photo taken on the ledge of the small balcony |
To give myself a simple creative push, and to rekindle my younger former craft days in after-school programs when I was in primary school, I wanted to paint some terracotta pot planters for the summer. I purchased about seven basic terracotta pots at Michael's craft store (any hardware or craft store will most likely sell them) and some bottles of cheery outdoor acrylic paint; choosing between a white, marigold yellow, salmon-pink, and a sky/light turquoise blue as my color palette.
It's been a much slower process than I recall as a child, but I would only paint one pot at a time too. I really feel that it's worth the effort to bring a little individuality to my small container garden. I'm sure most of you can recall this simple craft and painting a pot at least once in your life to plant a marigold or other plant in.
Small, simple crafts like this helps to awaken my artistic self-esteem, even if it's painting cheap clay pots with cheap acrylic paint. And of course, for those who know me well, I still end up with paint on myself and/or my clothes with each painting session. I secretly really like the paint marks and smudges I find on some of my clothes and/or hands/fingers/arms/legs; it makes me feel fantastically artsy.
Small, simple crafts like this helps to awaken my artistic self-esteem, even if it's painting cheap clay pots with cheap acrylic paint. And of course, for those who know me well, I still end up with paint on myself and/or my clothes with each painting session. I secretly really like the paint marks and smudges I find on some of my clothes and/or hands/fingers/arms/legs; it makes me feel fantastically artsy.
...And if you've been counting at home, yes, I did purchase seven pots and am only painting five. To give it to you straight, the last two are the largest of the seven and I'm getting a little bored with mini painting sessions and various drying times. I got a little lethargic and left the largest in their natural dried clay color for my cucumbers and cherry tomatoes to grow in. Yes, one solid color would have been easier to just do, but one solid color is just a little dull for my tastes, when my artistic being screams, "put more detail into it! Rawr!"
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