Friday’s Fun Find: artsyletters!

Oh, I’ve found something really, really fun today over at my writer friend, Robyn Hood Black’s Etsy shop! She’s taken her artsy skills and created artsyletters! Which is…well, let’s ask Robyn, shall we?

 Robyn, I saw a pic of you recently, surrounded by your artsyletters wares. What exactly have you created in this new venture?

 Thanks so much for having me, Cathy!  I’ve been busy drawing, printmaking, conjuring up collages with altered pages from old books and fun vintage finds, and packaging note cards and bookmarks – making “art for your literary side.”

 Last weekend, I did my first art show in a couple of decades here in Gainesville, Ga., and it was a blast.  My hubby and daughter helped.  (Son was on a school trip, or he would have been recruited as well!  But he had to stamp my logo on shopping bags this summer.)

LOVE this idea! So what’s the inspiration for your artsyletters?

 I still love writing, of course – poetry, fiction, nonfiction – and speaking, but I needed something to supplement the income from that, which can be, um, sporadic.  I’ve always had an entrepreneurial bent and actually had an art business in my life B. C. (Before Children).  Now I’m recruiting those aforementioned pretty-much grown children to help with this new endeavor!

 Wait – is that laughter I hear about my supplementing an income by selling art?  O, ye of little faith.  Quit laughing.  I can still hear you.

 Actually, once the idea to make art celebrating the reading and writing life emerged, my muse wouldn’t let me sleep!    It seemed like a perfect way to tie together all my interests.  I’ve rekindled passions from earlier in my life such as calligraphy and illumination, and for once I’m glad I’m a pack rat and kept so many of those resources.  A trip up to a Highlights Founders workshop last year re-ignited a love for printmaking, and I find myself making pictures with all kinds of vintage books and other fun literary props. 

 My new obsession with altered page collages has me picking up any intriguing piece of metal off the side of the road and paying perfectly good money for old typewriter keys and parts, letterpress blocks, and the like.  I keep widening my “territory” to encompass new antique shops, in addition to discovering new vendors on Etsy!  By the way, stooping to pick up little bits of abandoned treasures (old junk) here and there is a great way to make family members walk faster, in the other direction… .

 I’ll be adding more items in each category in my shop and have really appreciated the positive feedback I’ve gotten so far.

Such a great gift for a writer! (Or anyone who loves letters, really.) How do we get our grubby little paws on them?

 Bring any paws and tails and anything else right on over to my Etsy shop AND, just for you and your wonderful blog readers, I’ve set up my very first COUPON CODE!  If you see something you like, type in CATHY2012 when prompted at checkout, and you’ll receive 15 percent off.  This will be good through October 31. :0)

 Also, I’ve set up a new blog just for this adventure, artsyletters.  My plan is not only to feature my own work, but to set up a weekly discussion with interested creative types about art and creativity.  The site is up, but look for that first creativity-themed post next Wed.  And maybe a give-away?? :0)

 I have an artsyletters facebook page, and next time my daughter’s home from college, we’ll get Twitter going, too!

 Oh, and for each purchase, I’ll donate a small percentage to literacy charities.  Being able to read is a priceless gift, and I’m happy to celebrate it with all these fun creations.

 Thanks for helping me spread the word, Cathy!

Thank you for dropping by today, AND providing a coupon code. I’ve got a feeling I’m going to wear CATHY2012 out!  As for the rest of y’all, get some shopping done over at artsyletters! (I told you it was really, really fun!)

I Found a Poet for April (Pssst! It’s Robyn Hood Black)

I love serendipity! There I was, looking for something or someone poetical for National Poetry Month and BAM. I nearly tripped over Robyn Hood Black who coincidentally has been published in the recently released,  The Arrow Finds Its Mark–A Book of Found Poems. And she has serendipitously (not to mention graciously) agreed to step up to the blog plate and share all the details! So, here’s Robyn:

Okay, I’m supposed to be talking about found poems – and I will! – but first I have to share that TODAY is National Haiku Poetry Day.  Cathy knows I’m addicted to haiku. Or, she does now. It just so happens that my very latest haiku publications are actually in an online journal dedicated to senryu (and kyoka and haiga). To oversimplify things, senryu and kyoka share the same basic structure as haiku and tanka (short poetry of Japanese origin), but they deal more with HUMAN nature than Mother Nature, and they are often humorous.

