The year ahead: The Wild Unknown


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I tried out a 'year ahead' tarot spread using the beautiful The Wild Unknown cards... Cards which I would be totally happy to just shuffle and stare at, but I was curious as to what they might say to me...
As someone who doesn't know much about tarot, I can only interpret it quite generally. It looks like quite a journey this year, with some rough stuff around August-October -- destruction and construction -- which resolves into wisdom/knowledge by the end of the year. 
Also, the 'year in general' card was The Star, which bodes well, and the Father of Wands jumped out while I was shuffling -- creativity and charisma, just what I need!
My logical brain is still not sure about tarot, whether it really shows anything, or if it can just become a self-fulfilling set of restrictions, but it is fun to explore, and to sit quietly and think about what might lie ahead. 

If you could see what was in store for the next 12 months, would you?

Love things: Hard at work


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Life lately, just quickly...
1. Comission projects // print projects... all consuming at the moment
2. Get backing into the routine life: Early-morning breakfasting, train reading, pre-work sketching // Signing prints sold through here.
3. Missing Shadow and his weird antics (seen here with a cicada shell he accidentally picked up at the farm) // January saw a fair bit of travelling and bag-packing fun. 
4. Print projects // commission projects... hopefully I'll break for some personal projects soon. 


Sketchy Fridays: Slow progress...


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In my sketchbooks this week: I'm just chippin' away at things, still omitting the use of colour -- gotta sort that out. Hopefully some proper, complete, works to share in the coming week. 
But, I am still being distracted by this:

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➳☯ The perfect match ☯ ➳


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One of the equally delightful and frustrating aspects of art (and life in general) is that things seem to come together best when they are orchestrated least. 
Nothing illustrates this better than the above works... I had no intention of making a series, they were simply a product of my boredom and restlessness, marching out of my hands one after the other, in an orderly fashion, well-suited to sitting alongside each other. And as it turns out, they are the pieces that resonate most strongly with other people. 
So, I look at it this way -- for every frustrated hour an artist spends pouring over something she 'just knows' is going to be amazing, there's that five-minute throw-away scribble that is infinitely better. Whatever's right. 



⊚ ↠ The desert ↞ ⊚

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When Scotty and I were in America, we went to Vegas just to check it out. Which is largely about all I'd recommend Vegas for, but that's just me. As our plane landed back in LA -- packed full of people who, I daresay, had either lost big or barely broken even -- the guy next to me started talking on his phone. Scotty was battling a bad hangover and I was suspiciously keeping an eye on a guy across the aisle who was sweating profusely and maybe had some sort of explosive or weapon in his carry-on, but we both managed to overhear this guy-on-the-phone drop a key phrase:

"Out in the desert, man, I just felt so free."

Now, in Vegas, your sense of freedom is less to do with the mystique and magic of the wide desert skies, and more to do with being wasted all the time and walking from one casino to another without ever having to put down your drink, not to mention being able to buy beers and margarita slushies on the street corners. Add to that the fact that there isn't 'time' as it is traditionally understood in the outside world, and you do get into a heady sense of freedom from Vegas-in-the-desert.

But Vegas notwithstanding, the southwest American desert is a powerful idea, which is romanticised beautifully, and can be a poignant thing for a lot of people.

The Australian desert -- or 'outback' -- is far more hostile and unforgiving, and so isn't really romanticised in the same way. That huge expanse in the centre of our country tends to give rise to folklore (and truth) about psycho-killers waiting down otherwise-vacant tracks where your car is most likely to give out. And to a sense of sadness that the only people who really understood how to live out there, and who could truly tune-in to the mysticism of the outback's sacred places, had their culture, and its secrets, all but wiped out. Which I guess parallels with America's southwest too.

At any rate, I think deserts -- as potentially perilous and totally unknowable as they are -- connect with the human need for something divine and altogether more powerful than us. Like a representation of nature at her cruelest, mightiest, most menacing and most stoic, she's showing us God in the desert.

And so, there you have the thousand words that the above picture represents. 

Hunter's moon


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Mate Vintage shirt; op shop slip dress; Asos boots; vintage/markets jewellery and sunglasses.

There's nothing like the house you grew up in. The water tastes sweeter -- especially when it's rainwater -- the sleep is deeper, the smells and sounds are familiar and the shower pressure is always perfect. Even the concrete verandahs feel softer underfoot.
As an angsty teen, I used to resent living so far out of town, especially with the town being, more-often-than-not, best described as a 'total hole'. But as I get older I can see why my parent's chose the spot, and every time I visit, I'm increasingly grateful that they did.

Earlier this month I spent a week at home. Most of the time, I was just drinking ciders while swimming in the creek, listening to the birds and cicadas, singing songs to the dogs, leatherworking with my dad and altering op shop finds with my mum and aunty... It's the good life.

