Thursday, February 21, 2013

Thinking Spring!

Though the temperature today is only in the 20's in Cape May, it's already spring at the dollar store.  I went in this morning to stock up on some glue sticks and saw these bright and cheery place mats - well obviously, I couldn't resist.  I guess that is what is referred to as an "impulse purchase."  At least it only cost me $4.00.  When I got home, I realized that I already had some orange place mats.  So I decided to make the old ones into a laptop case and call it an "impulse craft." At least that was free!
 

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Something fishy...

I made this today.  It started out as an idea for a mobile with some chimes, but after playing with lots of different materials and ideas I settled on this.  I love the process of discovering what I am going to make and how it takes me by surprise sometimes.  I found the fish barbecue rack at my thrift store, brought it home and just started attaching metal things to it.  Only certain pieces worked.  There are keys, single earrings, random hardware, a tin whistle and a jingle bell. This is not a haphazard arrangement - it is a very deliberate one, but I love that it looks like it just washed up on the beach as it is, all weathered and messy.  It was fun to use things from my stash that I have had for years - I finally figured out why I have been saving them.   The creative process is so satisfying - it nourishes my soul.  I laughed when I finished it.  I think I'll have fish for dinner to celebrate!

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Deconstruction and Reconstruction


Used to be:  a man's size XL shirt.
Now:  Cup cozie, dog collarette, and skirt.
Voila!

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Article in the Press of Atlantic City!

Posted: Wednesday, January 9, 2013 12:00 am | Updated: 8:31 am, Wed Jan 9, 2013.
Penelope Cake, of Cape May, once danced “Red Checked Life” in an empty storefront in New York City’s garment district.
She decorated the window and store in everything red-and-white checked. Then she danced, “of course dressed in red-and-white checked clothing,” she said. It was all visible to passersby.
“It was one of those great (city) things where you don't know if what is going on is real life or art,” Cake said.
Cake, 56, moved to Cape May about a year ago after a 35-year career as an artist and dancer in New York. She is the volunteer artist-in-residence at VIMspirations, the new thrift shop benefitting Volunteers in Medicine of Cape May County, at 600 Park Blvd., West Cape May.
At the shop, Cake gives impromptu craft lessons using donated materials. She can tell you how to make new clothing from donated apparel.
“You can take the sleeves from one sweater, and put them on another,” she said as an example, while teaching this reporter to make an origami gift box from recycled holiday cards.
Her art is based on upcycling — using materials that might be thrown away to make something of value. She makes jewelry out of hardware and game pieces, art journals and boxes from books, collages from varied items, and knits and crochets using yarn made from T-shirts and plastic bags.
“My goal is to encourage people to be creative, especially through the reuse of things that might otherwise end up in a landfill,” she said.

Monday, January 7, 2013

No ordinary bunny...

Aromatherapy, heat therapy and cuddle therapy all in one!
This should get me through the winter blues...

Thursday, December 27, 2012


STEP INTO THE NEW YEAR!

We took down all the Christmas displays at VIMspirations yesterday and decided to "put our best foot forward" for the new year.  This is the window display that I designed.  Drop on by for a pair of shoes!

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Home Made Bookcase

Jeffrey made this bookcase for me to put in my studio.  Now I have a new home for some of my books too.  It feels like having old friends back in my life - I love it!

Thursday, November 15, 2012

New Bag Out of Old Jeans

We are having a 50% off sale on women's jeans and pants at VIMspirations this week so I made this.  I used a teeny tiny pair of jeans, a necktie for the bottom and the strap, a button down shirt for the lining, and finished it off with some buttons and a pin. Come on over and check it out - its for sale.  Or buy a pair of jeans for $3.00 and make your own!

Sunday, November 4, 2012

As artist-in-residence at VIMspirations thrift store in West Cape May (which raises money for Volunteers in Medicine) I often do the store and window displays.  Today an animal outreach center opened up next door to us, so I set up our store window in celebration of dogs and cats.  I had some paw print wrapping paper which I put down on the ledge, cut out pictures of dogs and cats from magazines and put them in some of the many photo frames that have been donated to us, found some books in our collection to add, and also included samples of my dog collarettes with copies of the article that I wrote for Bark magazine on how to make them, available as a handout for interested customers.  It was a good day, and most of us in Cape May are very fortunate to still have our homes, food, water and heat after the ravages of Hurricane Sandy, unlike so many many people just to the north of us. We will help them, and continue helping them for a long time, in whatever way that we can. Go to this link for information about evacuating with your pets.
http://www.capemaycountyherald.com/article/storm/court+house/87546-evacuation+ordered+shelters+readied

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Bookends

These days, I am trying to make as many things as I can with my own hands.  Here are some bookends that I made with some scrap wood, yellow paint and two cans of spinach from the dollar store.  I like the way they turned out.  I also like my new life in Cape May.  I  live in a real house, have a studio of my own, started a craft club, and have recently become the artist-in-residence at a local thrift store.  We just survived Hurricane Sandy in good shape and are looking forward to walking on the beach again soon.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

More poems...


