guard your seed-put a sock on it

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g-friend. je-sus. I feel like we are on one of those reality shows where they shoot you out of a cannon and then make you eat scorpions so you can get your prize that’s what- like $50? Who opens a nursery in the worst heat wave in recent history?

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We’ve got so many plants in ER we had Chucho and Hippo rig up some shade cloth so they can recoup. On a perkier note, Hans’ prado red sunflowers are thrilled- but Justin started wringing his hand b/c the seeds are disappearing.

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so ah, this morning we all came in to discover Tessa’s black panty hose in the garden. Really?

Kid’s Summer Camp with FEED Handcrafted Arts at Big Red Sun Venice

Join Jane Kifer, designer, teacher and creator of FEED Handcrafted Arts, offering hands-on arts and crafts instruction to ages 6 and up. Jane Kifer is a professional designer, who integrates her classic professional skills with unconventional designs to offer hands-on lessons this summer at Big Red Sun Venice.

WEEK 1- Beading and Jewelry

July 4,5,6,7

Basic stringing, exploring patterns in relation to technique, attaching a clasp, making a clasp, knotting, working and manipulating wire with beads to form a necklace, key chain, bracelet, earrings. Make wall hangings, sculptures and anything else that can be conceived with the materials. *Tools provided, children keep finished and practice pieces.

WEEK 2- Sewing and Quilting

JULY 11,12,13,14

Hand sewing, cutting, explores shapes and patterns. Learn to quilt a top. Sew a pouch. Different options for binding an edge. Sew three-dimensional forms. Learn to use pins, thread a needle, knot a sewn stitch. And as per request, sew a button : ) *Student keep sewn projects.

WEEK 3- Drawing

JULY 18,19,20,21

Charcoal, conte crayon, pencil, powdered graphite- brushes, fingers, paper towels blind drawings, drawing negative space, line drawings, contour drawings, look at tonal values of white to black. Explore composition, paper textures, pencil lead density and perception. *Student keeps all drawings

WEEK 4- Cord work

JULY 25,26,27,28

Various knots, braiding, twists and macramé patterns to create interesting strands to be used in key chains, bracelets, necklaces, or light pulls, curtain straps. Experiment with thick cord and thin string to achieve varying effects. Explore rope gauges, knots, patterns and color. *Student keeps all finished and practice projects.

WEEK 5- Crochet

AUGUST 1,2,3,4

Learn basic crochet stitches- furthering the skills individually based on the child’s progress. Chain stitch, single crochet, double crochet. Make a scarf, a hat, a potholder, and a square. *Student keeps, project ball of yarn, crochet hook and finished piece

WEEK 6- Paper

AUGUST 8,9,10,11

Paper in all forms! Make our own activity/coloring books and learn to bind it. Create stationery. Make paper beads, both rolled and cut out paper with metallic pigments and varnish for durability. Use as pendants for jewelry. Create sewn greeting cards, wrapped in beads and string.

Price:

200+$100 (High quality)materials/kid/week

Mon, Tues, Wed, Thurs. 10am-2pm

15 kids max, 2-3 teachers

Contact for signup:

Email: feedhandcraftedarts@gmail.com, (310) 428- 3937

Held at Big Red Sun, 560 Rose Ave., Venice, Ca.90291

Pack and bring a lunch. Snacks provided

About Jane Kifer:

Jane Kifer is a professional jewelry designer, who integrates her classic professional skills with unconventional designs, Jane’s work has appeared in Juicy couture, Anthropology, Planet Blue, Nordstrom, Barney’s and The Blue Jeans Bar. Her jewelry has also been featured on the TV show Grey’s Anatomy and various publications including TIME OUT NY, W magazine, Lucky Magazine, Ned and Shell, Sneaker.com, and Redbook.

Jane founded her company as a tribute to her Mennonite heritage, growing up with her great grandparent’s farm in southeastern Pennsylvania. Jane grew up crocheting, sewing, beading making everything from baskets to gluing leaves and sticks to paper with paint. She was fortunate to grow up in the wings of acclaimed Knoll designers such as Harry Bertoia, Don Albinson, Richard Schultz and eventually her stepfather, Bill Stephens.

Jane exemplifies the blend of two worlds. With the precision of her technical skills and her integration of classic yet unconventional design, Jane can make almost anything. She is often heard saying, ” Well anything can be made, we just have to figure out how.” Jane resides in Los Angeles with her two children, where her kitchen table is always a mess because someone is always making something, but she thinks it’s worth it.

