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Inside Brown Paper Bag Studio with Sara Barnes

December 29, 2014 Libby Zay
SBarnes_BSDA5.jpg

Since starting The Scout Project, I’ve been so inspired by the creative people I’ve met or whose work I've come across. One of those people is Sara Barnes, the artist and blogger behind Brown Paper Bag. (One of her cut paper and embroidery works is above.) Sara and I both live in Baltimore, and after meeting for coffee she suggested we collaborate on a series. Our plan is to go into artists' studios armed with our cameras. We'll try to capture parts of their creative process and photograph some of the objects they choose to surround themselves with. We're hoping to share some inspiring work, ideas, and tips.

To kick off the series, Sara and I are taking a look into each other’s homes. Check out Brown Paper Bag for a peek into my workspace and hear from Sara below.

Brown Paper Bag was founded in 2010, originally as just a way to catalog neat artwork and connect with artists around the world. After completing graduate school for illustration in 2013, I shifted the focus to an illustration-centric blog. Now, I feature editorial illustration, illustrated products, tattoos, ceramics, and embroidery. I also interview small-press magazines and zines from time to time.

sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio
sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio
sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio
sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio

I primarily work out of my apartment. Although I've entertained the thought of an out-of-home studio space for the past couple of years, I ultimately enjoy being close to my kitchen and bedroom.

sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio
sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio

The ceramic lady (face) is by Tuesday Bassen.

My apartment is a loft-style unit on the top floor of an old building that now has a 7-11 on its first floor. I share the apartment with my boyfriend, Chris, and our main complaint is the lack of storage space. Nearly everything we own is visible at all times!

sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio
sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio

Our living room, kitchen, and respective workspaces are all within one large room. The decor is a mixture of black/chrome IKEA, Design Within Reach, and CB2, in addition to some antiques that are sprinkled throughout. We've visually divided the living room with two sets of cubed bookshelves, which is where I keep my art books, graphic novels, cookbooks, plants, and small toys. It's something that I refer to often and am constantly fiddling with. Chris has his own matching bookshelf (which I have totally encroached on because I have way more books than him) that mirrors mine.

sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio
sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio

I pick up a lot of ceramics each year at MICA's Art Market. When you buy from the ceramics table, you aren't told any of the names of the artists! So, the geometric shapes I have and the white swan are both unknown artists (to me). The tall, smiley fellow that is on the tiger plate is my newest acquisition by Il Sung Na, a MICA grad student. The bizarre head wearing the baseball cap is by Karin Hagen.

sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio
sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio
sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio
sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio

The workspace is something we call Mega Desk, which is basically two dining tables pushed together. My side of it is often cluttered with things stacked on top of each other to conserve space and to minimize how messy it is. I have my laptop, weekly to-do list (by Rifle Paper Co.), a pair of colorful headphones, and a mixture of artwork, inspiration, and raw art materials. Oh, and a lot of pens.

sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio
sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio

My desk is certainly cozy, but I enjoy that aspect. It feels intimate and forces me to clean up! I've had other work spaces that were larger and they were a disaster.

flat file by sara barnes
flat file by sara barnes

Next to Mega Desk is a flat file, which I got for $40 off Craigslist 3 years ago. I drove for 2 hours each way to retrieve it, and it almost didn't fit in my car once I got there. I'm so happy it worked out, because I love it! The guy who originally owned was a coroner and stored photos of dead people in it.

sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio
sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio

The hand with the eye on the palm is by Sarah Burwash. I love illustrators who make their own ceramics - Tuesday, Sarah, and Karin make things in 2D and 3D. My goal is to amass a collection of small, limited edition ceramics—the more bizarre the better.

sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio
sara barnes studio - brown paper bag studio

Through Brown Paper Bag, I've planned projects like the Collage Scrap Exchange, which is a global paper swap. Artists are paired up and mail each other their unique scraps, and each creative makes something that's a combination of both their materials. Nearly all of my collage scraps are contained within these three orange boxes. I try to separate the smaller ones between warm and cool colors while the big box is a mish-mash of larger pieces. Digging through each of them is fun—I never know what I'm going to uncover!

