Colors and Textures: Natural and Unnatural

I’m fascinated by the color, shape and texture of things that are literally at my feet and all around me every day.  I’m also struck by the fact that the natural world creates, as it were, these tableaux effortlessly and flawlessly and they always surpass in beauty the best art work humans are capable of  . . . although some artists do come close.   All images © Max Vollmer  (Click on any image to enlarge)

Oregon Trip 10-09 170
Vanilla leaf and friends at Clear Lake, OR

 

Oregon Trip 10-09 168a
Bracken fern along McKenzie River, Lane Co., OR

 

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Beach at Cape Blanco, OR

 

Sept. 2012 trip 67
Hot springs, Yellowstone N.P., WY

 

Grab 002
Ripening pear.

 

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Shop window.

 

 

Cottonwood Bowl

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Cottonwood is a very soft wood and for that reason it is not traditionally thought of as material for turning bowls.  However, this morning I drove past a couple of guys who had just cut down a dead cottonwood tree in a front yard and I asked for and was given one of the rounds to cut up and try to turn.  Although dead, the tree had been standing out in the weather and was relatively wet, making it difficult to cut cleanly with turning tools.  Sanding was slow as well.  But a pleasing shape can still be realized with a little patience.  This bowl is 5″ deep and a little over 6″ across.

Weed Pots in February

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This is what you can do with a weed pot/Ikebana vase in February.  I clipped one branch each from my ornamental crab,  ornamental plum, and Mountain ash trees in the back yard.  The pot was turned from a “defect” in an otherwise clear Oregon black walnut board.  (Click on the image to enlarge)

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The walnut pot/vase by itself is 5″ tall, 1.75″ in diameter, and has a 5/8″ diameter slug of steel bar hidden in the base for stability.