I love creating things that take a minute to figure out. Today I stuck with one of my favorite "slightly off" themes and used a bit of inspiration from the book The Collage Workbook: How to Get Started and Stay Inspired to create my latest mix-media altered book page. If you know your Roman numerals and police codes you will get it. If you scroll down I will tell you if you don't know these two topics.
Have you figured it out????
OK I'll tell you. the roman numerals are 5150 which is the police code for 72 hour psychiatric hold (AKA-crazy!)
As you can see I have used this as a cross stitch and as the prompt in The Collage Workbook: How to Get Started and Stay Inspired suggests using numbers in creating, what better number...or is it letters really? Letters representing numbers? Another layer in the mystery.....
All I did was go through magazines and cut the letters out "ransom" style and glue them on a page that also contains an interesting idea all be it a little "off" shall I say and maybe even appropriate for the number designation????? Hmmmmmm.
If you too like creative prompts to help guide you I bet you will like The Collage Workbook: How to Get Started and Stay Inspired as much as I do!
More about the book from the publisher Lark Crafts:
The Collage Workbook: How to Get Started and Stay Inspired
by
Randel Plowman
"Both a popular hobby and a recognized art form, collage encompasses a
wide range of creative styles and techniques--explored here by the
creator of the popular A Collage a Day blog. Offering step-by-step
instruction, visual inspiration, and even a library of copyright-free
images, this hands-on guide covers all the necessary materials, tools,
and know-how, from adding color and transferring images, to décollage
(tearing away layers). And to spark the reader's imagination, there are
52 creativity prompts, such as a collage using the letters of a single
word.
Randel Plowman is the founder of the popular blog A Collage A Day
(http://acollageaday.blogspot.com). His art has been exhibited in solo
and juried exhibitions throughout the United States and abroad; cited in
The New York Times and USA Today; featured in How Design, Artist Magazine, and Somerset Studio; and graced the covers of numerous books. Randel resides in Madison, Wisconsin."
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1 comment:
I DO like creative prompts, Stef. Thanks for the tip.
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