In storyteller, shutterbug Tags scoutspiration
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5 Castles in North America and the Stories Behind Them

December 17, 2014 Sean McLachlan
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Castles are one of the prime tourist attractions of Europe and the Middle East. These romantic fortresses and royal homes make for great photographs and fascinating reading. They offer an insight into history and are an easy sell to kids. But you don’t have to cross the Atlantic to see them. Back around the turn of the last century, there was a boom in the number of millionaires in Canada and the United States. Industry was expanding and fortunes were being made, for some. It was called the Gilded Age, golden for the rich, rotten for the working class. The new millionaires, many of whom started from modest circumstances, wanted to show off their wealth, and what better way to do that than to build a castle? After all, the rich in Europe had them. Castles starting popping up all across North America. And now, many of these exclusive playgrounds for the rich are open to visitors.

(above) Casa Loma and part of its garden. Photo courtesy flickr user InSapphoWeTrust.

Casa Loma

Familiar to every local schoolchild, Casa Loma (pictured above) is one of Toronto’s best-loved landmarks. This stately home was built by Sir Henry Pellat in 1914. Sir Pellat was one of a handful of millionaires who were said to “own” Canada. He made vast sums wiring Toronto for electricity and speculating in mining and other businesses. He poured much of his fortune into making his dream castle. The final price was $3.5 million, more than $40 million in today’s dollars.

Hallways of Italian marble lead to oak-paneled libraries filled with rare books, a soaring Great Hall that looks like something out of the Middle Ages, and a conservatory with a huge stained-glass skylight. Every room is filled with antiques, including Louis XIV furniture and suits of armor. There’s even an exact replica of the Coronation Chair from Westminster Abbey, where monarchs are crowned, as well as the Stone of Scone, the legendary coronation stone of Scottish kings.

Sadly, Pellat only got to live in his castle for a few years before unwise investments and an economic slump left him deeply in debt. He had to sell off Casa Loma. It was eventually reopened as a tourist attraction in 1937 and is a popular wedding venue and school field trip. The castle is also a favorite for filmmakers, with rooms being used in scenes in movies from Robocop to X-Men.

Thornewood Castle in North America
Thornewood Castle in North America

Classical statues in the English garden at Thornewood. Photo courtesy Joe Mabel.

Thornewood Castle

While Sir Pellat was building a replica castle in Toronto, millionaire Chester Thorne of Tacoma, Washington, was getting the real thing. In 1907, he bought a 400-year-old Elizabethan manor in England, dismantled it, and reassembled it on a beautiful spread of land by American Lake with a stunning view of Mount Rainier. It was all a gift for his beloved wife.

Thorne had an eye for period detail. The windows are Renaissance stained glass from European churches. The main oak staircase is older than the home itself and constructed in a medieval style that uses no nails.

Unlike Sir Pellat, Thorne kept his money and lived in his castle the rest of his life, cared for by 40 servants, plus 28 gardeners who tended the English garden that will make you feel like you’re at Hampton Court, not the outskirts of Tacoma!

While Thornewood Castle remains a private home, it offers a bed and breakfast and weddings.

Castle in North America - Castello di Amorosa
Castle in North America - Castello di Amorosa

Castello di Amorosa. Photo courtesy Dhinal Chheda.

Castello di Amorosa Winery

Of all the North American castles, this one is the most authentic. Ironically, it’s also the most recent. It was built in the style of a 13th century castle from Tuscany by the owners of V. Sattui Winery near Calistoga, California, in the famous Napa Valley. It makes for an unusual stop on your wine tour.

So many faux medieval buildings turn out to be cheesy, but here the builders got it right. Standing in the main courtyard, you feel like you’re in one of the medieval castles of rural Italy, so much so that it comes as a bit of a shock to ascend one of the towers and see the parking lot right outside. The Great Hall is hits the eye with elaborate medieval scenes vividly painted on the walls. The people of the Middle Ages loved bright colors and would have felt at home here. There’s also a functioning Catholic chapel, a moat complete with drawbridge, and even a torture chamber for those who complain about the wine.

Like all good castles, it’s supposed to be haunted and there is, of course, a ghost tour. Considering Castello di Amorosa was completed in 2007, this must be the youngest ghost on record!

