connecticut for an installation at a casino. 
its been 7 years since i first started working for a summer art school in the woods, teaching kids, teens and even adults everything from silk screening, ceramics, drawing, painting, welding, photography, life casting, and for the first time ever glass bead making.

color rod for beads and other small pieces.
since then it has lead me to an outdoor adventure camp teaching kayaking, surfing, standup paddle sports, windsurfing and how to connect with the ocean. but most of all it took me on a 3 and a half year adventure with Megna Glass art studio, where i apprenticed and worked for an amazing couple on hand made kitchen and bath hardware, lighting sculpture, big casino theme work, traditional Italian style bench glass blowing, fusion work, a glass press, metal work, wood work and almost everything in between.

the torch set up.
last week for the first time in nearly 2 years i purchased for my birthday my first glass torch for making beads! i only made one test, but its been such an exciting time to be able to get back into glass work.

hand made glass hardware for kitchens and baths.
below is some of the wonderful memories and work which i got to be a part of with Martian and Mariann Megna. big love to them both for teaching me so very much and being such wonderful inspiration.


2300 glass blown dogwood flowers for a big glass chandelier at a casino. doing the installation.


almost finished and the glass valance begun to be hung in the background.

a collection of hand blown cylinders for a kitchen installation in Aspen. all aspects of this piece we fabricated from scratch. 


this video is a time lapse of us creating 3 separate pieces for a lamp restoration.  
the blowing deck and studio.

furnaces

bronze casting

wood, water, glass, metal, wax, heat, hand, mind all contribute to the process.

working on one of the hand made lighting pieces at the bench.

the bench and all its glory.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Medicinal and edible plants of California

in the new class room for our lectures
 about two weeks ago was the start of the new 240 hour medicinal and edible botany course offered here at RDI. we will be diving into a year long, once a month curriculum of native plant recognition, medicine making, and field trips to the 4 main bio-regions of California- the Eastern Sierra mountains, the trinity/Klamath region in the north,  the southern deserts of the Mojave and Sonora, and the Coast Ranges regions where we are now on the lovely unusually warm Pt Reyes Seashore. Tellur Fenner of Blue Wind Botanicals will be our fearless guide, and indeed he is a wealth of knowledge. the first part of the course was just a brief intro to bio-regions, poisonous plants,  and where we will be visiting through out the year long course. we also made a little field trip up the watersheds of Mt. Tamalpais overlooking Mill Valley and the grand San Fransisco bay.

 more to come after all our "home fun" reading before our next meeting. stay tuned. for now, enjoy some photos taken on our little field trip.
Tellur with his tinctures

looking south from Mt. Tamalpais to the city on the left, and  santa cruz mountains off the horizon on the right.

 from left clock wise: Coulter Pine cone, Manzanita Berries, and Turkey Mullein

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Cat Tracks, Tide Pools, and Fog Banks

Cat tracks!?

On Monday evening Dylan, Danny and I went for a evening/full moon hike up near the fire road behind the Bolinas Water Authority and storage tanks. it was a beautiful sunset complete with a fog bank that rolled into Bolinas lagoon and seemed to make our little West Marin hamlet an island. Up the road a bit i started to find and witness some really great imprints of animal tracks. Coyote and a fairly large cat were the culprits, with a few badger like tracks a little further up the road where the roads diverged at a grassy clearing with badger dig sites. the photo below is a perfect example of side by side dog and cat tracks! you can see from the dog print on the left (or coyote most likely) the clear X that is made in the middle of the paw. the dog print is actually facing south, while the cat print on the right is facing up or walking north if the top of the photo is North (which in reality it actually is). it was a little spooky since the three of us were walking into the wooded ridge, all the while following large big cat prints. Mountain Lion? i cannot put it out of my head that it is exactly what we were tracking.


coyote on the left, big cat on the right
Bolinas lagoon covered in fog.

On another note and the next day, I had the Brothers Johnny and Apollo again and this time we went to the beach with a beautiful negative tide. the tide pulls were splendid and Olivia found one of my very favorite little gastropod marine friends, the Nudibranch! this brightly colored gastropod known as the Opalescent Nudibranch (or Hermissenda crassicornis) sheds its shell after is larval stage, and is one of the main reasons i fell in love with the ocean and marine biology. with over 3,000 species these little buggers come in so many shapes and colors.
Opalescent Nudibranch!
Johnny and Apollo play at the beach

beautiful evening and fog


Danny Vitali in the grasses taking photos.
 a final note about the prints, my finger is around 4 inches... gives an idea on how large the cat. BUT, its not too much bigger then the coyote, and so it very well could be a bob cat. there were much larger cat prints on this trail bigger then the length of my finger....

nice kitty...