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Colin - 6 Months
Posted on Tuesday, June 30, 2015 | 0 Comments
Colin turned six months back in April, but I can't just not share these photos. They're just really stinking cute! Not going to lie, one of the hardest parts about leaving Arkansas was leaving this sweet little man.
And yes, I did buy tickets back in October so I could be there for his first birthday. What can I say? This auntie loves her little nephew. :)







Hahaha, this photo cracks me up! Look at that little face!











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Integrity
Posted on Monday, June 29, 2015 | 0 Comments

I am so happy to finally be sharing this image with you! It has been a long time in the making, what with the amount of planning I put into this, and the added chaos of prepping to move cross country right in the middle of my trying to bring this all together. But as of last night, this piece is officially done!

Integrity is another image in my Value series (just like Virtue). For those of you who don't know about, or are not members of my church, we have a program for girls aged 12-18 (kind of like Boy and Girl Scouts), called the Young Women Program. In this program the young women learn how to be a better version of themselves by learning important skills that coordinate with 8 values: Faith, Divine Nature, Individual Worth, Knowledge, Choice & Accountability, Good Works, Integrity, and Virtue. Each of these values has a set of scriptures that are meant to help interpret what it is these traits are, as well as a coordinating color. Integrity is purple, and one of the associated scriptures is Job 27: 3-6, which reads:

All the while my breath is in me, and the spirit of God is in my nostrils;
 My lips shall not speak wickedness, nor my tongue utter deceit.
 God forbid that I should justify you: till I die I will not remove mine integrity from me.
 My righteousness I hold fast, and will not let it go: my heart shall not reproach me so long as I live.

Now in my last post, I gave a bit of a behind the scenes with my explanation of how I made the shepherd's crook. There is so much more to this image, however, than a simple crook I am having Kacey hold on to. So  I wanted to dive into that a little bit for anyone who is interested to know:

Since the color for Integrity is purple, I made the obvious choice of dressing Kacey in purple. The ornament in her hair, a kanzashi, and the cherry blossom flowers wrapped around her crook are all nods to her Japanese heritage.
The image is representing her staying true to her beliefs and her principles and following the words of our Heavenly Father no matter what may cross her path. To me, this is the definition of integrity.
The shepherd's crook, long recognized as a symbol of our Savior, represents Christ as the Shepherd. He guides us to safety and eternal life through his example. I wanted to have Kacey holding onto this staff as she walked down the path, just as we must hold to the words of our Savior throughout our lives, during easy and difficult times alike.
As you may have guessed, the forest in winter and the fog creeping in represents not only the evils of the world, but more importantly, the difficult times in our lives. It's so easy to think that it's "evilness" that pulls us away from our Heavenly Father. But like a gentle fog rolling in, it's the daily struggles and the sorrows that occur in our lives which obscure our path back to him.

Lastly, I wish there was some really cool biblical or philosophical reason as to why I chose to make the fog green, like the apple Adam and Eve ate was a green apple, or Lucifer wears green clothing. For disclaimer purposes, these are not true! I don't even have a clue what kind of fruit Adam and Eve ate, let alone the color, and if Lucifer had a body, perhaps he would wear lots of different colors! Really, green is just generally recognized as bad: the wicked witch in the Wizard of Oz, for example, has green skin, and people are green with envy, right? So I went with it. From an artistic side, I felt like it also added the contrast I needed between the warm tones of Kacey's skin and the path she is walking down and the coldness of the fog creeping in. I wanted it to be clear where the subject was and what I wanted to be considered "good" and what would be considered "evil". 

So there you have it. Hopefully now this piece has a little bit more meaning and significance to you!

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How to Make a Shepherd's Crook
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Behind the Scenes

I had the idea for Integrity floating around in my head for several months before I was able to go out and photograph what I was visualizing. Part of the reason it took so long to get this image translated from my head to reality was because of the shepherd’s crook, believe it or not! It was such an integral part of the story I wanted to create, and no matter where I looked, I could not find anything resembling a shepherd’s crook that was also within my price range (which is free, or pretty close to it).
So… my quandary.
 I figured it was time to get crafty, since I had already gone that route for the dress I would be using in the image. For the dress, I had found a king size lilac duvet cover made out of this velvet-y material at the local thrift shop. While excellent dress material, I shudder to think what it looked like as an actual duvet cover. I like to tell myself that I saved some poor bedroom from an awful lilac tinted fate.
So it turns out that googling “How to Make a Shepherd’s Crook” doesn’t turn up much (although, since this is now the title of this blog post, fellow crook makers will now rejoice when they stumble upon my blog after googling for just such a phrase), but I did find a tutorial on how to make a Gandalf inspired staff, found HERE. With that inspiration up my sleeve, I ventured to the nearest thrift shop and tracked down a candy cane Christmas decoration, then stopped at Walmart and grabbed some brown paper bags, masking tape, and a wooden dowel. Right now, you're probably thinking "What in the world? I'm not following you Madeline....". Just bear with me.
Once I got home, I stuck the candy cane Christmas decoration on the end of the wooden dowel, and, satisfied with the height, glued and taped the two together like so:




(Why yes! That is Hermione in the background. Nothing like a little magic while working up your magic. Ok… obviously humor is not one of my gifts.)


Once that was done, I proceeded to tear up the brown paper bags and use the masking tape to tape it around the dowel and candy cane. Like so:




Cue brown paint:




Now the original tutorial I was following just stopped there, but to me it didn’t quite look like wood (maybe if you were using it for a Halloween costume and needed something in a pinch, but I'm a perfectionist, and I wanted better), so I introduced some hot glue into this business. To me the paper bags seemed too much like…. well, crumpled paper, and less like wood that had been smoothed and shaped over the course of many years of use. So I used the hot glue to fill in and smooth out most of the crevices and crumply bits so that in the end it was more like that smoothed wood texture I was going for.




I then painted over the hot glue again:




 

So that's how I made the staff itself. However, I wanted to take it up a notch, by incorporating some of the culture of the model I would be using in the image. Kacey is half Japanese, and while I didn’t want the image to scream THIS IS A JAPANESE GIRL, I did definitely want to see aspects of that.

I wanted to include the Japanese Cherry Blossom in some way, because what could be more quintessentially Japanese?  And this is where I put in my plug for Amazon. Can I just say how awesome it is that I can pay less than $4 for silk cherry blossoms and have them shipped to me in less than two days? Technology these days, folks. So literally two days later I was able to dress up my crook just a little bit more and finally I was all set to take THIS picture:



Isn’t Kacey beautiful? I love working with this age group. So easy to direct and they’re still willing to experiment.

So there you are. A tutorial and behind the scenes all rolled up into one lovely (and admittedly quite long) blog post.
I hope you enjoyed!


Until next time.  

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About
Arkansas native.

Currently based in Boston.

Travelling soul.

"Unexpected travel suggestions are dancing lessons from God." - Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
Contact
madeline.s.stoker@gmail.com