View allAll Photos Tagged folkart,
I made some creatures to sell this past Christmas - these are two of them. To me they were a bear and a rabbit, but people had different ideas about what each one was. Turns out they could be many different creatures. I like that about them.
Sick of Christmas
Sick of Krampus
You get the Kramps and that's all!
5.5" x 5.5" x .75"
Hand carved basswood with acrylic paint and varnish.
Collection-Jj Hommel-beateyemedia
This 120-year old Folkart Horse graces my living room. Shot indoors in morning light with a Polaroid 680SLR loaded with Impossible Project Color 600 Gen 2.0 film (batch 3/16/15), L/D wheel in middle position, shielded.
#PolaroidWeek2015, Day 3, Photo 1
a chunk from a larger pieced together piece. acrylic and ink on wood. Messing around with some new stuff.
new painting! For the "All Star Hustlaz" show at White Walls in Dec. By the way...this is the biggest painting I have done since school!
I found this old card with folk art flowers I had done years ago. Decided to add doodles to the mix and was happy with the result.
Sooooo...I missed out on blackbirds but they fit just fine in the folk art category!!:)
Inspiration came from a cross stitch pattern by Bent Creek.
Stereo Dog
Say hello to Stereo dog - don't worry, he won't bite...he's actually very well behave. Fashioned from a large outdoor aluminum light sconce, camping pot and a vintage vacuum cleaner. Stereo's legs are 4 matching ice cream scoops, his neck an old truck side view mirror and wagging the rear a microphone flex arm ...not sure what the ears are?(...just discovered that they're a super rare set of Comisky aftermarket tank badges for a 1940 to 1946 Harley Davidson Knucklehead or flathead!) Though he has neither a left or right speaker, Stereo Dog exists in perfect K9 harmonic balance. Crank it up!