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Top Hat Cat/Creative Cats Book


Tikobaby

3,553 views

My latest effort from the Creative Cats coloring book...my favorite book so far.  Prismacolor, Winsor-Newton, and Staedtler fineliner markers. Just got the owl book by the same artist and am working on a page in the NatureScapes book right now.   :cat:

TopHatCat.coloring.jpg

  • Upvote 4

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Curious

Posted

You are going to be the death of me.   I swear my husband will move out if I buy another tub for markers and you are making it SO hard to resist.

I have the owls book and did one pic out of there.  I think I've posted it as a Pic of the day already.   I really like both of those books.

Now that I discovered I have the Naturescapes book, I pulled out the seahorse page in my next set of pages to do.

Right now I'm working on a page out of Lost Ocean.

You know I really have always HATED yellow.  I wanted to move out when my dad painted our kitchen and the huge wall that went into the basement yellow.  It was like torture to live with that when I was a kid.

Lately though I am warming up to yellow.  I really love the yellow you use.  I use yellow a lot more than I ever expected that I would.   I'm not sure why changed my mind about it since I've hated it as long as I can remember.

  • Upvote 1
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Tikobaby

Posted (edited)

Nice! Those markers are nice and vivid.

Thank you!  I love my Prismacolors!  Have got some more Winsor-Newtons coming on Tuesday...they're really nice also.   :cat:   

 

LOL!  Don't want your hubby to move, but buying more markers is not easy to resist.  I love the Prismacolor Premiers...the colors roll out smoothly and they're very vivid. The Canary yellow is a favorite of mine, but I've always loved yellow and red together.  A few seem more "wet" than others and those are not as easy to control. My Ultramarine one is like that. I ordered some Winsor-Newton Promarkers from Michael's online and they are arriving Tuesday.  Would love to have a set of Copic Sketch markers, but they are very expensive.  I did the seahorse page in NatureScapes, but didn't have good markers at the time so it doesn't look too great. Love seahorsies!  Am doing the meerkat page right now, but my color choices are a bit odd.  Oh, the artist who did the Creative Cats book has a dog book coming out next year according to Amazon!   

Edited by Tikobaby
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Tikobaby

Posted

Sorry, somehow it looks like I've hidden my replies to Grimalkin and Curious by accident!  Tried to fix it and  made it worse....whoops!  Hope you both find my replies to your posts.  

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Curious

Posted

Oh I didn't know that about the dogs book.   I try to avoid looking at amazon unless I'm PLANNING on making an order because I'm a horrible impulse buyer when it comes to coloring supplies.   I don't actually feel terribly guilty about those purchases because I do USE them (vs just hoarding them lol), but at what point do you really need MORE coloring books, etc.

I do have 3 books coming out in Jan in my wishlist, so I will get those once they are released.

Have you looked at http://www.blick.com?  I've never ordered from Michael's online since it's easy to just run to the brick and mortar store when we are out on "dr. day," so I'm not too sure how the pricing compares.   I ordered a few single markers/artist grade colored pencils from them and was really happy with the purchases.

I now have 5 prismacolor markers and 7 copics, I think.   I like the copic, but I wish I had gotten the one with the fine point/brush tip vs the brush tip/chisel point.  I really don't like the chisel tip at all.  I thought I might like it for filling in large spaces like backgrounds, but I don't :(

I think I'm going to stick with the prismacolors from now on just because they are several dollars cheaper and are just as nice, IMO.

  • Upvote 1
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Tikobaby

Posted

I think the dog book comes out in May/2016.  I did look at Blick before buying the Promarkers, but the shipping cost was high so I went with Michael's. We have a Michael's in our town, but that place is always mobbed to the gills and it's in a plaza with a really tight parking lot that's overcrowded with huge SUVs that barely fit the spaces.  So, kind of stressful to go there in person...though I have done it. The WN  markers were between $4.19-$4.99 on the website and the shipping was less than on Blick.  I think Prismacolors are affordable and very good quality. I like the brush tips on the Copics...don't like chisel tips at all and never use them.

Could someone explain about the 5 stars that appear under the title of the blog entries? Some are lit and some stay dark...how do they work?

