Tag Archives: flowers

The cure for the winter blues…

Longwood Gardens of course!
We braved the frigid temps and practically ran from the car to the conservatory in search of some cheery color on Saturday. So sit back and relax and think of warmer days as you look at these pretty flowers…

I like this one below called coral pea.
The flowers were on vines that thickly covered several archways (see last photo).

I swoon for sweet peas!

Bouganvilla reminds me of a trip to Jamaica.

You can almost smell them, right?

Mother Natures works of art!

I’d like to pour a nice glass of wine, grab a book and sit on that patio set all afternoon!
Can you find it? It’s a little hidden. The fountain in the foreground made such lovely music.

©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Longwood at Christmas – Part 1

Longwood Gardens at Christmas, it doesn’t get any better than this. Seriously, if you are within 2-3 hours of Philadelphia, you NEED to make the trip. You’ll thank me later. Trust me.
I took so many photos, I have to break this up a bit. So here we have part one. All photos taken in the conservatory.

I don’t even care for poinsettias but these pink ones had me swooning!

These peachy ones were gorgeous too! Don’t you love how they matched the berries?

There was a whole room full of kid decorated trees. Very nicely done! Swooning over the cyclamen here. I don’t even really like pink…

Table for two? Yes, please!

All sorts of trees every where you look. This one was in the cactus/silver room.

My favorite tree. Beautiful blue morpho butterflies all around. Stunning glass ornaments too.

Upon closer inspection, the butterflies actually moved!!! It was beyond magical.


Planning your trip yet? :^)
Stay tuned for part 2 – the outside lights!

©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Tuesday is market day…

Probably one of the best things about living in the little town of East Petersburg, PA, is that we are right down the street from one of Lancaster County’s oldest and largest weekly markets. Started in 1925, Roots is a year round market, open only on Tuesdays and has over 200 vendors both inside and out. You can find just about anything here: flowers, produce, fresh meat & cheese, toys, dollar store items and desserts galore. They even have a few primitive and folk art stands, homemade soft pretzels, jewelry and a plant & small animal auction. The best thing about Roots (pronounced “rutz” if you’re a local) are the prices. They will beat the grocery store every time. Lemons – 5 for a $1.00, $2.50 for a small basket of just picked peaches, $5 heads of garlic for $1,
$2.00 for a dozen ears of local corn, $3 for a big, juicy watermelon!
How wonderful is that?




©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Macro makes me giddy…

I am absolutely gaga over macro! You know, that little flower button on your digital camera that makes super close up photos look amazing? I walk around my garden several times a week (sometimes a day) taking really close up pictures of my flowers. I love to see the fine hairs, the tiny veins, the itsy bitsy spiders.
What’s really cool is downloading them to my computer and getting to see all the details you don’t normally see with the eye. Mother nature truly is the finest artist around!

On a separate note, I was walking out to the garden today with a clean and newly filled hummingbird feeder when a little female ruby throated hummer stopped me in my tracks and started to drink! My I was so insanely excited, my heart was beating like a, well, hummingbird’s! Man, do I wish I had my camera. I’ll have to work one getting some photos of these gorgeous birds before the end of summer!

So here’s some macro shots – click on each photo for a larger image.




In the studio I’ve finished a few more pendants for Etsy including one made from a littleTennessee Spinner gourd that I grew in my garden last year! I thought it would only be fitting to paint a pumpkin on it. I have a few more I hope to add to Etsy soon.
And I really like this Unicorn Tapestry inspired pendant too.


Here’s to a wonderful weekend! I’ll be finishing up a harvest moon welcome sign for EHAG’s August challenge.

©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Silent Sunday – Scenes from the Garden




©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Getting back to the drawing board.

