blog

You are currently browsing articles tagged blog.

Laura O’Brien from Bridging The Gap in Kansas City! Congratulations, she wins a raspberry pixie daylily! She correctly answered Arum italicum, a plant native to the U.K. It’s in the Araceae family which threw a few contestants off. They thought it was the native Jack-in-the-pulpit—a very good answer, by the way. I love the common names for it which are Cuckoo Pint and Italian Lord-and-Ladies. If you’re in the U.K. stop in at the Cuckoo Pint Pub in Fareham to have a toast to its namesake plant.

I first noticed this plant with its summer berries a couple blocks from my house and I had to know what it was. I finally found one at a local nursery and it has been a success in the shade under my cherry tree. This fall it will send up new leaves that will last all winter to the end of spring.

This photos was taken in spring but the leaves look the same. Notice how much they look like the houseplant, Arrowhead vine, Syngonium. In the spring, a strange looking bloom will appear.

Thank you Wikipedia commons for this photo.

After the sheath goes away, the center thingy becomes the berries. If anyone can fill me in on what you call that vertical appendage, I would appreciate it.

So here we are in July with lovely orange-red berries. Even though my wikipedia source says this plant can be invasive in warm climates, I have never noticed that happening here in Kansas City. It also recommends planting with hostas so the new fall foliage will cover the spent leaves of hosta in the fall and remind you where you planted your hostas. I think the orange berry stalk would look smashing in between hosta leaves as well.

Here’s what Missouri Botanical has to say about it. Mobot to the rescue! That vertical thingy is called a spadix.

Share

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

I was supposed to go bicycling tonight but I let the wimp factor overrule my desire to ride. It’s March. We’re in that nether world where winter and spring are negotiating the eventual take over.

While I sit here at my warm desk, hope rises anew. For the past month several of us cycling nerds have been planning, working on and getting donations for the first Kansas City Tweed Ride for April 3rd. Tweed Rides are about fantasizing on the “Golden Age of Bicycling” which was the 1890s. The guiding philosophy is “Style not speed. Elegance not exertion.”

So imagine yourself living in an age where sporty clothes are itchy woolens, knickers and argyle socks, snap-brim hats and long skirts or bloomers. Then gather with like-minded folk at noon in Loose Park for some civil discourse before forming a parade on penny-farthing bicycles or modern “safety bicycles,” to tour the elegant neighborhoods of Kansas City. Jolly good!

As a designer of the Tweed Ride website and other collateral, this is a fun project for me. Good . . . because the price of free work is to have fun and do whatever I want. Otherwise it’s work, right?

To brand the ride, I wanted to make a design with elements that evoke the period, the fun, some humor and spring! For me, another important element to include was a woman with her bicycle since women of that period found a means of liberation, mobility and physical fitness through bicycling that frankly, women still feel today. There are many old photos of proud women and girls with their bicycles. Cartoons of the day show that people didn’t know what to think of those wild women riding bikes in those new-fangled bloomers!

I thought our marketing materials should have a contemporary feel yet use elements from the past. To create the look, I scanned a white shirt for the speech balloon background and of course, scanned some tweed. The other items I used are:

  • A copyright-free photo of a woman and her bike from the Library of Congress. Sepia tone added
  • A Raleigh heron logo chainring and bike chain border made in Adobe Illustrator. Who knew hardware could be so beautiful?
  • Victorian clipart man on bike, daffodils and butterfly, color added
  • Victorian type styles

Our marketing mediums are WordPress, Facebook, flyers, word-of-mouth and spoke cards. On our website we added links to sources with British-influenced clothing, photos to get people in the mood, a bit of tomfoolery and links to other Tweed Rides including the full Tweed Report. We have lots of great prizes to give away and for all our extra wealth, a couple worthy charities (Revolve, and The Urban Kansas City Community of Cycling) that teach children to ride bikes.

With the event still to come we will be watching to see how effective our marketing is. Of course, the eventual outcome will depend a lot on the weather. For now, I hope to see lots of people in various vintage finery on April 3 at noon in Loose Park, so we can take many grand photos to post. Cheerio!

Laurie Chipman is an award-winning graphic designer, illustrator and marketing consultant. She specializes in designing for sustainability, energy, gardening and active transportation clients. Contact her if you would like to discuss marketing your organization or event.

Share

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Hi all, my name is Laurie Chipman and I’m an artist, specifically a graphic designer and illustrator, more specifically a specialist in print media but I hope to broaden my scope to web design, blogging and e-news. So bear with me while I learn to do this.

In a business where you work alone like I do, many times you feel like the only one who is overwhelmed by learning all the stuff you need to keep current. Well, I can tell you that you and I are not alone! There are so many of us out there who are trying to be noticed, to make a living, to figure out social media and e-marketing that it’s just a matter of degree of who knows more and who doesn’t. When I go to networking events like the Freelance Exchange of KC or just talking with people we are all feeling a bit overwhelmed. So I guess we, as communicators or just business people, are in another transition stage. The transitions just seem to come more frequently now.

I have heard, too, that we are in a time of opportunity. Deep down I hope it’s true and really, I believe it is. Set free from the old patterns we can reinvent ourselves which is both scary and exciting. It’s hard not to get paralyzed with the many choices available and how much there is to learn.

So here’s my blog pledge: I promise to be honest, interesting, regular, curious

business computer

It's official. We're open for business.

and I hope sometimes even funny.

And, I want to hear from you! Really. I can talk to myself anytime. Let me know what you think. Send me something funny, something interesting, something thoughtful or challenging. Let’s talk soon.

Share

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,