This is the chandelier on the ceiling of my bedroom. In real life it looks much bigger and sparklier and frankly a lot more garish and over the top (part of what I like about it). Hipstamatic has taken it to a much dreamier place.
Saturday, July 16, 2011
Hipsta-fun
This is at the W in downtown Austin. I was waiting for a friend to finish her meeting and join me. Meanwhile, my car was parked under the tree where apparently every bird in Austin lives and getting crapped on. It was of Biblical proportions. No photo of that, I am still too traumatized. After a $55 car detail it is slowly becoming a distant memory.
Anyway, anyone who knows me knows that I have something of a one-track mind. And for the past 7 months I've been on the jewelry design track. I'm still wholeheartedly on that track (www.isabelborland.com) but am slowly reintroducing other things. Yesterday it was the Hipstamatic app which has been around forever and I'm not sure why I never downloaded it before. Apparently apps, like parking, is a category I am irrationally cheap about.
So what I love so far about the Hipsta-app is how it encourages me to focus on simple formal considerations, abstracting things into shapes and colors. But I haven't yet mastered the unpredictable nature of framing the photos - its a crap shoot and a gift when things do come out as I intended. Not unlike the old days when you'd get your prints back and most of them were nothing like the shot you thought you were taking, but instead included 5 feet to the right and below that were not in the viewfinder.
Sunday, June 5, 2011
back to blogging
For those of you who used to visit this blog for the actual blogging, you'll be happy to hear my blogging self is staging a return.
For those of you who come here for the jewelry updates, I've created a dedicated spot for that at www.isabelborland.com, and Isabel Borland Jewelry on Facebook.
(http://www.facebook.com/pages/Isabel-Borland-Jewelry/119943654753664 come "like" me there!).
To all of you who stop by now and then for whatever reason, thank you!
For those of you who come here for the jewelry updates, I've created a dedicated spot for that at www.isabelborland.com, and Isabel Borland Jewelry on Facebook.
(http://www.facebook.com/pages/Isabel-Borland-Jewelry/119943654753664 come "like" me there!).
To all of you who stop by now and then for whatever reason, thank you!
Monday, May 23, 2011
Make a Wish
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Bracelet Deconstructed
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Organic Oval Bracelet
Monday, May 9, 2011
His
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Green
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Less is More
The minimalist Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe originally said this, and for me it is a guiding principle for most things. But as is often true, also with jewelry design I'm finding that it is easier said than done.
It can be much easier to file and sand and buff the cr*p out of a piece to get that "perfect" blemish-free finish. And on the occasions I've done this, I've been disappointed to find I have worked the heart and soul right out of it.
For me the joy is in finding the uniqueness of each piece, deciding which marks to accentuate or smooth away for the overall balance. I like to see evidence of the process, the human hand and the character of the metal. The challenge is knowing when to stop and let the piece just be.
organic oval bracelet, 18k |
organic oval bracelet, 18k |
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Faux Bois
Finishing these pieces in 18k gold is so exciting for me - this is how I envisioned them in concept and design.
I embrace wabi sabi in all things, also in my line of jewelry. Some pieces are designed with a smoother more perfect finish, others are intended to be a bit rougher around the edges. I love the delicate marks and shadows that make each piece unique.
This ring is called Round Angle and it is a wabi sabi-er one. As anyone who endeavors in anything creative knows, you see new things about your work through other peoples' eyes. Like when a friend was ordering this ring, she said - "But mine will look like wood too right? You'll keep that wood texture on mine?"
Of course! And so this one is nicknamed Faux Bois. Everything sounds better in French.
I am so grateful for these first orders, several of them placed from afar based only on a few photos and a promise. I appreciate the encouragement and excitement so much in all of the various forms it has taken. Thank you!
I embrace wabi sabi in all things, also in my line of jewelry. Some pieces are designed with a smoother more perfect finish, others are intended to be a bit rougher around the edges. I love the delicate marks and shadows that make each piece unique.
This ring is called Round Angle and it is a wabi sabi-er one. As anyone who endeavors in anything creative knows, you see new things about your work through other peoples' eyes. Like when a friend was ordering this ring, she said - "But mine will look like wood too right? You'll keep that wood texture on mine?"
Of course! And so this one is nicknamed Faux Bois. Everything sounds better in French.
round angle (faux bois) ring, 18k |
round angle (faux bois) ring, 18k |
I am so grateful for these first orders, several of them placed from afar based only on a few photos and a promise. I appreciate the encouragement and excitement so much in all of the various forms it has taken. Thank you!
Monday, March 28, 2011
Organic Round Bracelet and a Tease
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