Hello all.
Great to be back in the studio and even more fantastic to welcome all my new followers.
Summer is swinging its heart out at this end. It’s picture perfect…

All the scribbles pals left blunt and dormant have been coaxed out of their hibernation “summernation” and sharpened up. I was missing them, badly!
Black on Grey on White’s posts (sadly a little sporadic until September) will be covering three new wips (two equine and one canine) and my encounter with Rubens.
So without any further ado I’ll trundle over to the drawing board and get cracking on exercising the Derwents, the Staedlers and the FaberCastells.
Will post their exercise routine tomorrow.
Cheerio

©Copyright 2009 by Sheona Hamilton-Grant. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Paths of Destruction

Last weekend was quite an exciting one at our house! Shortly before 3:00am Sunday morning the phone rang. It was an Antrim County Sheriff’s deputy in our driveway asking us to come outside because there was a car in our yard and “a lot of destruction to the property”. Hastily throwing on clothes and turning on lights, we headed outside to see what was going on. To our shock, we found a strange car wedged between our dog pen and the side fence; a space just wide enough for a car! Just as puzzling was the fact that the driver was nowhere to be found! Further examination with flash lights revealed that the driver had gone through our fence in not one but three places!

In due time a wrecker arrived and hauled off the car, but we were naturally too wired up to go back to bed. When daylight arrived, we headed outside with our cameras to record the path of destruction and figure out just what happened. Here’s the scenario as near as we can figure out. A neighbor’s daughter (or some other driver of her car) came around the corner too fast, hit our neighbor’s mailbox on the right and then oversteered, crossed the road and went through our chain link fence.


From there she proceeded across our lawn, plowed into the large lilac bush and the fence along the side of the yard and ended up against two pine trees in the other neighbor’s yard.


She then, apparently, threw the car into reverse and turned it to the left, intending to head back onto the road. Instead, she went through our fence on the other side of the lilac and somehow managed to end up between the dog pen and the fence, hitting the corner post of the pen and getting hung up on my compost pile. (evil grin) She was stuck. Since there wasn’t room to open the doors, she climbed out the driver’s window and disappeared. We figure she called a friend to come get her and didn’t want to face her father or the police. It’s highly probable that she’d been drinking.

Apparently, she wasn’t hurt too badly, fortunately, and the deputy told me a few days ago that she has so far not returned calls from the Sheriff’s department. Without knowing for sure who was driving, the police can’t do much more. I will refrain from any comments on people taking responsibility for their actions although I have plenty in this case.



As soon as our homeowners insurance adjuster had documented the destruction first hand, I was able to clean up the lawn mess and assess the flower beds better. The casualty list includes a honeysuckle bush, a small lilac bush that I’d been nursing along, the large old-fashioned lilac bush, the sweet peas which were torn out of the ground, and my cone flowers whose tops were shredded. I trimmed back the cone flowers as I mourned the fact that they were about to bloom. It remains to be seen if they will recover. With brute force, I was able to wrangle the top rail of the fence back up onto the remaining posts along the road which looks much better and allows the lawn to be mowed while we wait for the fence to be fixed.

All in all, it could have been much worse, for the plants and the girl/driver. Did you notice that large maple tree next to the dog pen? If the car had hit that, the driver would have been in a world of hurt. I’m thankful that the accident wasn’t worse. As a parent, I wouldn’t want to be the one to get that 3:00 am phone call from the police letting me know that my child had been in an accident. I’m thankful that this girl and her parents were lucky – THIS time! I hope she learned a lesson that will stay with her for a very long time.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have to call my children and let them know how much we love them.

©Copyright 2009 by Karen Baker Thumm. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Good News Abounds!


If anything, today’s weather is worse than yesterday’s. It’s cloudy, a stiff wind is blowing, a drizzly rain is falling, and the temperature is a chilly 56 degrees F as opposed to yesterday’s high of 66! Even so, I prefer this weather to last week’s heat and high humidity. It’s a good chance to catch up on indoor chores without the misery of constant sweating and clammy floors and furniture.

At the height of last week’s heat, I was visited by a newly found saddle fitter who evaluated my saddle and my horse and declared that he could take my saddle apart, narrow the tree and restuff it to fit my horse better. Since it’s a quality saddle in good condition and needs only these minor adjustments, I won’t have to go saddle shopping again! The long and short of it is that this culminated a long-time goal of mine to “do something” about a saddle that I knew was a little too wide for my horse but that is comfortable for me and that I love. Thanks to a Chronicle of The Horse online forum, I was able to find a saddle fitter in Michigan who was highly recommended by other dressage riders. If the fit turns out well, I’ll share his name.

