Monday, September 15, 2014

Fun Fall Leaf Art

 


The leaves have only just started to turn here, but I wanted to share with you some fun leaf projects that you can keep in mind for when you have a yard full of leaves and are wondering what to do with them (apart from raking them).

1.  Arrange your leaves and laminate them to make a picture.


Artful Kids

2. Organize them by colour and make pictures - maybe an apple, a bird, an arrow, a heart, a leaf rainbow, or even words.


Mr Dale via Agonistica


Furgots

see post
see post

Agonistica

Wildlife Gadgetman


3. Organize the leaves into a rainbow of colours and then sew them together to make a fall tapestry.



Richard Shilling via Agonistica

4. Arrange the leaves by colour and find the matching paint colours. 


Chris Glass via Agonistica
5. Rake the leaves to show the passersby some love with a big leafy heart or a beautiful spiral.


Telegraph

Sylvain Meyer via Inhabitat

6.  Maybe just organizing leaves by colour is where its at. In which case you could arrange them into a circle like a glowing sun, or an arc, or into a bar of leaves, or a line.


Creaanita


Richard Shilling via Nature's Corner



Richard Shilling via BBC


Nature Whispering
7. Now here is where we get fancy - and maybe even move indoors to get some supplies like glue and pens and scissors.  You can make art with your leaves by arranging them into pictures, drawing or painting on the leaves, or even cutting silhouette patterns in the leaves.


Nature Whispering


Timothy Power
Architecturadure

Handmade Charlotte


Bicocacolrs

Inhabitat


Inhabitat


Lorenzo Duran via Fubiz


Lorenzo Duran via Fubiz


Lorenzo Duran via Fubiz
Aren't they amazing? It makes me want to get out there and have some fun with leaves when they turn colours. Are you inspired?

Friday, September 12, 2014

Curry Chicken Burgers


I only sort of like hamburgers and enjoy them no more than maybe once a year, so when I was shown this recipe for Chicken Burgers I was only lukewarm about it. Until I heard they had south Asian flavouring and came highly recommended. I can't agree more - they tasted fantastic. The spices were just right. 

I had to adapt the original recipe because I didn't have all the same spices, but the chicken burgers were so delicious that I didn't want to risk losing or forgetting about the recipe so I'm posting it right away.

Although the recipe said to cook the burgers for 10-12 minutes, I used my meat thermometer (stuck in one of the burgers sideways) and it wasn't registering 165F after 12 minutes of cooking so I cooked them a few minutes longer. There's no fooling around with raw chicken so I would advise using a thermometer to make sure.

Ingredients:
454 gm (1lb) ground chicken
1 egg
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/4 cup dried bread crumbs
1 tablespoon curry powder
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
3/4 teaspoon garam masala
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper

Method:
1. Mix all ingredients together.
2. Shape into 4 patties.
3  Cook in a frying pan turning once, for about 13-15 minutes until a meat thermometer registers 165F.



We skipped the bun and I served the chicken burgers with tzatziki, sliced tomatoes, and a couscous salad. I know, I know, holy fusion cooking, but man did it taste great!


Do you have big plans for the weekend?  This is going to be a low-key-get-things-organized kind of weekend and I'm so looking forward to it.

Monday, September 8, 2014

Summer Painting


I did a lot of painting this summer - mostly watercolours - which is a first for me. I started doing some acrylics last year, but always found watercolours to be frustrating because you can't really fix mistakes. When we went to Newfoundland in July, my mother and I packed our little paint boxes and a pad of watercolour paper and we painted most evenings. In the process of filling up my watercolour book and creating a fun memento, I learned to love doing watercolours. 

The little paint box with a collapsible brush is so portable that I didn't mind taking it with me and it gave me a way to capture the beautiful scenes we were seeing every day. One of things I love the most about painting is how it makes you focus on details you wouldn't notice otherwise - how the shadows fall, all the colours in the rocks, the different greens and browns in the vegetation ... Every evening I would look through the photos I had taken that day and paint one or two of them. I have posted a few favourites below. 

 
 
 

Recently a friend and I went to the cottage to spend some time practicing painting sky and water because boy is it difficult. We were very fortunate to have a fantastic display of different types of clouds and water textures.  I took photos on my iPad so we could paint from the pictures and ended up with a wonderful collection in just two days. I uploaded them to the computer so the quality is not as crisp as with my camera, but that just means they have a painterly quality to them already. 

We had dark and looming clouds


and light and fluffy clouds


  
and wispy clouds

  

and a blue sky with just a few little cotton puff balls 


and even for a short period of time early on one of the mornings a pure blue sky.



The water ranged from ruffled





that was insanely sparkly at times



to soft undulations




to a smooth glassy surface which allowed for great reflections of trees and clouds



   
  


 to an absolutely smooth mirror-like surface.


I can't say my paintings were out of this world, but I learned a lot.  Namely, that clouds and water are hard to paint. Ha!