Betsy & Iya Jewelry


Posts Tagged ‘Washington DC’

Cherry Blossoms in Wonderland.

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

I forget how much I love drawing and painting until I’m actually doing it.  And then it’s as if the world melts away, all of my troubles, fears, obligations, sadness; I find myself in a smooth, colorful, geometric, creamy, limitless world of adventure,  joy, and peace…no matter the subject.

gu-painting-2

Over the past few months, I’ve had the privilege of doing some decorating consulting and design work for Georgetown University’s Foot & Ankle Center.  During my last visit, we decided that the space was really aching for color pops.  I rounded up some of my favorite paints and put together a collection that I thought would go beautifully against the dark blue walls in the space.

gu-painting3

One thing I love about DC and Virginia (my home state) is the warmth and color of the landscape.  There’s a reason they say it’s for lovers– you pretty much can’t beat the Blue Ridge Mountains…  Oh, and DC’s abundant cherry blossoms.  I wanted the paintings to have a cohesiveness while remaining independent.

gu-painting2

I loved the idea of cherry blossoms as the through line.  So the cherry blossom was the impetus (along with the right kind of blues), then I kinda went nuts from there.  The top painting is also the bottom painting, flipped around.  It’s the most abstract; it’s my favorite.

gu-painting1

This one is huge, 30 x 40 inches.  I painted it horizontally, as seen at the top.  When finished, I played with which angle was my favorite and why.  This vertical version reminds me of a calm creek or stream (also very Virginia) and the sun going down on a summer’s day, with fish jumping and fireflies waving and micro eco-systems thriving.  It reminds me of a place I want to be.

I really should do this more often.

***Song of the Moment: A Sunday Smile, by Beirut***

I’m back!!

Monday, January 5th, 2009

When I returned to Portland on December 31, I jumped right into friends and NYE celebrations as if I hadn’t skipped a beat; though on the inside (and a little on the outside) it looked as if I was about to collapse.  Christmas break in DC was fantastic, and came and went so quickly that for a brief moment before the new year rang in, I thought I was drinking my bubbly in the White House.

Uhhh…hello Mr. President.  Um, HAPPY new year?  Where’s Obama?… whatever…er…best wishes).

Luckily, I quickly woke to a room full of great friends–catching up and laughing and staying up way too late.  The next day, I allowed myself to enjoy a perfect breakfast at Zell’s with perfect people.  And later, we just sat and watched movies all day, one of which was Slumdog Millionaire.  I really really liked this movie.  I was especially taken with the final moments–be sure to watch through the credits…it will tickle.


The next day, January 2nd, I had to re-enter my studio.  I was soooo reluctant to turn the key and walk in.  I had surely left it upturned in the pre-holiday rush to get out of town on time amidst the winter blizzardland.  I wasn’t ready to get back to work.  I was hating on my studio before I even gave it a chance.  For the first moments on one hard studio stool, I spent 2 hours drooling and staring at my computer with a break-not-really-break hangover, really dreading getting back to work–trying to think up excuses to get myself outta there for the day.

please please help

please please help

After I finished my slow moan, I decided to buck the heck up!  With a little bit of Stumptown fuel I switched into high gear,  filling all the awesome Etsy.com orders I received while out of town and preparing for the sale I promised Portland Picks readers I would have on Saturday, January 3rd.  Before I knew it, I was minutes from leaving for the day, so I quicky cleaned the display case and swept and mopped the floors.  She was all shiny before I turned off the final lights and all I could think while I turned the key for the second time that day was:  “I’m not ready to go!”

inside the studio

inside the studio

(photograph by the amazing Ms. Hickok, check out her awesome work here:  www.hickokphotography.com)

I.  love.  my.  job.

The ideas are flowin’.  The hands are rested.  The heart is full.

Thank you all SO MUCH for such an unbelievable holiday season!  It was my first and definitely (even in this crazy economy???) solid affirmation that my living is not being made in vain.  I love it!!!  Your support is more appreciated than I have ways to express.

***Song of the Moment:  Fools, by the Dodos***

Breaking it up.

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

Miraculously, I made it out of the Portland airport and into D.C. by 3 am on Christmas Eve.  I was exhausted and grateful that I was not aboard one of the 500 flights that were cancelled that day.  Since then, I have been truly enjoying this break with my family.  I do think I really needed it.  My hands and arms were beginning to wake me in the night with loud beseeching throbs, “give (pulse) us (pulse) a break (pulse pulse)!”

Okay okay okay, I hear ya, hands.  I think they just wanted to have some fun.  Even though we had discussed not giving each other big gifts this season, Ash and Mom decided that I needed a better camera for my product shots.  While I am so thankful for the amazing photographers I’ve found and used and will continue to use, Enko Photography and Hickok Photography, I need to be as economical as I can in these beginning stages of my business.

So the two of them decided I was to be the one to luck out this Christmas and went in together to get a great mid-range SLR digital camera for me.  It’s amazing.  I’ve been going nuts with it from the moment I opened it.  So let’s stray away from jewelry for a moment and focus on the life that inspires it.

Great Grandma Bessie's Old House

Great Grandma Bessie's Old House

Many of my relatives have lived in this little house in Southwestern Virginia’s beautiful countryside, but the figure who is the most memorable in my mind: Grandma Bessie.  When I was a little girl, there was never a visit in this little white house when she was not making fresh sweet bread (she called it light bread and it took most of the day to make it) and coffee.  I suppose that was the beginning of my deep love for coffee.  The front door opened to her warm little bedroom, and her modest grandma house.  My senses were opened with love the instant I walked through the door; I just wanted to hug and hold her, while her sweet sweet smells locked into my memory.  There is nothing like the smell of warm sweet bread exiting the oven to cool while I sipped on my 9-year-old cup of coffee with cream.

Uncle Chuck noticed me taking the pictures just outside of his house and he said efficiently, “Come with me.”  I knew I was in for a treat:

mossgravesmall

I feel like I had heard of this graveyard, but in all my 28 years of living, I don’t think I had ever braved the wooden walk into this sanctuary.  A short walk past the little white house is a tiny cemetery filled with my ancestors.  I was taken by this particular moss topped gravestone.  My great great grandfather, J.P. Neathawk, and great grandfather, Galen Neathawk, harvested the wheat for the community and milled the wood for their homes.  Even though Chuck said it’s time to clean up this graveyard, I like how nature and death looks when it has merged.

Of all the 250 photos I’ve taken since being introduced to my camera, this might be my favorite.  It was taken on the walk back to the farmhouse from the woods where the old rusted over john deere tracker and sawmill that JP Neathawk used to make a living resides. It reminds me of the beautiful intricacies, the ups and downs, ins and outs of this path we call life:

the path

the path

My 35mm camera was stolen from my car in San Francisco in 2003.  Before then, I was obsessed with taking amazing photos.  It wasn’t until this Christmas day when I really remembered the joy I find in taking beautiful images.  I think, though, that I needed the break to appreciate what’s most important:  the experiences and spirit that inspires them.

Now off to explore D.C…more images to follow.

***Song of the Moment: Pale Lit Sea, by Kotogoto****