Here are my two poems hot-off-the-virtual-press from Prune Juice:

om

the distant hum

of a leafblower

 

back to school

nip in the air

of my teenager

Copyright  Robyn Hood Black. All rights reserved.

Prune Juice, Journal of Senryu, Kyoka & Haiga, Spring 2012

If I’m going to trumpet the virtues of haiku on Cathy’s blog, it seems appropriate to pick the humorous variety.

(You can read more about haiku on the HAIKU page of my website,  and on my guest post on Laura Shovan’s “Author Amok” blog from last week.)

Now, back to found poems.  I’m thrilled that my poetry has just been published in an anthology, THE ARROW FINDS ITS MARK – A BOOK OF FOUND POEMS, edited by the fabulous Georgia Heard and illustrated by Antoine Guilloppé (Roaring Brook Press).  Honestly, my knees still get a little weak when I see some of the rock-star poets’ names included in this collection.

What’s a “found poem”?  Essentially, it’s a poem created from material – written, or perhaps even heard – that was not intended to be poetry.  One of my poems in the collection came from crossword puzzle clues in a fourth-grade language arts workbook.  (I featured this poem on my blog earlier this month.)

Georgia Heard writes in the introduction:

“You might be interested in seeing how each poet’s process was different: some poets chose to splice words together from a single source and make a kind of word collage, as in Robyn Hood Black’s “We See with These”; others took words intact and in order and simply changed the line breaks and added a title, like Avis Harley’s “Lawn Talk”; and other poets took words from multiple sources on one theme, as in Bob Raczka’s “Places I’d Love to Van Gogh Someday.”

I suggested to Cathy that perhaps we feature my other poem from this book today, and I warned her that it was “slightly weird.” You can guess Cathy’s response:

“You know I LOVE the weird, right?”

In an interview with Georgia Heard on the amazing Sylvia Vardell’s “Poetry for Children” blog last week, one of the questions posed by her graduate student interviewer, Kori Parkinson, was:

What do you find as the strangest/most unique place a poem used in this collection was found?

One the most unique places where a poem was found is Robyn Hood Black’s poem “Battling Beams” found in a Funopolis LASERTAG Results Report, folded up on a counter in the laundry room.

I had originally submitted this poem with the boring title, “Laser Tag,” and Georgia expressed interest but wondered if I could come up with a better title. So it was re-christened “Battling Beams.”

Now, if you don’t have kids or teenagers who play laser tag, this poem will likely leave you scratching your head. And it might, even if you do! Laser tag involves Star Wars-like action and glow-y lights and space-y sounds, and points are scored if you “hit” someone on an opposing team. Teams are represented by a color, with members making up their own individual names.

Thanks to my son, Seth, for attending a laser tag birthday party and leaving me fodder for a poem, folded up in the laundry room. And for taking the accompanying photo in said laundry room (and, not really knowing the backstory, wondered why in the world I wanted him to take a picture in the laundry room?!)

Battling Beams

By Robyn Hood Black

CODE NAME:  DeathEater

Green Red Blue

you hit 4      7 hit you

you hit 14   5 hit you

you hit 29   8 hit you

Bubbagump, Darth Vader, Terminator,

Megatron, Voldemort, Snape,

Bella Edward Jacob,

Jedi Knight

Green Red Blue

650 shots

Score

X-TREME FUN

Copyright Robyn Hood Black. All rights reserved

The Arrow Finds Its Mark, Georgia Heard, ed., Roaring Brook Press, 2012

(Told you it was weird!)  Thank you so much for having me here, Cathy, and HAPPY NATIONAL POETRY MONTH!

And thank you, Robyn! Serendipitously, I actually understand haiku and your found poems!