A

happy playground

of mixed media art

made to turn the ordinary

into extraordinary

in everyday life.

March 19th, 2026, Issue # 119

Fresh eyes see more clearly.

They see better.

How a simple fix turned into a signature detail.


Howdie!


Happy Thursday!

A collapsing chair is not a great start to inspiration. One sharp crack. One hard fall. Weeks of soreness. Thankfully, no broken bones.


Still, it changed things.


Every matching chair left in the studio had to go.


In their absence, a quiet truth surfaced. Those chairs had become holding zones for half-finished ideas.


Creative clutter now demanded attention. With no available 'holding zone', each of those 'waiting' projects required reassignment or completion.



One pile called louder than the rest:

The Certificate of Authenticity for Chatterleaf Sage.

I had spent nearly a week of writing, printing and precisely cutting pages — then the holidays swept in and that project was shelved.


Returning to the gathered materials with a fresh perspective, the original pale ribbon I had intended to use for the binding looked and felt merely serviceable.


Art deserves better than serviceable.


Instead of the ribbon, I decided to cut silk leaves from the very same fabric that clothes Chatterleaf Sage herself — a deliberate echo, a visual poem that when glued to the pages would create a cascading accordion.



Gluing the leaves to the first two pages revealed a problem: fraying fabric edges.

Quickly, I recalled a technique* previously tested to create butterflies for the soon to be born butterfly fairy art doll. I brushed WeldBond diluted with water onto the fabric and allowed it to dry completely. 


The dyes, cut each leaf crisply yielding gallery-worthy edges.


The pages started to look extraordinary.


But monotone.

Days before, a birthday gift had been assembled for a beloved niece: a box full of wonder, holding a play invitation with everything needed to make natural-looking flowers from washed, used coffee filters. Those same stained, coffee patina, filters** — warm, mottled, amber-toned — could become perfect leaves. No two identical. Each, alive.

And that is how, suddenly, the accordion book*** was transformed. 

Fourty-three pages now fold open like a blooming secret, nestled inside the cleverly hidden clamshell that Chatterleaf Sage sits upon.

A certificate of authenticity became an experience.


A detail became a story.

A setback became a signature.


Chatterleaf Sage is eager to find the person who sees magic in the ordinary. She is impatiently wanting for you to welcome her into her new home.


And that's this week's news from the studio.


Next week, fingers crossed, we'll discover how the butterfly fairy is coming along. Until then, keep playing, keep experimenting, keep transforming.



Because magic rarely starts as perfect… it is up to each of us to make it so.

By for now,

Nora


PS. Know a fellow maker who'd love this information? Be kind ! Forward this newsletter — creativity loves company.


Sources:

  • WeldBond Adhesive (commonly used in mixed media and fabric stabilization techniques).
  • Upcycled material practices aligned with sustainable art methods (see: environmental art and reuse principles from organizations like the Craft Council)
  • Handmade bookbinding structures, including accordion folds (widely documented in book arts and conservation resources)
  • Surfacedesign.org, a credible source for the eco-printing tip


The Techniques in Simple Steps:

*Dilute WeldBond with water. Brush onto fabric. Let dry. Use dye cuts to cut out the patterns of your choice.


**Use washed, dried coffee filters for natural color variation — warm, earthy, one-of-a-kind. Try It Yourself — Next time you brew coffee, don't discard the filter. Rinse it, dry it, keep it. Over weeks you'll build a palette of warm, earthy, free paper — perfect for collage, bookbinding, and mixed media work. (Learn more about natural dyeing and eco-printing at surfacedesign.org)


***Stack, align, and glue page by page into a 43-page accordion. Create and add covers. Insert inside a clamshell or let it stand on its own.