Category Archives: Featured Work

Irises Short and Sweet Plaque

Springtime brings beautiful Irises in a wide range of colors and styles.  This small plaque (9″ X 7″) depicts a fairly low to the ground purple and white variety that I fell in love with at Elizabeth Park in Hartford last year.  This time the visiting insect is a honey bee.  I would love to paint something like this for you if you want as this one is already in the hands of a happy owner.

Japanese Memories Table

This striking side table began life as a solid wood vintage Early American style nightstand.  I painted it a  deep navy blue and  created faux marble surfaces in shades of grey on both the top and lower shelves.  This is a trompe l’oeil  piece of art work, where everything looks real enough to pick up!  On the upper surface I depicted items collected on a visit to Japan; There is a sophisticate  navy colored fan, and a pair of chopsticks encased in a fabric sheath, secured by a braided knot.  I added three glass marbles through which you can see light shinning.   I folded a crane and a swallow from paper purchased in Tokyo to use as models to paint the two Origami birds on the lower shelf.  This unique table is currently for sale for $450 plus shipping.  The top is  14″ X 16″ and it stands  27″ tall.Please contact me through this site if you are interested in this table or perhaps a custom painted item.

Vintage Box Restored

This box was handmade by a man in the 1920’s as a gift for his new step daughter.  He wanted it to be  for her doll clothes.  In the summer of 2017 I was asked to restore and brighten the box before it was presented as a holiday gift to the  grandniece of the original maker.    Although I was given free reign I did not want to ruin the integrity of the piece.  I could see Pine trees and Native American influences in his precise geometric patterns.  As you can see in the two “before” pictures, the gold colored edging was blackened or totally gone, and many areas of paint were also worn away.    I matched and freshened the colors and put fresh gold paint on all the edges.  The inside cover was lined with glued-on bright pink foil paper (not shown), and so too  was the removable tray .  Most of the foil paper was in bad shape and I removed it, but I chose to keep it inside the tray in tribute to the box’s  history.    A serious crack in the structure of the lid needed strong glue.  I learned the box had been created in Oregon and I searched for images that would evoke its origins.  I found multiple photos of a landscape attributed to the Pacific Northwest and used them to create a scene which pulls in the colors from the outside of the box.   Sunflowers and Lupines are native to the area as is the California Dog Face butterfly.