Showing posts with label chicken paintings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chicken paintings. Show all posts

Friday, September 14, 2012

Available prints!


The prints are here! 
 
 
I printed the first run yesterday and got them all framed.  Here are a few photos of them hung on my porch.  They look cute all in a row, don't you think?
 
 
They are printed on canvas with archival inks and then sealed with a protective UV spray that protects them from moisture & sun.  They are framed in these simple, natural wood frames. Size of the prints are 8x8 inches. Price is $50 each. Message or email me if you'd like to purchase one.
 
I will eventually list them on my Etsy shop but in the meantime I am off to Andover Art in the Park and then getting the Happy Camper ready for her debut!
 






here's Daffodil
 


 
and Big Red




Elvis...
 

 
 
and Priscilla
 



and George
 



 and finally....Napoleon
 



 a trio from my Walking with Spring series









Here's a list of all the available prints.




Tuesday, September 11, 2012

YOUR input is requested!

By popular request, I am going to start offering some select prints of my work!

These will be prints on canvas using archival inks and will be virtually indistinguishable from the originals.  To start, I will be offering 8x8 inch size prints framed in a clean, contemporary frame.

I'd like to hear from you about which paintings you'd like to see offered as prints.  I'm going to start with 4 from my backyard chicken series, 4 landscapes & 4 florals.

Please leave a comment and tell me your favorite 4 chickens, landscapes & florals and why. If I've left a piece out that you think I should include, let me know!

Thank you!

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

win a painting!

I'm offering a chance to win your choice of Ralph or Alice at Keene Art in the Park!  Stop by my booth and ask me how to enter.

I'll be in my usual spot, near the front of the park.  Look for my giant red poppy to
find my booth (#78)!


Keene Art in the Park
September 1st & 2nd
BOOTH #78
Keene NH
Ashuelot River Park
Saturday & Sunday, 10am to 4pm
 
 
 
 
 
 

Thursday, July 5, 2012

11 Steps to Building a Chicken Coop -- in pictures


Step 1: grab a cute li'l helper and start on the porch.  Here's the frame & the floor.




Step 2: Select your location.  Pay special attention---it matters!

 



Step 3: Install your walls.  Don't rely on the measurements some guy on Ebay puts on the listing for the windows---wait until you get the actual windows before you build your frames.





Step 4: Add siding & rafters




Step 5: Take a break and wonder why you aren't building an art studio for all this effort.



Step 6: Paint, build exterior nestboxes and doors





Step 7: Enlist husband to shingle the roof. Do not attempt to tickle his leg while he's up on the ladder--he won't think it's funny.





still not funny...





Step 8: Add trim & shutters. Frankly, the chickens won't care but you'll get points from the neighbors


Step 9: Add hardware cloth, chicken door & ramp.  Watch the pitch on the ramp--you want the chooks to elegantly saunter out of their house not tumble together in a feathery pile.


Step 10: Paint rooster to watch over the hens.  Only 2-D rooster allowed (see step 8 about keeping neighbors happy)


Step 11: Install chickens and let the happiness begin!






We loosely used the "All in One" pattern in the book Building Chicken Coops for Dummies.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

5 things I learned while building a chicken coop

 This is the latest installment in my journey in having backyard chickens (for eggs and models for my chicken paintings)  You can read more about our 6 girls here and here.


 
1. Location, location, location.



Chickens are fun to have around the house, but they are a farm animal. After reading multiple accounts of how inconvenient it is to hoof through the snow to your coop, we thought we'd be super smart and place the coop where we could collect eggs without needing to step off the porch.

We wouldn’t even need to put on shoes! 

How brilliant! 

Mind you, our porch is a place where we spend many hours in the summer; reading the paper, enjoying an evening meal or cold drink, while admiring the birds and gardens. At the last minute we came to our senses and opted for a site halfway between the house and the back fence, well away from our porch.

Now that the hot summer sun is beating down on our little hen house, it is quite clear (in an olfactory way) that this was a wise decision.


2. It’s true what my 7th grade math teacher said: all those lessons in fractions and geometry will come in handy someday.


 Adding 32 9/16 + 21 7/8 never held as much importance as it does when you’re trying to make a square door. Nor did calculating the hypotenuse of a triangle with a 40 degree angle and a 22 ½ inch adjoining side when trying to make sure the rafters meet at the peak of the roof.

 3. Measure twice, cut once, but just cut already!



Chickens grow fast, so while it’s important to avoid carelessness, it is equally important to finish the damn coop!

When six tiny yellow and brown chicks came home in a container closely resembling a Happy Meal, the sense of urgency was minimal.

Just a few weeks later, six fully-feathered birds the size of our cats were trying to stretch their wings and actually fly within the confines of a plastic bin not large enough to hold our summer clothes. There’s nothing like witnessing the future tenants literally grow overnight to motivate a housing project.

 4. Minivans are better than pick-up trucks. 

Okay, so they’ll never be featured in country and western songs, or pictured alongside roughnecks and cowboys in car commercials, but our minivan can quite easily accommodate a 10 foot length of lumber and a stack of 4’ x 8’ sheets of plywood, with the rear door closed. This is a good feeling after driving compact cars for so many years, having to literally reach out the window and hold a stack of 2 x 4s as we nervously drove home from the lumber yard.

The minivan is the most practical vehicle ever created.

