Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Feel Better This Spring, Get Out the Clutter!

I'll be addressing this topic again, but wanted to take a moment to discuss it briefly. In my business I visit so many homes and I realize that many people have a large accumulation of things. I myself fall victim to my own clutter especially my home office! But oh what a difference it makes when it is cleared. Spring will soon be over and Summer is fast upon us. This would be a great time to find an area in your home you know needs addressing and tackle it!

There is actually a physical reaction we have when we are in spaces that were once filled with clutter and then cleared and made neat and tidy. You actually feel good in them and want to be there and linger, in some cases you may not want to leave it (there are some Feng Shui elements that help with this as well that will be discussed later).

Removing clutter will reduce stress. You will gain time and energy in your life. By clearing these critical areas of your home you reduce the amount of time worrying, looking for things and house cleaning. Have you been saving books and magazines that you plan to read or re-read some time in the future. If you have not read them in the last three years, do you really think you will read then in the next three? It is unlikely. I know you are saving many of them as references. With the Internet, you have all the reference material you will ever need right at your fingertips. Get rid of books and magazines. Put them in the donation box. If you really cannot stand to give things away because it all has value, have a garage sale. Make it a challenge to have tons of stuff at your sale. When it is over, take whatever does not sell and donate it to a charity. Promise yourself you will get rid of the leftovers.

To sum up clutter, it robs valuable time from your life. It takes away some of your life energy and makes you wonder how you will ever organize it all. Do not organize it all; get rid of a lot of it!

Monday, May 28, 2007

Understanding Art Terms

It helps to understand the many different art terms before you think about purchasing art, so whether you are beginning to collect, have been collecting for a while or are thinking about it, here are some terms to keep in mind:

Giclee (zhee-klay) - Giclee is a general term for an extremely high resolution digital print based on an original piece of artwork, such as painting or photographic print. The artwork is captured digitally and converted into a high-resolution digital file that is optimized for colour and accuracy to the satisfaction for the publisher, printer and artist. Giclee prints are created using a state-of-the-art, professional 8-colour to 12-colour inkjet printer and are printed with archival quality inks onto various substrates including canvas, fine art and photo base paper. They are characterized by excellent saturation and depth of colour.

Lithograph - Lithography is a planographic process in which the printing surface is uniformly flat - in other words, the drawing is on the same plane as the surface of the printing plate. Lithography is based on the chemical repellence of oil and water. Designs are drawn or painted with greasy ink or crayons on specially prepared limestone. The stone is moistened with water, which the stone accepts in areas not covered by the crayon. An oily ink, applied with a roller, adheres only to the drawing and is repelled by the wet parts of the stone. The print is then made by pressing paper against the inked drawing.

Serigraph - Serigraphy is one of the oldest printmaking techniques in use today. It is a stencil process that is also known as silkscreen printing. Each colour requires a separate screen thus the painstaking labour of colour separation, colour application, press time and drying can take up to 100 days in order to complete a hand-pulled fine art serigraph edition.

Etching - Etching is an intaglio printing process in which the artist uses an etching needle to draw into the wax ground applied over a metal plate. The plate is then submerged in a series of acid baths, each biting into the metal surface only where unprotected by the ground. The ground is then removed, ink is forced into the etched depressions, the unetched surface is wiped, and an impression is printed.

Edition - In printmaking, an edition is a number of prints struck from one plate, usually at the same point in time. In the art publishing industry where digital printing is used, edition is the number of copies printed from the same image.

Limited edition - Limited edition is an edition with a fixed number of impressions produced on the understanding that no further impressions (copies) will be produced later. Limited edition prints are usually hand signed and numbered by the artist or signed in the plate.

Open edition - Open edition is an edition that is limited only by the number that can be sold or produced before the plate wears or in case of digital print it is limited only by market demand and the publisher's decision to produce the print.

Archival quality - This term refers to the permanence and the longevity of the medium of artwork. In digital printing the paper has to be acid free, lignin free, usually with good colour retention and the ink is permanent, non-fading, high-quality ink to meet the criteria of archival quality.

Fine Art Paper - Fine art paper that serigraphs, lithographs, and giclees are printed on add immensely to the value and quality of the print. The paper weight and content make the difference in the way a print looks, feels, and ages. An integral part of printmaking, paper is perhaps the foremost consideration for the publisher at the outset of the printing process, especially in terms of what best interprets the original piece and the artists intent.

Poster - A poster is a reproduction that involves taking an original piece of art and photographing or scanning it digitally and transferring that image to paper via inks or pigments, often using a lithographic printing or inkjet process.

Print on canvas - The image is printed from a high-resolution digital file directly into the canvas using professional, 8-ink to 12-ink printer using durable pigment-based inks. The canvas' surface can be coated with emulsion after the printing if the canvas itself was not water-resistant.

Canvas transfer - A canvas transfer is a print or poster image that has been transferred and fixed to a canvas surface. During the process a paper poster or print is coated with a special film that lifts the image from the paper. The film, with the embedded image, is heat-sealed to the canvas surface. The quality of the final product highly depends on the quality of the poster image or print such as what type of ink were used, how the ink react to heat.

Discussing Topics on Art & Decor

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