FF2 II

S- the fountain- non affectionately known now as the f*cking fountain or FF2 is in it’s final phases of readiness. The plaster guys only did a medium job last friday so lunes, we’ve literally got 5 guys and one daddy overseeing it. Anal overkill i guess. We’ve only been able to

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work on it in fits and starts as we’ve found the time. But- it’s SO gorgeous even though we are maligning her, we can’t wait to turn her on… tomorrow?? wish us luck. xoxojb

all aboard

S- the fountain- non affectionately known now as the f*cking fountain or FF2 is in it’s final phases of readiness. The plaster guys only did a medium job last friday so lunes, we’ve literally got 5 guys and one daddy overseeing it. Anal overkill i guess. We’ve only been able to

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work on it in fits and starts as we’ve found the time. But- it’s SO gorgeous even though we are maligning her, we can’t wait to turn her on… tomorrow?? wish us luck. xoxojb

Vote for Selena Souders in the Bix Bash Readers Choice Awards


VOTE FOR BIG RED SUN’S FOUNDER, SELENA SOUDERS IN THE BIZ BASH READERS CHOICE AWARDS AS DESIGNER OF THE YEAR!
BIG RED SUN‘s Owner and Founder, Selena Souders has been nominated for BIZ BASH Designer of the Year for her amazing event designs and decor.
VOTE BY SUNDAY, JUNE 12, 2011 at the link below:

sagos survive!

S~ sister. check it- we have been anxiously circling the great transplanted sagos from last fall.

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We had that epic cold spell that killed back sagos all over town and we thought they were doomed. Oddly, the big girl didn’t even take freeze damage, the other 2 –not so much. We had to cut them back to nubs. 4 weeks ago the second one flushed out. But you can see little stump there on the edge. We watched and watched and waited and finally last week the homeowner asked us to just cut it back. She was thrilled that the other 2 big ones survived the transplant. We begged for one week reprieve. We seaweeded it, we talked nicely to it, we threatened it, we coddled it and lo and behold-

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He rewarded us this morning with this- on June 6th. It’s 104 degrees today- poor little thing. But dios- these are some tough plants. Dr. Kasulka successful again. Schwing!! xxoxojb

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Alhambra in NYC

S- the sunday party pix in the Times this morning reminded me of the exhibition at the New York Botanical Garden- didn’t you intern there back in the day? The guests wore blue to match the exhibition. You know I love love love that kind of effort.

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Did you see the NYT Alhambra story last week? I think we are going to visit Granada in the fall to see the gardens and also run to Majorelle.

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Lavish garden books are a major treat- but there is debate on how much of a garden you can grasp from a picture. I’ll be curious to see the exhibition in NY and if it’s able to capture the allure of what I dream the Alhambra is like. It’s in the conservatory so that’s already a little creepy some how vs the light and shadow of the harsh spanish sun. But the harsh African and Spanish light and heat are from whence we learn here in A town. It’s been 99 degrees all week. umm hmm, with that i’ll sign out. xoxjb

OPEN OPEN OPEN

S- we finally carved out the time to rearrange the courtyard so it looks presentable.

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I’m feeling very “my first visit to Epcot Center” in terms of decorating…

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I’ve acted on our mutual faux bois urges in the weeping cedar wonderland section.

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But maybe it’s all tomorrowland? this is my little palm springs + (X) = We are using okay mountains custom picnic table as our check out while we are waiting on our umbrellas to arrive.

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Have you met the OKAY mountain boys? They used to be across the street in Mel Ziegler’s building, but moved out of their gallery space to concentrate on making work. They are kind of slaying it right now.

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But, mercy me, i had no idea when we’d have the time to pull it together, so i didn’t advertise. We’ll see how it goes.

You can see we put in an order of wooly pockets to use for special arrangements and we are teaching Ben how to use the calculator.

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more later on our W extravaganza. xoxojb

the natives are nice once you get to know them

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So last year, remember, we were beginning on a garden for a client who is extremely knowledgable about native plants-past president of the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, some sort of secondary degree in garden healing and has a few gardens around the nation. The neighborhood had been hit by not one but 2 tornadoes in the last 2 years and her front garden had gone from shade to sun and it was time for an overhaul. She keenly wanted to prove that one could use Texas native plants in a formal garden vocabulary. And she wanted people to get the design immediately. She is also a friend and lived 2 doors down from me and our temporary office- so we had plenty of reasons and time to fret about the design.

