The internet guide I wrote for my mom. When you didn't grow up with the internet...

The internet guide I wrote for my mom. When you didn't grow up with the internet...

My mom didn't grow up with computers. I didn't either for that matter. We got our first computer in about 1985 when I was in junior high. My dad bought an Apple IIE and I think it had a total working memory of 2 MB. Everything had to go on those little 3 inch floppy disks and heaven help you if you lost the one with your 9th grade English paper on it.

My mom just got her very own Macintosh computer and I am so proud of her! What I have realized from watching her struggle with technology is that for those of us who were not born with a smartphone in our hand, learning how the world of the internet works can feel really overwhelming. The internet didn't really exist until I was well out of graduate school and my own education in how it works has been largely courtesy of Dr. Google.

Commissions: weaving for a client (or learning basic addition the hard way)

Commissions: weaving for a client (or learning basic addition the hard way)

The piece on my loom right now is a commission for a couple's home. Managing a commission demands some organization and I am fairly good at this. What I'm not as good at is estimating how much time the accumulated tasks on my calendar are going to take. Oh sure, I can come up with a fairly good estimate of how many hours creating a certain piece of art will take me. I can also estimate how long it'll take me to rebuild my website or do my accounting for the month or answer Monday's emails. 

What I can't seem to do effectively is ADD. I might have a separate number for all those things in my head, but when I add 2 + 3 + 4 hours, I tend to get 5 instead of 9. So though I'm sure that I can shoot six videos, weave a foot on the big tapestry, and manage all the online teaching in a week, the chances of that actually happening are really zero... due to that addition thing. (And perhaps my eternal sense of optimism.)

Weaving tapestry on small looms: Hokett looms and beyond

Weaving tapestry on small looms: Hokett looms and beyond

Weaving on a portable loom. I can take it camping and even backpacking. It fits in my purse if I have a long evening of babysitting my nieces ahead of me and it is a great companion for road trips especially when I'm not driving. I have been messing around with these Hokett looms for years now and this loom got to come on a quick camping trip in northern Colorado last weekend. I think she liked the starts the most.

Vermont-- here I come!

Vermont-- here I come!

I've been planning this retreat for about a year and a half. Tomorrow I am on my way. There is still a large quantity of yarn to be shoved into suitcases and some sorting of materials to do. The most important thing is the thoughtful placement of clothing for Thursday so that I don't have to lug three massive suitcases into the hotel to search among the yarn for my clean underwear. (Don't worry, I don't keep the dirty underwear there.) 

Emergence II in its public installation space

Emergence II in its public installation space

On a day trip to Dinosaur National Monument, I finally got the chance to see my tapestry, Emergence II, installed in the permanent art collection of Northwestern Colorado Community College in Craig, Colorado. I was quite taken aback at how different the piece actually is from what lives in my memory. Woven in 2010, the colors have shifted around in my head to be something quite different.