The other thing I accomplished over the past week was to finish weeding the flower beds, plant the wax begonias and install edging blocks along the front of the old garage flower bed. That made a huge improvement in its looks and helps to hold the water in, since one end of the bed is higher than lawn level. All of my new perennials that survived the winter are doing spectacularly, and the foxgloves are now blooming in lovely hues of magenta and cream. I’m going to wait until next year to move plants around after evaluating their different growing characteristics and bloom times. This year I’ll install more edging blocks along the long fence bed and dig out more sections between shrubs which will make mowing the lawn easier for my husband.

In about ten days, Horse Shows By The Bay will begin its expanded three week series of shows in Acme, and I’m hoping to get over there to shoot at least a couple of times. There will be an all-afternoon series of polo matches that are must-sees as well.

In honor of HSBB, I’m thinking of starting a new painting or drawing using one of my images from past shows. There are so many good ones to choose from that it will be difficult to make a choice! Should it be hunters, jumpers, dressage, ponies or a general horse show scene? Or, perhaps I’ll start my planned series of horse show dogs.

There is more good news that Mural Mosaic’s The Horse Gift will be displayed at this year’s Calgary Stampede. That’s the mural I did a panel for last year, so if you’re up that way and going to take in the Stampede, be sure to search out the mural. You can’t miss it; it’s 22 feet high! So far, the mural has been shown at Spruce Meadows, Quarter Horse Congress and the National Finals Rodeo; all top horse venues with lots of visitors. Reports are that visitors are just blown away by it! You can buy your own poster of it, too, or buy a book and put together your own life sized horse poster of the mural. I have books, if anyone is interested.

At the top are my foxgloves blooming. And below is my panel for The Horse Gift.

©Copyright 2009 by Karen Baker Thumm. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Summer at Longwood

Took the day off on Monday for a trip to Longwood Gardens. Thought I would share a few pictures…

Got an old stump? I think this is a great idea for a birdbath. Seemed well received by the Longwood bird residents too!

My favorite of Longwood’s summer displays are the water lilies – hands down. So many gorgeous dragonflies to look at too.

One of my favorite new flowers (new to me that is) – Throatwort. I think that I am not in the right zone to grow this though. Maybe as an annual?

Another favorite I hadn’t heard of before, Showy Hebe. I just adore purples and blues in the garden…

Flowers… are a proud assertion that a ray of beauty outvalues all the utilities of the world. ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Lilac Season

The lilacs above are an old fashioned variety that were here when we bought the property over thirty years ago. They had probably been here for many decades before that since this property was once a farmstead along the banks of the lake, going back to the nineteenth century when the area was cleared and homesteaded. Hard as it is to believe today, northwest Michigan was still very much a wilderness until late in the 1800’s. Some southern Michiganders still think it is!

Our lilacs are now in bloom, and their sweet fragrance fills the air when I do my daily tour of the flower beds. Unfortunately, we can’t see them from the house, but there are small lilacs planted along the road fence which will be visible from the house once they’re big enough to put on a real display. I was told they need lots of manure to bloom well, so I must remember to bring some home from the barn each time I go. Last year they got a dose of Moo Doo, but it didn’t spur any blooms this Spring, much to my disappointment.

Last weekend I drove all over in search of the annuals that I wanted for the flower beds; wax begonias with green leaves and pink and white flowers. By experimentation, these are the colors that work the best in the beds along the driveway and house and the round bed that hides the well pipe. These are partially shaded areas, and the begonias do better than any other plants I’ve tried, plus they bloom profusely well into autumn. I just love them!

I also bought a flat of pansies, another favorite, and will plant them in the road fence beds as border plants where ever there is a need. Several years ago these happy little plants bloomed so well that they could be seen from the house and even managed to over winter and bloom again. I lost the remaining ones when they dried up one summer before I could get them mulched. I don’t know what it is about that bed along the fence; whether it’s a thick layer of insulating snow that the plows deposit or what. My snap dragons come back every year, too, and are now about five years old.