Aerial view of Boldt Castle.
Aerial view of Boldt Castle.

Aerial view of Boldt Castle. Photo courtesy Teresa Mitchell.

Boldt Castle

Another fine replica of a castle is found on Heart Island, one of the Thousand Islands in the St. Lawrence River in upstate New York. This one has a sad story attached to it. Back in 1900, the millionaire George Boldt, owner of the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City, decided to built a fairytale castle for his wife. Sadly, Boldt’s wife died in 1904 before it was finished. Boldt called the workmen and told them to put down their tools.

For 73 years the castle deteriorated until it was purchased and lovingly restored by the Thousand Islands Bridge Authority. Now Boldt Castle draws visitors from both sides of the border who visit many of the 120 rooms, look out from the towers for lovely views of the river, and stroll in the Italian gardens. The restoration crew was careful to furnish the rooms the way Boldt had originally intended in a refined fin de siècle style.

Boldt Castle is available for weddings and the local yacht club is popular for New York’s and Canada’s well-to-do, who enjoy plying the waters around Heart Island and examining the castle’s rare steam-powered yacht from 1892. Renovations are continuing, so if you’ve already visited this compelling attraction, it’s worth a repeat visit.

Heart Castle - North American Castle
Heart Castle - North American Castle

The Roman pool at Hearst Castle. Photo courtesy Wikipedia user King of Hearts.

Hearst Castle

Of all the millionaires of the Gilded Age, the greatest had to have been newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst, who brought entertainment and news to the masses with sensational yellow journalism. He fomented war fever against Spain in 1898 and then made millions selling newspapers about the fighting. He was the model for the millionaire in Citizen Kane.

Near the end of his life he built this imposing modern castle of 165 rooms set within more than 125 acres of gardens and pools atop a wooded hill just outside San Simeon, California. Completed in 1947, Hearst Castle is like something from another time. Grandiose buildings such as this were things of the previous generation, but Hearst never did anything by half measures.

There are two vast, Classical-style pools, one inside and one outside, that look like something from a Roman emperor’s palace. The Gothic study has a vaulted wooden ceiling with Medieval-style paintings. The rooms are stuffed with Heart’s vast collection of art, with fine examples of ancient Egyptian statuary, Renaissance religious paintings, and a floor covered in a genuine Roman mosaic. The dining room is paneled in wood from early European churches and features Renaissance tapestries.

In storyteller, history buff Tags museum explorer, explore, learn, collection, story, america, united states, canada
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Scout Gift Guide // Gift Ideas for Writers and Bloggers

December 1, 2014 Libby Zay
writer-gift-guide.gif

Finding a gift with enough wit and charm to match the writer you know can be a challenge. These ideas will inspire you to find the perfect present.

gift-ideas-for-writers-composition-bag
gift-ideas-for-writers-composition-bag

Composition notebook tote (Out of Print / $18)

gift-ideas-for-writers-adam-jk-pencil
gift-ideas-for-writers-adam-jk-pencil

“I am a tool or a weapon…” pencils (Adam JK / $1)

gift-ideas-for-writers-notebook-tie
gift-ideas-for-writers-notebook-tie

Notebook paper tie (Cyberoptix / $35)

gift-ideas-for-writers-paperweight
gift-ideas-for-writers-paperweight

Handpainted wood paperweight (Anthropologie / $18)

gift-ideas-for-writers-earrings
gift-ideas-for-writers-earrings

Mini Notebook Earrings (Mango Tree Ceramics / $8)

gift-ideas-for-writers-candle
gift-ideas-for-writers-candle

Old-book-scented candle (Frostbeard Studio / $15)

gift-ideas-for-writers-shower-notepad
gift-ideas-for-writers-shower-notepad

Waterproof notepad (Amazon / $7)

storyteller writing badge
storyteller writing badge

Storyteller badge (The Scout Project / $3.75)

In storyteller Tags scout gift guide, collection
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I'm Libby Zay, a Baltimore-based writer and all-around curious person. I love roadside attractions, taking photos, and campfires. Let's earn some badges and explore together!

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