Above: Hungry cats from a book of Victorian games that I bought at that nice second hand bookshop in Northcote recently.Safe and happy holidays to all.  See you next year!
Above: Hungry cats from a book of Victorian games that I bought at that nice second hand bookshop in Northcote recently.
Above, front.  Below, back.
My first (and possibly last) piece of basse couture.  (Thank you very much BB and Lambert for correcting my previous attempt at humour in a language I do not actually speak.)







Photo above by Anna Parry. 
A scan of the unfinished and as yet unprinted lady, above.  She may be a self portrait.  Her ponytail is meant to double as a brush (somewhat Illustrators Australia logo style, oops!).  I also don't smoke a pipe or wear a hat, and my head isn't quite THAT big, but never mind.  I don't know whether I will ever finish her or print her:  I actually quite like her just as she is with all of the gauges showing.
I have mostly been behaving myself, stitching another bunch of scarves for the Craft  Victoria Shop.  In between I have been spending a bit too much time on etsy: now that the interface has been updated to include Facebook-style real time "Activity Feed" showing who has been putting one's items in their favourites and "Your Circle" which shows what selected etsy friends have been putting in their favourites, really there is no reason to ever leave and have a normal non-computer life.  Yesterday as I finally logged out (um, I had an appointment to keep), I noticed a very familiar eye half way down the front page, below:

Alison Feldmann, AKA TeenAngster, smiling up at my Lady!  To say that she made my day is quite an understatement.
I have cut out an aqua sweater clock with bright orange 'knitted' people.
A hanging tattoo clock with a mother tattoo.  (I left the hairs off this time because I always make them look like rain, which would have been even more likely now as it's raining every single day on the tropical isle of Melbourne.)
A Lady with a village on her head mark II: this time she has a dark and mysterious visitor.
And of course the original wooden tattooed sailor who was first shown here.
I took Thea's advice and opened my giant circus book the other day.  It is so full of incredible images that I am beyond words.  The photo below of performer Zelda Boden, taken in the 191o's, so intrigued me that I had to do something with it.
I actually painted this picture a couple of weeks ago when my back was at its most sore, and it took a while to get it right.  My memory of exactly how and why I connected the headdress to scraps of food packaging has faded.  I know that one of my inspirations was the work of the brilliant Rob McHaffie, a Melbourne artist whose work I love, and whose blog I stalk occasionally and write incredibly inane comments.  (Intelligence of comment and admiration of work have an inverse relationship as far as I am concerned.)

