Sorcha de Barry’s AoA (May 2013)

Sorcha's AoA

Award of Arms for Sorcha de Barry

This assignment actually had an excuse to be finished just under the wire, since it began life as a completely different award for a completely different person. We took that in stride, though, and put the other info aside like we’d never heard of it. Hm? What other assignment?

Since the recipient for this was being recognized for lots of work, especially with children’s activities, I sought as a source something featuring either a) children or children’s activities, or b) something which could easilly be altered to show children’s activities. Eventually, I wandered past the teeny tiny book of hours which I’d included in my figure class last year as an example of grisaille, and realized that Jean Pucelle had included scads of street life in his marginalia for that book! Bingo! The corners of nearly all the pages in that book feature lovely little people doing anything and everything one could see in Paris in the mid-fourteenth century – begging, kinging, waterbearing, thieving, what have you – so it was a good candidate for this project. As it turned out, one of the pages of which I found good photos was very nearly useful as it was, so I ended up needing to do little fabrication, just a little cosmetic surgery here and there. Continue reading

Davius’ Golden Rapier scroll (March 2013)

Davius Saincte-Jacques' Golden Rapier Scroll.

Last year, I worded Davius Saincte-Jacques’ Silver Rapier scroll, with the actual scroll handled by Mistress Nataliia. Since the source I found then was so useful for the OSR, I went back to it when Annys and I received the commission his Golden Rapier scroll. I found what I was looking for in a much earlier letter than the last time, this letter being from Edward IV, rather than Elizabeth I. As it had the feel I was looking for, I fudged the date-accuracy a skosh and ran with it. This text contains most of what I love about good scrolls: it’s overly wordy, contains wonderful spelling, and allowed me to insert several in-jokes tailored to the gentle receiving it.

Text and process images after the jump. Continue reading

Squirrel! (March 2011)

Squirrel!

Isn't he great?

This distracting fellow was produced for a heraldic submission (if it’s for free, does it still count as a “commission”?). What you see here is the initial drawing, which was simplified a bit for the actual submitted image. I worked from several images of leaping squirrels which I found on flickr, including a wonderful series taken in Scandinavia – hence the tufted ears. I’m extremely pleased with how this one turned out, and I’m going to need to find something to do with it for my own purposes, additional to the original request. It’s too much of a fun image not to.

Ink on paper.

2009 Known World Academy of the Rapier/Known World Costuming Symposium website and swag art

KWAR/KWCS swag art

I built and co-maintained the website for KWAR/KWCS 2009, designing it to look as if it had been illuminated and painted. This was a pretty decent challenge, as I’m not a painter, and this was going on the web. The base images are ink drawings, digitally painted in Photoshop. Once we had the site laid out, I designed the image which would eventually grace the event swag (see above.) This was produced on-demand at Zazzle.com.

The real site is long gone, but here’s the sample site. Unfortunately, it looks like the “penguin cam” link is dead too, but I keep holding out hope.

EDIT: Wonder of wonders! The penguin cam is working again! Life is the tiniest bit better today because of it.

Collin Monro’s AoA

Collin's AoA scroll

This is (I think) my first scroll illumination. Notice my acute lack of understanding of Period leaf forms. Sigh.

I did the illumination and wrote the text; the calligraphy was done by Christopher Jameson, an excellent scribe in Bhakail. This scroll has the distinction of having been given three times, once at one Kingdom event, once at a local event, and again (by the same monarch) at a different event while it was locked in a car in the parking lot.