But all too soon I was back on a plane to the city, and here I am.
Although, I am pleased that this time when I returned to Melbourne, it did feel like I was coming home, just in a different way.

Sketchy Fridays (but Saturdays, really)


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Alright, so it's the second week and I already missed actually posting this on a Friday. Which pretty much sums up why I never make resolutions, but rather try and sneak in lifestyle and habit changes gradually, so I don't notice. Which makes no sense, but sometimes I can trick myself into excellent things like quitting smoking or drawing every day. So, in the words of HST, whatever's right.

But anyway, here it is... my sketchbook this week is full of work, work, work. There's maybe one personal, for-fun drawing among them, and it's probably the one I like least... which says a lot about drawing for work and how it makes you push yourself, and even more about how very, very quiet my social life currently is.

Also, my excuse. That strange alien being of cuteness pictured above arrived yesterday evening, and that, ladies and gentlemen, is my excuse for failing at a resolve only two weeks in.
By all accounts, I'd say she's a good excuse.

Raych x


Moon Shaman


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The Moon Shaman is a wild and mystical daughter of the night, who holds a raw and powerful magic. She is midnight of the winter solstice, every phase of the orbiting moon, the strange tides that bring the oceans near, and the weirdness elicited by a full yellow orb rising over the horizon.
Harvest and hunter's, wolf and long nights.
Prints of the Moon Shaman are available here.

Smoke and artefacts: Lenni

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Love this little creative firecracker of a lookbook for Lenni's latest line (shop it here). 
Shot by the ever-killing-it Julia Trotti -- who runs a photography blog here that is not only beautiful, inventive, and inspiring, it is also super practical in that she shares a lot of knowledge -- this collection of images heralds the arrival of some really strong Australian creatives, in both Lenni and Julia. It definitely sets the bar. 
And also, from a totally subjective standpoint, this is the way I love to see photoshoots edited -- with a bit of collage-illustrationy goodness thrown in for good measure. 
See more of the shoot on Lenni's blog here.

Also -- yay! -- I created the above logo for Lenni (but, by way of disclaimer, not the other images used throughout the shoot)... nothin' is more fun than drawing a set of tattooed palms. 

Share the love III

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Things I'm loving this week -- and the past couple of weeks -- as the holidays wind up and it becomes time to head home to Melbourne.

1. Finding my will to be weird // More illustrations on vintage Arizona Highways scans.
2. While I was 'home-home' (in NSW), we visited nearby hippie town Bellingen and blitzed the opshops // Then dad's leather-working tools came out, and I made Humble her first handmade collar.
3. Collecting roo bones and abalone shells in Eden, NSW, over new year's eve with Bay // Learning how to draw shells.
4. New year's eve in Eden: the campsite // Blue tips, blood lips.
5. The process from sketch to painting // From start to finish.
6. Another pre-painting sketch // Cleanskin vs. tattoos.
7. Drinking, skating and painting jam at Creekside DIY skate ramp // Swimming in the creek the next day.
8. Cold salty ciders at the Ballina skatepark // Shadow: blissing out at Angels Beach in his lifejacket.
9. Melbourne home: painting, bruschetta, ciders, new rug and home decor with Bay // Farm home: Belly-button the border collie, gardening, champagne with my mumma. 

Sketchy Fridays: The first

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So I thought this might be a good way to stay updated with what's going on inside my sketchbook... And to make sure I remember to share a bit of artwork with you as I go. Also, the works-in-progress shots give a bit of insight into how I work/ what's behind some of the pieces.
When I worked at the local paper, every Friday afternoon I used to sit at my desk way down the back of the office and draw a notebook sketch to share, and as a way to keep drawing. Now I have a job where I need to stay on task, so to hell with that...
But anyway, here's what I've been doing lately -- which is not a whole lot, to be honest -- and welcome to Sketchy Fridays!
Raych x
 

Live by the sun, love by the moon

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Photography: Emman Montalvan
Model: Lauryn Holmquist
Styling: Chloe Chippendale
Art by Tami Snodgrass of Charmed I'm Sure
Tarot card descriptions by Victoria Kray of Vega Jewelry
Maniamania jewellery via Bona Drag 
This one is for the tarot reading, hypnotist collecting, crystal swinging, Stevie Nicks ticket-holding, candle lighting, sage burning, white magic mamas. Pick your card, trust your intuition, follow your heart, live by the sun + love by the moon. 
Chloe, your creative mind is killing me -- too amazing! Tami, same goes for your perfect fine-line embellishments... Check out the whole shoot on Chloe's blog here, and visit Sugarhigh + Lovestoned's new site here.

Also, apologies for the lack of art on the blog -- or anywhere, actually -- I'm drinking ciders and bass fishing on my parents' farm. Internet is poor and the serenity is unparallelled.
I'll be back soon.
Raych x