Morning Walk #7

The sign says
“CAUTION
Trees leaning toward roadway”
Arched
They look like the crest of a wave
The sea
In a tree.

Morning Walk #8

We put seashells on our windowsill
Around the garden
And in our bathroom.
We wonder if it’s a trap
Like for lobsters and crabs.
But we don’t mind
Being caught.
We have seashells in our pockets.
 



Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Morning Walk #4



This morning I saw the sea.
Lavender
With white ruffles
Sparkles of gold
Hints of green like I’ve never seen
A blue to see through.
Today I will dress myself
In the colors of the sea
And invite myself
To an afternoon tea.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Morning Walk #3



I’m not there
Where
I can meet the sky.
I’m not there
Where thinking
Is an option.
I’m not there where
The ocean and I
See eye to eye.
I’m not there where my soul
Has wings.

Friday, August 12, 2011

I have become addicted to ETSY.


I immerse myself in the bountiful creativity.  I laugh too, at the genius living there.  Treasury Lists take me to places that I couldn’t find on my own, like knowledgeable tour guides that show you secret places.  And yes, I keep my favorites. They are listed under the heart so that I can visit them often.  Today I made my second Treasury List.  It is called Fantasy Favorites and is what I want right now.  To get there, go to Etsy.com, scroll down to Treasury on the left side, click on it, type "Fantasy Favorites" in the search box.  Be sure to get lost while you are looking.  Find something that speaks to you...

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

2 Poems?


I have been walking to the beach every morning and thinking about things....

Morning walk #1
Pippi weighs 8lbs 13ozs and she barks at the ocean.
I think that she thinks
It will answer her.
Nothing has prepared her for this.
Not the joggers that come too close,
Or the other dogs that get in her way on city sidewalks.
It does not respond to her voice but repeats its own refrain.
The waves roll in and she runs out, creating her own song.  Soon they are dancing together. 

Morning Walk #2
There is time to find beach glass.
No need to bow
Down
Now.
It will be there when I find it.
For now, I look out.
Tall back, long neck,
Shoulders released.
To where
There
Is time.
 

Sunday, December 5, 2010

How I read

     I have my book, a pen and a cup of tea.  I hold the book with both hands to feel its weight and the texture of its cover.  I run my fingers over the edges of the pages so that they can fly through the air.  I smell it and touch it to my cheek.  Then I open it, not to the page I last read, but much earlier than that.  I read over the sections that I have underlined.  I re-enter its world and remind myself of where I am.  I often long to connect with the text in ways that expand my experience.  So I write notes on post-its of images to include on its pages.  I hunt for those images in my massive picture collection or on the internet and carefully tape them onto the pages so that the text is not permanently covered.  The images become new pages that I can flip up to reveal their connections underneath.  Sometimes I use other materials to illustrate an idea.  I have included little bags of sand, sticks, quotes from other books, postcards and fabric.  I have sewn a design with thread onto a page.  At times, I have attached photographs so that the book also becomes a personal journal.
     My favorite book is "Red" by Terry Tempest Williams.  I read it several times and then visited the red rock desert of Utah to observe its beauty first hand.  I carried the book with me as I traveled.  It became a scrap book, photo album and work of art.  I felt as though I had entered the book and treasured it as both an object and a spiritual experience.  I keep it on a shelf with many other books that I have examined in  the same way.  I visit it sometimes and re-enter its world.   That's how I read.




    










Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Happy Thanksgiving!

I wasn't really in the Thanksgiving mood and had decided to put minimal effort into planning and decorating this year.  Earlier today, though, I noticed an empty patch of white wall just above our dining room table and thought it would be nice to put a wreath there.  I went to the farmer's market in search of one, without any luck.  Jeffrey suggested that we just make one, right then and there.  We used a coat hanger, brown paper grocery bags embellished with a little bit of orange and yellow paint, and fake berries and leaves from old Thanksgiving decorations.  We didn't have to buy a thing.  Happy Thanksgiving everyone!