You know I don’t have the best relationship with native plants, so she sent me out to Native Texas Nursery to scout around for loot. It’s a design challenge because as you know as you cruise green house after green house out there there are many different types of plants that seem to have all the exact same leaf shapes and texture. And to add to the challenge, the client wasn’t keen on cactus saying: It’s hard to pay for things I rip out of the ground in the ranch- which is indeed an excellent point. But to me, cactus was the only way I could really throw in some evergreen structure and of course some differently shaped leaves and plants. We cajoled her into trying these beautiful blue agave. She had already started the yaupon hedge outlining the beds- I wrassled together a blue and yellow theme and began to take a whack at it. We were all too scared to move the beautiful sagos that were in an awkward position and of course not native- but prehistoric sometimes takes precedence. So we sketched in these super tall dishes to counter balance them. Which they almost did.

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We added some lovely Vitex specimens and esperanzas and a bevy of sages, germanders, snuck in a plumbago, found some sages in her back yard that we were sure would croak because we pulled them up in July – but what the hell – popped them in the ground. I confess i’m enamored with our idea of planting the agave parryi like bedding plants with some knock out roses behind. (she threw me a bone bless her when i told her that we actually did purchase them at Native Texas Nursery).

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The back yard we kept more lush- it is under full live oak shade- so all oak leaf hydrangeas, mock orange, obedient plant, native ferns, some transplanted yaupons from the front beds (boy did they sulk), some manfredas, beds of spider lilies for old school charm, turks cap, honeysuckle and lantana here and there. Mostly going for a white and pink palette to match the house and light up the shade. She already had spectacular evergreen wisteria and some specimen beauty berries which was a lovely start.

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As the summer wore one, I was still trying to cajole her into some more meaty cactus here and there and a yucca collection in the corner yard. But it was getting to be July and planting time was O V E R. We came back in late fall and sprinkled some wine cup seeds in front by the datura. But jeese- these natives are some scrawny ass scraggly plants when you first put them in the ground and it was only mildly satisfying when we pulled out. Of course- she could see what it would look like because she is so conversant in the palette and seemed quite satisfied.

She doesn’t keep a gardner per se, a fact that worried me- but she has no lawn and these plants are tough right? Of course I drove by everyday on the way home and the garden was looking quelle festive- all happy yellow bells. But we had a drama winter for us- and when we came back in early March to do the winter clean up – dios mio. I was a sad mama. Talk about scraggly ass. She of course was just fine about it all- Julie the soils not warm yet- which is hard to remember when it’s 90 degrees out. I had low hopes that these little plants had grown at all and i could tell a few had just up and croaked.

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Regardless, it was clear that we needed some more evergreen structure to keep the front garden relevant in the winter- we also had moved those giant sagos leaving a big hole in the garden. So we’ve begun round 2 of plantings. And several weeks later when we came to install, we saw that indeed most of the plants were quite busy over the winter – the esperanza and passion vine are super slow coming back but everyone else seemed to be well. Until I tried to move a few to put in my new additions. It’s really a one shot deal once you get these babies in the ground right? So i killed a blue sage bush and a germander bush by transplanting them trying to make room for my new sotol and to reward the little agave mediopicta that made it through the winter in a dish by putting her in the ground. I added some Jerusalem sage, some majestic sage and man whatever those blue sages were that we just tossed in there from the back went nuts and are now stupendous. We asked kindly if we might put some cold hardy cactus in the dishes so they’d have some meat in them during the winter and she acquiesced. By the time we had found and planted all the new babies, last years were beginning to put on their show. So finally, i’m feeling much more proud of this native garden.

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Probably more importantly, her ulterior motive SO worked on me. I’m planning a garden out in Deerland, Westlake and I’m all over it. I heard myself saying to the new client (who has moved here from Greenwich) the thing is with these types of plants is…. Well truth be told I’m not wanting to use them in the formal garden way, but rather a la Mr. Oudouf. …whom we think is a hero. I’m feeling lots o coneflowers next year.

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Note Justin last spring at the high line with planting designs by Mr. Oudolf. We’ll see how the client digs the concept….wish us luck….

i’ll keep you updated on the native wonderland. I’m a bit obsessed with it. xojb