On Sunday I weeded the driveway flower bed and planted some of the begonias; by far the earliest I’ve ever planted before! Usually, June is ending before I get around to this chore, and wouldn’t you know it; there was a freeze warning for Sunday night! We missed the freeze, and the plants looked healthy the next morning and happy to be out of their confining little boxes.

For the time being, I’m contenting myself with this form of creativity while winding up other urgent projects around the house and figuring out how I can fit in significant blocks of time for artwork. I suspect that means curtailing computer time to an hour a day instead of the several that is the current routine. Goodbye Facebook and other mindless wanderings around the internet.

Just as I had hoped, my last blog post about the licensing agent has exorcised this unpleasant experience once and for all and has allowed me to move on. As negative as it was, it had a very positive and beneficial effect. Such people are just not worth stewing over!

©Copyright 2009 by Karen Baker Thumm. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Yellow in my garden…


But be bright,
bright,
bright as yellow,
warm as yellow.

~The Innocence Mission


“When you take a flower in your hand and really look at it, it’s your world for the moment. I want to give that world to someone else. Most people in the city rush around so, they have no time to look at a flower. I want them to see it whether they want to or not.”

~Georgia O’Keeffe

“He is happiest who hath power to gather wisdom from a flower.”
~Mary Howitt

“The artist is the confidant of nature, flowers carry on dialogues with him through the graceful bending of their stems and the harmoniously tinted nuances of their blossoms. Every flower has a cordial word which nature directs towards him.”
~Auguste Rodin

©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Blood, sweat and dirt…

“I perhaps owe having become a painter to flowers.”– Claude Monet

I have been so busy in the yard I haven’t gotten much else done. I’m so proud of my new flower garden (mostly perennials) that I thought I would share a few pictures. My wonderful husband bought me a weeping redbud that is in the corner of the boomerang shape. I can’t wait to see it bloom next spring!


This was the garden half way finished. I wish I had taken a before photo. When we moved in nearly 2 years ago there was an oval garden in the back that was entirely over grown and a butterfly bush that had a lot of dead wood that I cut off and put a large saucer in for a bird bath. This year I enlarged the space around the butterfly bush and connected the two beds in a large boomerang shape.



Here’s the finished garden. I have a lot of plants in there that will grow tall and spread such as shasta daisies, lupine, black eyed susan, yarrow, coneflower, dianthus, salvia & baby’s breath.
Also planted a knock out rose, two blueberry bushes, glads, spirea, lady’s mantle coral bells, scotch broom, meadow rue, borgae, obedient plant, sunflowers, spiderwort, morning glory, geranium, portulaca, foxglove and more!


Veggie garden is getting big. Just added a small patch behind it for cantaloupe and watermelon. Instead of bamboo poles for tomato teepees, I thought I would try using large branches.


Guess who’s going eating lots of salad this week? I have three varieties, like this romaine, to choose from. My favorite is red sails but the black seeded simpson is ready too!


One more gorilla photo from last Monday! Thanks for all the comments. I’m sorry if I’m not able to always comment back but I do appreciate hearing from other bloggers.

©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Walk in my Garden Wednesday

You know, I started this blog 252 posts ago to show my artwork but when spring hits and the weather warms up, I just can’t get my hands out of the dirt!

I have a springtime ritual, every morning, after my coffee, I take a stroll around the yard to see what’s blooming and popping up out of the ground. We’ve only been here about 2 years so some things are surprises and some plants I’ve just added last year. Every year I plan on adding a new flower garden so eventually there will be little to mow. This year I’m working on a big perennial garden which is half way finished and I doubled the size of my small veggie garden. So here are a few pictures from around the yard as I take my morning walk…

My small veggie garden. Planted 2 tomato plants this week! The lettuce, peas, beets and onions are coming along nicely. I need a bale of straw to put down.


My first radish! Too bad I don’t like them. It’s cute though, isn’t it? My husband will eat it. Friends think I’m weird to grow things I won’t eat.


