Showing posts with label color palettes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label color palettes. Show all posts

Friday, September 2, 2016

Caribbean Color Palette Challenge Reminder

by Sherri Stokey

As you can see, I've been having a lot of fun playing around with the colors in the Caribbean Color palette.  I'm hoping some of you have been busy on pieces inspired by this palette as well.  Just in case anyone needs a reminder:


If you haven't started anything yet, there's still time!  Photos need to be to me by September 14th and you can find all the details on how to submit them in this post.  Have fun!!







Friday, August 5, 2016

Color Palette Challenge - Caribbean!

by Sherri Stokey

Are you ready for another color palette challenge?  We had so much fun with the Starfish Color Palette Challenge, I thought we should do it again.  This time I chose some pretty blues (cyan, aqua, Caribbean blue, teal), lime green (chartreuse) and a dash of white.  It has a bit of a Caribbean feel, don't you think?  I found some pretty beads in my stash, including several handmade lampwork pieces, a ceramic pendant and a polymer clay sand dollar.  I even found some macrame pieces I've done that fit the theme:




The rules are simple:  make something inspired by the photo.  It can be anything - a painting, jewelry (of course), a scarf, a hand painted pair of shoes (wouldn't that be cool!?) - as long as it's made by you.  Share a photo of your creation with me by September 14, 2016 and I'll put together a blog post revealing them here on September 16th.  If you'd like to do a blog post, send me the link along with your photo and I'll include it.  Please send photos to me through my business Facebook page  or via email.

Who will join me this round?

Friday, May 20, 2016

Starfish Color Palette Challenge

by Sherri Stokey

I have a challenge for you!  Here's the scoop:  I pulled out some beads and cord in some of my favorite colors a while back when I was feeling a little low (that's them in the photo above).  I chose some neutral tan and ecru along with teal and turquoise, then added a bit of bronze for depth.  The color palette is soothing and beachy and perfect for summer (or any time you want to pretend it's summer).


Using different combinations of the colors and different patterns, I'm up to around sixteen pieces of micro macrame jewelry inspired by this palette (you can see more of them on my blog at www.KnotJustMacrame.com if you're interested).


Some pieces are fussier and some just scream "relaxing on the beach".



Lately I've been messing more with the neutral part of the palette:



So what's the challenge?  I want to see what you make inspired by this photo:


Here are the details:  make something inspired by the photo.  It can be jewelry, sculpture, a painting - anything.  Heck, decorate a cake!  Make a quilt!  Anything handmade.  Share a photo of your creation with me by June 15, 2016.  I will put together a post with photos from everyone so you can see what fun things everyone comes up with.  If you'd like, do a blog post and send the link with your photo and I'll include that, too.  Please send photos to me through my business Facebook page (so I don't miss something in that mysterious "other" folder) or via email.

Who's in? 

Monday, July 20, 2015

Color Play

by Sherri Stokey


Have you noticed how many gorgeous pictures go scrolling by daily in your social media feeds?  Those photographs can be great color inspiration for design.  I loved the jewel tones in this one and pulled out beads and cord in aqua, lavender, orchid and slate blue, then started a design using the aqua cord and a mixture of beads.  (If you're trying this and are having difficulty pulling colors from the photos, there are some great sites online to help you with that like Kuhler and Color Palette FX.) 


Then I switched out the cord for orchid, but used all of the same beads.  It looks very different, don't you think?  


 Not only is the overall look different, but the individual beads even appear to be different colors.  That, of course, led to trying one more version with slate blue cord.


All of these pieces were inspired by that one photo and there are still many variations to be explored.  I could introduce a bit of the green into the mix or concentrate more on the pink tones.  I also see a ribbed texture and some webbing that would be fun textures to try to mimic.


Where have you been finding your inspiration lately?


Thursday, June 4, 2015

Variations on a Theme

By Sherri Stokey
Micro macrame bracelets with Mexican red snowflake jasper.

Some of my best ideas just sort of morph into being.  I know that sounds odd, but let me give you an example.  A customer asked me to feature some Mexican Red Snowflake Jasper beads in a micro macrame bracelet.  If you know me at all, you know that red is my Kryptonite.  It's just so hard for me to work into a design that feels right *insert whining here*.  But the customer is always right and the show must go on and all that stuff, so I found an image I felt might inspire me and pulled some beads and cord to match.

Red paisley color palette with seed beads and nylon bead cord.

*Shudder*  Just look at all those warm colors!  I made a bracelet using these from this pile, and it was fine.

Macrame bracelet by Sherri Stokey.

Fine, but it wasn't speaking to me.  I tried, people.  I tried to get the red to speak to me, but it was definitely giving me the silent treatment.  So I went back to the drawing board and pulled out some beads that were talking to me to act as interpreters.

Turquoise beads and cord.

It's turquoise to the rescue (okay, okay - sort of sagey green if you want to get technical about it).  I threw it into the mix and made another bracelet, and this time it sang to me!

