Je suis votre blog depuis la campagne française….très inspirant,même pour une artiste sculpteure! je travaille la pâte à papier en modelage de personnages mais depuis un an j’ai ressorti mes tissus anciens et fils …merveilleux monde qui invite la poésie au bout de l’aiguille…
how cloth softens outdoors. quietly absorbing the energy of wind, rain ‘n sun. reminding us that home extends beyond doors ‘n windows. love the weaverliness of the pillow…
Rocks are truly wonderful things, big ones especially. I’d be landscaping around it with maybe an oriental poppy coming up behind it on the right hand side. Probably not practical with all your deer so close at hand.
By the time i read your post, think about it, process it and feel ready to reply there are at least two new ones. Makes my reply feel ancient😂. I am too slow!!
So, here to February, your birthmonth. Happy birthday Jude!
Thank you for all you do, are and share. Especially liked the beginning of the month post. With all the photos and recordings.
And i would like to sit with that pillow on that stone!
Hope so much that all family is ok and safe after earthquake.
Love and peace
What a wonderful view you have from your house, Jude – so many trees and huge rocks of different shapes and colours. And now they’ve provided you a couch! as well as places to drape your quilts. Couldn’t be better, especially for a photographer like you. Fantastic outlook.
A good place to meditate, too, especially with the wind chimes.
i have so many of those chimes. My brother brought them back from Indonesia…the woods are singing.
Yabba-dabba-doo! Not sure I spelt that right. 🙂
Seems about right, ha!
Such a nice couch . . .
(though a bit cold right now, even with your lovely soft cushion)
Absolutely. But it will still be there in spring.😎
read this and saw a small wooden chair next to It…..
so many things could happen here
there is a kind of theater in my mind
Je suis votre blog depuis la campagne française….très inspirant,même pour une artiste sculpteure! je travaille la pâte à papier en modelage de personnages mais depuis un an j’ai ressorti mes tissus anciens et fils …merveilleux monde qui invite la poésie au bout de l’aiguille…
Bonne continuation
Malou ANCELIN
and I would love to work with paper more, maybe you have inspired me to pursue that
Love it!
place
I am always so inspired (“Doing” stance) by your pieces. But at the same time I am just plain loving them (“Being ” stance). Thank you for both.
I like the stance words…
how cloth softens outdoors. quietly absorbing the energy of wind, rain ‘n sun. reminding us that home extends beyond doors ‘n windows. love the weaverliness of the pillow…
i might weave here.
ancient throne —enthralling!
I wish there was a time lapse video of how this was formed.
Rocks are truly wonderful things, big ones especially. I’d be landscaping around it with maybe an oriental poppy coming up behind it on the right hand side. Probably not practical with all your deer so close at hand.
yeah, the deer rule here mostly, ha! I did plant daffodils, they get by.
By the time i read your post, think about it, process it and feel ready to reply there are at least two new ones. Makes my reply feel ancient😂. I am too slow!!
So, here to February, your birthmonth. Happy birthday Jude!
Thank you for all you do, are and share. Especially liked the beginning of the month post. With all the photos and recordings.
And i would like to sit with that pillow on that stone!
Hope so much that all family is ok and safe after earthquake.
Love and peace
My “would be” reply that is…..
that stone is a bit cold right now!
What a wonderful view you have from your house, Jude – so many trees and huge rocks of different shapes and colours. And now they’ve provided you a couch! as well as places to drape your quilts. Couldn’t be better, especially for a photographer like you. Fantastic outlook.
things are more clearly visible in winter, I like that…
An anchor.
That stone makes a great bench! What a pleasant place to sit.
the rocks are very welcoming here.
What a nice rock sofa 💙
Love it!
Room for two here, there a smaller chair deeper in the woods.