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Altered Books

Recently, I have been spending most of my creative time working on an altered book.  Part journal and part art, the medium suits me.  I realize that blogging is not really my medium.  I have not been able to enter into a relationship with the computer that is as immediate and passionate as the one I have with real materials:  cloth, paper, paint, scissors, glue, paper, buttons.   It is difficult to continue with this blog when my creative longings take me elsewhere.  It can, however, be a record of this other work that I do. So, here are some photos of my most recent project.  Let me know what you think.  I guess the important aspect of blogging is the relationship you create and nurture with others.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Credit card charm bracelets

                                                              
It seems like the nature of a blog is to go in and out of it.  I'm trying to get back to my original vision, "Creativity Everyday."  This post is one that I hand-wrote in my blog journal in August which I never published but feel like it is a good start back into this process....


August 13, 2010
So what can I do today that's creative?  My outfit isn't particularly striking. I'm sitting in an ugly room at the Courthouse serving my civic duty as a juror-in-waiting and I haven't made anything in the last few days.  I have, however, made a lot of things in the past.  At times like this (when my creative spirit is taking a nap) I can pull from some of those older ideas.  Maybe that will even help me wake up and get inspired again!

Making jewelry, especially out of unusual materials, has been one of my passions for years.  For instance, does a charm bracelet have to have specific kinds of charms?

I'm sure you have all had occasion to cut up a credit card because it has expired, or you are determined to get out of debt, or you never wanted it in the first place.  But how many of you save the pieces and put them in your drawer full of other random junk that might be useful someday?  I sometimes get credit cards or membership cards in the mail that I don't want or need.  Yes, I am a member of the Humane Society, but do I need to carry a plastic card in my wallet to prove it?  Out of my paranoid habit to avoid identity theft, I started to cut the card up and noticed all the interesting little pieces that appeared.  (My favorite one is from a list of tips for taking care of your pet in an emergency, "Always remain calm," a good reminder for everyday life as well.)  I continued to cut the card up, choosing pieces and shapes that pleased me.  I have no idea how the image of a charm bracelet first occurred to me but it soon became a reality.  I poked holes in the pieces of the card with a small awl and attached them to a piece of chain with jump rings and finished off the bracelet with a clamp to open and close it.  Maybe I could offer to make charm bracelets out of your old credit cards as a way to encourage people to stop using them.  Let me know if you would like me to make one for you!
xo penelope

Friday, July 16, 2010

I find myself in a world of pink...


Today, I wore pink and black sunsuit that my sister got for me at Daffy's and Pippi wore a pink bandanna that I made for her with poodles on it.


Yesterday, my friend Judith made a dress for me with the same fabric.  It was like magic.



She measured  me and  then cut and sewed the dress without any pattern or pins, in less than two hours.  I had  these poodle earrings that I made from keychains to go with it.


Then I remembered the new wallet that I bought at Pearl River last week - its mostly pink.
 

And I just finished reading a children's book called "The Pink Motel" by Carol Ryrie Brink in which the color pink is used as a symbol of individuality leading to a better understanding and acceptance of diversity.

So THINK PINK and enjoy your weekend!
xo Penelope

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Fruit #3

Here is another "Fruit" outfit.  I reconstructed the dress from a 1960's shirt by cutting off the collar and sleeves, reshaping the neck and adding pink tulle to the bottom.  The belt is made out of grass turf and fake flowers [I didn't make it].  Green cowboy boots, white satin gloves, a green button bracelet [that I did make] and green dangling earrings finish off the outfit.  All I need is a place to go!  Maybe I should start my own "Fruits" gathering - anyone want to join me?   How about on Sunday afternoons at the High Line in NYC?

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Fruit #1

"Fruits" is a beautiful Phaidon book with vibrant photographs of Japanese teenagers in fantastic, outrageous, colorful and playful outfits.  The author and photographer, Shoichi Aoki, states that his interest in fashion "comes from the way people express themselves through the clothes they wear."  During the 1990's, teenagers congregated every weekend in the Harajuku district of Tokyo to display their creative attire, socialize, and inspire each other.  Street fashion became personalized artwork, moving sculpture and a performance event all at the same time.  This is my homage to that movement.  For the next few days, I will be experimenting with my own "fruity" outfits and posting them here.