Showing posts with label koldinghus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label koldinghus. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 03, 2022

no boring chairs


when the light falls like this, you don't need anything more than a lovely designer chair. summer is fading fast, but we are soaking it up, when it's not soaking us with torrential rain showers. i'm back to work after a couple of weeks of vacation and it's a slow start. most everyone will be back next week and then things will pick back up. it's nice to have a bit of a lull. i hope you're getting one too.

Sunday, January 02, 2011

i think i may have started a new 365 project

i went to koldinghus today for lunch and loads of chatting with a friend. i've blogged about the marvelous old restored castle before. it's one of those places where the danes show off their ability to combine classic and modern architecture in one harmonious structure. and the light is phenomenal.


i want to have a party in this room.
and i'm really happy with how moody this shot came out.
so i've not processed it at all.


there is a rather strange beatles memoriabilia exhibition going on there - where they've curated a collection of photos, clothing from the sixties and various other beatles-related souvenirs. i loved these orange dresses and would be happy to wear any of them today. i think you can only embrace the fashion of an era you didn't really experience for yourself (hence my utter inability to go there on all that 80s stuff that's fashionable again at the moment).



and although it's only january 2, i think i may have started a new 365 photo project.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

energized or i should really get out more

self-portrait in really old mirror (i think i need a really old mirror)

i have had the most energizing couple of days, despite the fact that i didn't sleep enough. sometimes, it's just so energizing to be around other people. i went to a job interview that was very exciting (still in process, no news yet). afterwards, i drove down to visit elizabeth, who has has some  unexpected trouble with her eye - she explains it on her blog, so i won't go into it. talking about it kinda makes me have to lie down anyway.

i am amazed tho' at her beautiful attitude about having a blind spot right in the center of her right eye. she is quite accepting about the whole thing and already thinking of how to adapt her art and her life to live with it if it doesn't clear up. all i can say is that someone else will have to pour the tea. :-) i think if it was me, i would be so much more angry about it, but elizabeth doesn't seem angry at all, nor does she seem frightened at the prospect. so i learned a great deal from her quiet acceptance of what happened - completely without martyrdom or anger or even questioning. i kept asking "how did it happen," but there's really no answer for that, it could happen to any of us, a small burst blood vessel in the eye. i said to someone recently that elizabeth was my zen master, teaching me now to be more accepting and understanding of the world, and this just confirms that.

i had a really delightful evening, meeting her family and sitting up 'til the wee hours, drinking tea and chatting and looking at all of her beautiful art and the stones she's gathered and displayed around the house. her son has definitely caught her artistic bug and he made the most delightful little ceramic crocodile! he (the crocodile that is) tried to crawl into my camera bag when i left, but i made him stay there with his family.


elizabeth lives on an island, so while i was waiting for the ferry, i got out of the car to take some pictures of the softly-falling snow. there was a real old salt kind of a captain there in a small boat that was being loaded with loads of orange cables. he saw me taking pictures and came out to talk to me (i wish i'd asked him if i could take his picture, but  i was chicken it just didn't feel right to do so). he began to tell me about the ice. the ferry was keeping a path of ice clear, but he said that all of the ice around the dock had really formed overnight. he told me of his days of sailing the real icebreakers up in greenland and he was charming and interesting in that down-to-earth way that sea captains so often are.  his boat was taking a scientific crew out to lay cables for seismographic measurements that are being taken further north in the fjord. i asked if the ice would be a problem for his little boat, but he said it wouldn't, it wasn't that thick. when the ferry came and i had to go, i had a strong urge to give him a hug, but i restrained as i think he would have been quite surprised. it was an odd feeling since i'm not really a huggy person. he was just so real and authentic. one of those moments of perfect clarity that are so few, actually.

the only shot i got of his boat, as i was on the ferry and leaving.
i really wish i'd asked him if i could take his picture.

on my way home, i stopped at the marvelous koldinghus to see what was on display in their beautiful exhibition rooms. it was a limited and not very interesting exhibition about gaudi and la segrada familia (if you'd been to the real thing), but i enjoyed wandering the beautiful spaces there. it's just a wonderful castle and another of those examples of how the danes are so good at combining old and new architecture and at creating atmosphere. even on a large scale.  i would SO love to have a party in this room:


i made a stop at the fabric store before i got home and got some really, really exciting stuff that i'm going to work with in the coming days. think: leather. when i saw those rolls of hides, something wonderful popped into my head, fully formed and i'm so excited to get started making it!  more about that soon.

i got home just in time to dash out and pick up my iMac which is totally cured now by the doctors at the mac hospital (it got a new hard drive), pick up the child, make some dinner (salmon & leek tart) and then head for weaving. at weaving, the setup of the loom was finally finished (it takes a LONG time) and i got to actually start weaving my little 20cm x 20cm test swatches. i'm loving the colors i'm using and i already had a problem that i learned from--one of the shafts came apart and i didn't realize it until i got a few rows away and discovered it had skipped some stitches. but that's how we learn best, by making mistakes. you can see the row with the skipped stitches below. my teacher encouraged me to leave it, as a reminder of what it looks like when one of your shafts slips out of position, so i think i will.


other than that, i'm trying to get the hang of having my stitches evenly spaced. it's really not that easy! i do have a sense of wanting to be instantly good at it, but am trying to be patient. it will come and in the meantime, learning is a good thing.

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a big thank you to everyone who's bought birds! there are a few left and i've added a few more, so do go check it out if you're interested!