This means you may never look cool driving it, but you don’t have to worry about impaling the guy behind you.

 5. Chickens don’t take long to make a house a home. 



 I was so diligent about keeping the coop clean when it was going up, I caught myself removing my shoes once before climbing inside to install a small door.

Now I need a separate pair of shoes just to go into the coop to open that door.

Monday, May 14, 2012

5 things I've learned about chickens in 4 days

The chicks are here! 

Our adventure in raising backyard chickens has officially begun.  I've only had them a few days but I have learned a few things already. 

mother hen, oil on canvas.  ©2010 Kristina Wentzell

Want to see more chicken paintings? Check out this fun video I put together.



1. Chicks sure are messy. I read this beforehand, but boy has it proved true. Tiny chicks are impossibly cute balls of peeping fluff that also possess remarkable athletic abilities right from birth.  They scratch and shuffle and peck around in their brooder like little possessed demons scattering pine shavings in a three foot radius in the air and all around their box.


coming home from the feed store!


2. Chicks start their flying lessons early. We learned this quickly, when opening the door to their brooder (in our case, a wire guinea pig cage) and a couple of them came running and flapping towards the opening and actually got a little bit air born.  Luckily, we were able to stop them in their lemming like leap to certain death.


unpacking the little peepers

3. The contended peeping of baby chicks is the best sound.  It lets a person know everything is all right with the world.  I’ve taken to bringing my laptop in their room to work while listening to their happy little cheeps and shuffling noises.



4. There should be a yoga pose called the chick. My chicks do this hilarious stretching exercise of extending one leg waaaaay out straight behind them while simultaneously leaning sharply forward and stretching the same side wing out. There are cat, cow, and cobra poses…why not chicken?



5. A chick can fall asleep like a drop of a hat.  My chicks can fall asleep in about 1.5 seconds. They will stand still, close their eyes, and slowing fall face first into the shavings…staying there sprawled out like a drunken sailor. Once I realized they weren’t dead, it became quite funny.



Do you have your own flock of backyard chickens?  I'd love to hear from you!  Tell me your chicken stories. 








Sunday, April 29, 2012

Adventures in backyard chickens

A couple of years ago, I started painting a series of chickens.


I don’t remember exactly why I painted the first one…I’ve always just been drawn to chickens.  Maybe it’s because I’m a fan of little packages with big attitudes (probably why hummingbirds are among my favorite birds) and I always stop and when I see chickens in someone’s yard by the side of the road.  There is something so calming and just right with the world about a chicken quietly scratching in a grassy yard. Don’t you agree?

So, back then I painted a few chickens to start and they were a big hit. They got a lot of comments and attention at my outdoor shows and sold right away so I painted more…many more.  At first, my daughter and I gave them names from our imaginary flock (picturing a day when we’d have our own). We had a definite floral theme with girls like Daffodil, Petunia and Marigold. 

Once I ran out of flowers I moved on to famous couples, I introduced the hen & rooster versions of Napoleon and Josephine, Fred and Wilma, and Elvis and Priscilla among many others to the world. 


I also started researching all the breeds.  There are so many and they come in such a multitude of sizes and shapes from the large, sturdy stock like Rhode Island Reds to the impossibly foolish Silkie Bantams or the every-which-way feathered the FrizzleCochin (my favorite).

At every show, I get asked about twenty times “So you must have your own chickens?”  When I tell them “No, I just really like chickens” I usually get a slightly quizzical look like why do you paint them then? (and what is wrong with you, lady)



But that is all about to change.

This is the year! We’re finally ready. If not ready, close enough…we’re taking the plunge.  I ordered 6 chicks from my local feed store to be picked up when they’re one day old. 
buff orpington chicks
I will share my journey in backyard chicken raising here…join me starting May 11th (the day the chickies arrive!) as I post about raising baby chicks in the house (with two kids, 3 cats and 2 guinea pigs).  Not that the guinea pigs will be interacting much with them but I didn’t want them to feel left out.
We’ll build a coop and a run for them along the way and figure this whole thing out by the seat of our pants. Like how to keep the neighbor’s dogs from eating them and how do I bribe my two little charges into mucking out a chicken coop.
You can check out more of my chicken paintings here.


Sunday, November 27, 2011

presenting....Lucy & Ricky

Kristina Wentzell, ricky, oil on canvas, 8 x 8 inches. ©2011



Kristina Wentzell, lucy, oil on canvas, 8 x 8 inches. ©2011




These paintings are available in the 100 Paintings for $100 or Less Sale.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

barney

Kristina Wentzell, barney, oil on canvas, 10 x 8 inches. ©2011


This painting is available in the 100 Paintings for $100 or Less Sale.

Monday, November 14, 2011

betty


Kristina Wentzell, betty, oil on canvas, 8 x 8 inches. ©2011


This painting is available in the 100 Paintings for $100 or Less Sale.


Thursday, August 4, 2011

backyard chicken paintings

The chickens are quickly flying out of my studio! They look so great in little groupings. Here are a few that are still available. Go HERE to purchase.




Kristina Wentzell, the guardian, oil on canvas, 8 x 8 inches. ©2011

Kristina Wentzell, black rooster, oil on canvas, 8 x 8 inches. ©2011


Kristina Wentzell, scarlett, oil on canvas, 8 x 8 inches. ©2011


Kristina Wentzell, valiant bird, oil on canvas, 8 x 8 inches. ©2011