Friday, February 7, 2014

Introduction & first letters (Lisa)

 
Hello! This is my first post for this edition of ALaW, though I've been enjoying the many alphabets that are already appearing.

While I completed both alphabets in 2012 (my first year participating) I did not fare so well with ALaW 2013. In fact, I am still working on my "Peace" alphabet, & will likely not manage the second one in the interest of completing both alphabets this year. It was not for lack of inspiration or time at the studio table that I struggled with ALaW in 2013, but rather that I had a hard time settling down & committing to a concrete direction...I tend to get carried away with the "process" sometimes, & enjoy playing with/stretching ideas—unfortunately sometimes at the expense of bringing them to a conclusion. If anything, ALaW has been useful in making me understand this. Hopefully I will be able to say I learned from it by the end of this year!

The structure of this first set of letters, my "free" alphabet, borrows from an idea I was developing for one of the alphabets last year; it will consist of twenty-six "sleeves" that each slide over a 7x7x2.75-centimeter box made of Canson Mi-Teintes paper in a variety of colors.

The concept for these "letters" came to me as I was creating a gift card for my parents' seventieth birthdays. I started playing with a couple of letters, trying to conceal their identities, but allowing them to guide the design. At first I experimented with blocky, sans serif fonts, but decided to see what would happen with the more flowing English Vivace. Through a series of manipulations—duplicate, flip, group, rotate, repeatI then grouped the resulting elements into a new object, duplicated it & altered its dimensions (which changed the amount of space between the individual letters that comprised the object). I transformed them further by applying different colors & then began layering the designs (sometimes with a further rotation of the original). This likely doesn't make much sense, but I will try to record the steps of one of the letters at some point to clarify the process.

 

The alphabet in "English111 Vivace"

 

Here are some of the letter arrangements in a more basic form; I used them for my Christmas greeting in this post. The first one was made from 16 "P's," the second from 32 "J's," & the third from 16 "L's" (inspired by "peace," "joy" & "love").



Next are some screenshots of the files for the tops of the sleeves for my  ALaW alphabet, i.e. the "official" 7x7 cm squares...

 

"A"

"E"

"O"

"T"

"V"


Most sleeves will likely just have a design on the top, but these next two images are screenshots of the print files for those with designs on the sides/bottom as well (the lines at top/bottom are guides for the scoring-lines).





I've expanded this entry on my blog, where I also show a few cards using these ALaW-inspired designs.

 


Now I just need to decide what, if anything, will go in the boxes!

14 comments:

  1. Wow! This is a wonderful idea! I imagine the time and thought put into it could easily get out of hand. But worth it I think.
    Sandy in the UK

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  2. Thanks for writing a comment, Sandy! And how true - it has been easy to get carried away with each letter, as the possibilities are endless. By committing to focusing on one each week I hope I can find some kind of equilibrium...plus I imagine it will get a little easier as I develop a rhythm : )
    - Lisa

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  3. Your concept is so original and very beautiful. I love it and am looking forward to more posts. Don't think I would have the patience or skill to do what you are doing.

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  4. Love the idea of making boxes! And they are so elegant...

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  5. what a good idea, and so nice.

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  6. Unbelievable Lisa! I read thru this and back again and checked out all the images and just thought how beautiful and divine they are - such fabulous letters! I imagine you can get a bit carried away - but then, why not?

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  7. Thanks for all of your lovely comments! I'm looking forward to continuing to follow the all of your inspiring work on ALaW...
    - Lisa

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  8. Soooo pretty! They are like lace doilies. I love them!

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  9. had to pop in quickly and say this is an AMAZINGLY cool alphabet Lisa. Inspired design.

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  10. Amazing designs from the ;letters and the colours are beautiful.

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  11. This is stunning work. And that is a magazine-quality photograph of the boxes in your workspace. Really conveyed a mood of 'afternoon shadows getting longer, very satisfied after a day of making boxes of art' to me.

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  12. Wow, stunning, so elegant and so much technical detail and know how that I admire and wish I knew how to do too. Looking forward to seeing what you decide to put in the boxes.

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