Showing posts with label portals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label portals. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Got Mail?

 
Because everyone needs a reason to hide secret notes...


I made a mail kit.

It's our Narnian Lamppost.
Our Portal.
Our place where the real world transforms into the magical one.
 
See, Pip and Winnie haven't exactly been excited
about writing time.
They moan and whinge when it's time
to pull out notebook and pen.

But now they have a reason to write.

All manner of small letters, notices and lists
have been appearing in the mailbox, begging for a reader. 
 
Secret message makers, word lovers in the making, I hope.
And if we're not so concerned with punctuation just yet,
still Something is being kindled,
and that Something is what we're going for - 

getting so lost in play so that the unseen world
shines brighter within us,
and the ordinary world shines brighter on our return...

This is what I want for myself, too.
To take more time to play
with my words, with art, with the kids
without focusing on how much I get done.

I have a choice every day -
wear myself out trying to blast through my goals,
or find the sweet spots and savor.

Relish the revision. 
   (thank you Gail Carson Levine and
     Molly Blaisell for your great advice.)
and

if you need a reason to play with your words,
or an incentive for young heel-dragging-writers,
may I suggest a mail box?

Our kit is compiled of:

A domed box (thrift store find)
Denim.
Felt.
Mod podge.
Ribbon.
A cardboard swing arm fastened with a nut and bolt.
 
I added a mail sack, felt envelopes and flannel stamps
plus a thick stack of paper
for good measure.


My dad's old mail carrier hat tops the cake.

Any mail today?

Books of Note:

 

The Dove's Letter by Keith Baker


The Jolly Postman, by Janet and Allan Ahlberg

The Jolly Christmas Postman by Janet and Allan Ahlberg
The Gardener by Sarah Stewart, illustrated by David Small
Toot and Puddle by Holly Hobbie
Letters from Father Christmas - J.R.R. Tolkien
Love, Mouserella by David Ezra Stein
 Writing Magic
Writing Magic: Creating Stories That Fly - Gail Carson Levine

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society - Mary Ann Shaffer, Annie Barrows
The Enchanted Chocolate Pot - Patricia C. Wrede, Caroline Stevermer


And an experiment. 
I've been trying to set up some freebies for my small writer friends, so here is my first attempt. Drag the image below to your desktop, and it should be ready to print.


You are welcome to use this art as long as you credit the artist (Hey, that's me - Faith Pray!) and as long as you don't try to pass it off as your own work, or sell it (That would be illegal). If you are going to pin or webshare this, please credit me as the artist, and link back to this original post.
Thank you for the respect.




Wednesday, November 9, 2011

The Fairy Door


Pip and Winnie's fairy door.

Do you ever find portals while reading?

Lucy Pevensie's wardrobe
Alice's rabbit hole
Harry's Platform Nine and Three Quarters
Dorothy's tornado
Meg Murry's tessaract

Characters in these stories are ordinary people, 
minding their own perfectly normal business
when whoosh! -
in zips a talking rabbit, a parliament of owls, an envelope in emerald ink, 
bag ladies spouting Latin -  

and the next thing they know
they've been carried away into a gloriously different world - 
and life is never the same.


Children, lunatics and writers 
live on the edge of that line between fantasy and reality. 

Life is good here.

It takes less work to believe in books,
to look for fairy doors 
and hang out near them, hoping for a way in.

At least, that's my excuse when I find myself 
wishing for Diagon Alley,
an invitation to Camp Halfblood, 
or to see Aslan face to face. 



What are your favorite story doors?

Chalkboard paint and iridescent white acrylic
transformed a boring corner of Pip and Winnie's bedroom 
into trees crossing paths 
over a secret door to fairyland.

I think they like it. 
The fairies, I mean. 
If you look very carefully,
you can see them glowing.

And more fairy finds:



Wish baby
- a gift from my friend M. Bloom.

Her blog, We Bloom Here is full of lovely handcrafted inspiration such as these darling fairy people.
M. Bloom

Another blog for the fairy-hearted: 

inspired this week by the artist Elly Mackay . . .
Ruthie Redden











is compiled by Scottish artist Ruthie Redden, who has a knack for making and gathering beauty.

Books with great doors:

The Wishing of Biddy Malone 
by Joy Cowley, ill. Christopher Denise

The High Rise Glorious Skittle Skat Roarious
Sky Pie Angel Food Cake 
by Nancy Willard, ill. Richard Jesse Watson










The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, C.S. Lewis, 
ill. Christian Birmingham
The Princess and the Goblin, George MacDonald, 
ill. Jessie Wilcox Smith


The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, L. Frank Baum, 
ill. Lisbeth Zwerger 
A Wrinkle in Time, Madeleine L'Engle, ill. Leo and Diane Dillon

A Christmas Carol, Charles Dickens, ill. Trina Schart Hyman
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, 
by Lewis Carroll, ill. Barry Moser 
The Lightning Thief, Rick Riordan 
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, J.K. Rowling

Add more favorites in the comments;
I'd love your recommendations!





















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