Who doesn’t like lilacs? I’ve been anxiously awaiting the blooming of this bush!

Japanese Laurel, I didn’t know it had flowers until now.


My perennial garden half way tilled and planted. Still have to link the two gardens but there were a lot of grape hyacinth planted in that grassy spot I didn’t want to disrupt.


Pink Dogwood in the front yard. It looked sick last year but bloomed wonderfully this spring. What’s up with that?


Our small little house has a wonderful 1/2 acre yard. One of the nicest parts are the 7 large azaleas in front.


Lightning hit one of our mature pine trees last week. Not sure what’s going to happen to this poor guy.


Melody Lea Lamb used one of my frog photos I posted a few days ago to create this gorgeous original Frog Prince ACEO. It is so nice, I just had to share. Click HERE to purchase him (wish I had the money:) .

©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Scenes from the Backyard

70 degrees, super sunny, sweet spring air – what more could you ask for?
Here’s just a few shots from the backyard today…


Meadow Rue


Unusual small yellow tulip.


Zazu chases the hose.


Tender pea shoots.


Grape Hyacinth coming up in the yard.


Zazu and the gargoyle keeping watch.

One of my favorites, Bleeding Hearts.

©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Good Friday

Click on each photo for a larger image.

It has indeed been a very Good Friday. I had been wanting to go to the Brandywine River Museum to catch the exhibit on Edward Gorey for a few weeks now and the weatherman was calling for rain today so I thought it would be the perfect time to go. I don’t think I was allowed to take photos but there wasn’t really anyone around. Here are some envelopes he drew on and sent to friends. I thought it would have been cool to have one of these.

Because I was being sneaky I didn’t get many photos. I really wanted to take one of a man and a dragon exchanging gifts but there were a few people in the room. I was surprised that most of his pen and ink drawings were very small, about 5″ x 7″. Some really fun artwork and they had his big old beaver coat there too.

A cool NC Wyeth Painting I don’t remember seeing before. It was called something like “Brigham the Famous Buffalo Hunting Horse”. Don’t quote me on that title, I just thought it was neat that the guy was using no tack.

And the cool bronze pig down by the Brandywine River.

So after we were done with the museum we decided to head over to Longwood Gardens since we were in the area, have a membership and it hadn’t started raining (it never did rain). A few varieties of tulips were up as were some other springtime flowers. I was in love with this purple one. There were loads of pretty blues and purples! I want a wisteria bonsai and a weeping redbud!

A beautiful Canada Goose in a pond by the meadow. His mate was nesting nearby.

As if the day couldn’t get any better, my neighbor down the street at Goat Flower Farm had several perrenials to share with me and a ton of new baby fainting and pygmy goats. Also saw a hawk on her fence. I think it’s a Cooper’s Hawk or Sharp Shinned Hawk. Here are my two favorite photos I took this evening.

Okay, now I AM really tired! Off to have that glass of wine and put up my tired dogs:) I have a ton of things to plant tomorrow (oops, I forgot to mention all the lovely flowers my mom gave me for Easter when we stopped by the shop she works at!).

©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Favorite Artist – Carol Biering Hendrix

Today’s artist is someone whose work I have admired for quite some time. She does excellent equine paintings, including horse racing subjects (among my personal favorite painting subject), but she does equally well with other animals.

She also does excellent still life and floral work, including Hell’s Angels, at left. I ordinarily choose an equine image if that’s what I know an artist for, but this one jumped out at me when I was looking at Carol’s website. The title brought a chuckle, too, so here it is!

Carol specializes in commissioned oil portraits of horses, other animals, florals and landscapes and has been involved in various art activities for many years. Her work has been included in many private collections, galleries and shows through out the Southwest.

Carol has also become a distinguished photographer as well. She utilizes her photographic skills for client advertisement purposes, commissioned photo portraits as well as an aid in developing her paintings and as an art form.

Many other images can be seen at Carol’s web site or through either of two online stores (Cafe Press: Painted Memories and Yessy.com).

©Copyright 2008 by Carrie Lewis. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Carrie Lewis’s website.

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