Red jasper macrame bracelet with turquoise.

I probably never would have had the idea to create this piece from scratch.  The idea came gradually, step by step.  Evolved.

Micro macrame bracelets by Sherri Stokey.

This is a technique I use often.  I think it's because I'm curious.  I make a bracelet like this:

Micro macrame bracelet in deep blue and marigold.

Then I wonder what it would look like if I switched out the marigold for another color and before I know it, I have a coral, a chartreuse and a lilac version:

Micro macrame bracelet in deep blue and different accent colors.

I also like to use the very same pattern and the same beads, but switch up the cord colors:

Micro macrame bracelets with different cord colors.

Remember this next time you think something isn't turning out quite the way you want.  Maybe you just need to let the idea steep a bit.  Maybe if you let the ideas develop, you'll get right where you want to be!

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Feeling Uninspired?

by Sherri Stokey


Have you ever had one of those days (or weeks, even) when it feels like your creativity has left the building?  You've ground to a halt; come to an agonizing standstill.  Your muse is on vacation.  The idea fountain has run dry... I think we've all been there, but I'm here to help today with some ideas on how to find that spark again.  I find inspiration everywhere!  The wall decoration above is a good example.  I found it at a yard sale for $1 and besides the fact that I love it in all its kitchy glory, it gave me a little seed of an idea that turned into this micro macrame piece:

Micro macrame bracelet based on colors from 1970's kitchen decoration.

Fun, don't you think?  Flea markets and garage sales can be a treasure trove of pieces that may just transport you to another decade and change the way you look at things for a little while.  Anybody remember these Tupperware containers in avocado green and burnt orange (my mom is still using hers):

Beaded bracelet based on colors from old Tupperware!

Try to change your mindset and look around you.  Common, everyday objects can provide you with ideas on colors and textures.  Even sand:

Sand dunes in macrame (bracelet).

And water:

Freeform macrame inspired by water.

And street signs (this is from my hometown, Valentine, Nebraska, and yes, they really do stencil hearts on the sidewalks on Main Street):

Valentine inspired bracelet with hearts.

If you have a talented person in your family (or friends), maybe you can piggyback on their creativity to jump start your own.  My mom makes beautiful quilts, but maybe you know a painter or a weaver or a clothing designer?  These are a couple examples where I drew inspiration from Mom's work:

Patriotic quilted piece and macrame bracelets in red, white and blue.

Quilt in purple and green colors inspired a macrame bracelet.

Are you getting excited yet?  Seeing some possibilities?  If none of those ideas appeal to you, you can always turn to color palettes pulled from photos.  

Blue and gold color palette and beaded micro macrame.
Color palette based on NASA photo and resulting macrame piece.

Try thinking of the photos a little differently, too.  Instead of just pulling a color palette, consider the shapes, textures and movement in the photo.  Is it something you can use?  Like these undulating lines:

Micro macrame bracelet based on USGS photo and color palette.

Or this texture:

Bead weaving spiral necklace inspired by lizard photo.

Or just pick up a feeling from the photograph and go from there.  In this next piece, I tried to capture the feel of the waves lapping up onto the sand; the foam; the colder, deeper water further out:

Micro macrame bracelet by Sherri Stokey of Knot Just Macrame.

One more place you can turn in a crisis and then I'll leave you to ponder.  One of my all time favorite color palettes is pulled from the raku finishes on some of the art beads I've collected (these are from Star Spirit Studio).

Beads, cord and art beads (pendants) in raku colors.

I think I could use these colors for years without getting bored (raku focal pieces below are from Star Spirit Studio, Spinning Star Studio and Elements Pottery and macrame work is by yours truly)!

Micro macrame bracelets and necklaces featuring art beads.

If you get to that point where you're uninspired, try taking a look around you again with fresh eyes.  Hopefully some of these ideas will help you.

 

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

New Polymer

by Barbara Bechtel
Today I thought I would show you some of my most recent polymer clay beads. Admittedly, for most of the last year, I haven't been making much new polymer clay work and have mostly been working in copper. A recent injury has kept me sidelined for several months, and once I started feeling a bit better but still couldn't get into my metal studio, I felt that polymer itch.



This is actually the front and back sides of a double sided focal donut.

Not wanting to burn myself out again, I started in on creating some new color palettes. My polymer clay has always been an extension of my background as a painter and I prepare each piece almost as a mini canvas, spending the majority of the time preparing, building the base, and layering and creating depth through the surface treatments in layers of color and translucency through the careful selection of a color palette.
Transparency and opacity are very important in the colors I select and how much I remove or add to each surface.

At the current moment, I'm not getting to wild with the shapes and forms, but instead using the same or similar forms, really searching for and working beyond the obstacles of each palette. I almost like to think of them as tiny sketches or color studies.





If you'd like to see more of my recent explorations in color, I encourage to pop over to my Facebook page and check out more of the photos there!
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