  • Upvote 1
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Tikobaby

Posted

Thank you so much, Fascinated!  It's very kind and encouraging of you to say so!  :cat:

Am now working on the Cuckoo Clock Cat page in the Creative Cats book...quite intricate.  Am waiting for a certain color of marker to arrive next week so I can finish the meerkat page in NatureScapes. 

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EyeQueue

Posted

I love this! It's very steampunk cat. And I love the saturated colors.

  • Upvote 1
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Tikobaby

Posted

Thank you, EyeQueue!   I love vivid colors too and the artist who did the Creative Cats book drew fantastic designs that are so much fun to color!

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Curious

Posted

On 11/21/2015 at 2:00 PM, Tikobaby said:

Could someone explain about the 5 stars that appear under the title of the blog entries? Some are lit and some stay dark...how do they work?

Gosh I've missed so many comments because I thought that following the top level of the blog would be good enough.  I'm going back through and following each blog post now and catching up on what I've missed.

The star thing is just a rating system.   Unfortunately, it doesn't mean much because it doesn't show up anywhere that is really helpful.    If everyone rated stuff, it would give a better idea about how people feel about posts/topics, etc, but not many people use it.

 

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  • Posts

    • Mrs Ms

      Posted

      1 hour ago, Ozlsn said:

      And it probably won't leak!

      Or at least won’t need a technician to fix…

    • Ozlsn

      Posted

      2 hours ago, Maggie Mae said:

      I also think braggie's fridge is dumb. It comes with a pitcher for water. Great. I can buy a $35 pitcher with a filter and fill it in the sink and get the same result.

      And it probably won't leak!

    • GreenBeans

      Posted

      1 hour ago, Maggie Mae said:

      I guess I'm just a little confused if we are talking about the same thing. Because a place with dedicated staff, display cases, and seating sounds like a bakery to me, more than a bake sale.

      No, it typically takes place in a church hall or gym or a cafeteria at school or a community center. It’s not a permanently set up bakery, but these kinds of locations typically have some tables and chairs in a back room to put out and a fridge in the back, sometimes even plates and cutlery and a dishwasher. The “staff” are just volunteers who come out for the day. So you have one person making coffee, one handing out cakes, one handling payments and one in the back to get new cakes from the fridge, cut them, bringt them out etc. It’s all very much improvised and nothing like a real cafe or bakery.

      9 minutes ago, Mrs Ms said:

      but it is super common here and would be front page news if someone got food poisoning anywhere in the country from one. 

      Agree. I’ve never heard of food poisoning from a bake sale, ever. I know it makes sense to have all the hygiene regulations in place for professionally run businesses. But for charity bake sales, apparently they’ve been doing fine without those for decades here. It’s just not an issue.

    • Mrs Ms

      Posted

      52 minutes ago, Maggie Mae said:

      They aren't completely wrong. Inflation IS making it hard for everyone. Wages aren't and haven't matched inflation in a long time.  However, economics is a complex topic and there are a thousand reasons why food, housing, and basic supplies are more expensive. [snip long paragraph of stuff no one cares about] 

      The "I truly don't know what we are going to do" is ridiculous. I have a suggestion. 

      Get. A. Job. 

      Like every other person who wasn't born into the 1% (and even they have jobs.) Plenty of people are struggling with mental and physical health and still go to work. Go sign up for a temp agency. There are tons of jobs that are just one or two days - company needs someone to catch up on filing. Company Y needs someone to sort out some boxes. Company Z needs someone to fill in and answer phones for a week. It's money that can help.  I can't see how someone who has experience with public speaking, can write coherently, and operate computers and basic software couldn't keep a job. I see people every day who don't email, can't figure out websites, don't know a browser from a bulldozer. Unemployment is at like 4%, everyone is having workforce shortages. We've hired so many terrible receptionists and had an administrative assistant who called out 25% of the time and we still worked with them. 

      So in the US, a bake sale is usually something put on by a group - like the French club wants to go to France, or the Band needs to raise money to get new uniforms, or a church group wants to raise money to send to a natural disaster type place.  They are low-key -usually, people donate some brownies or cookies, and it's just a couple of card tables in a hallway or on a sidewalk somewhere. They aren't going to buy glass display cases and set up a storefront. Maybe in areas wealthier than mine? 

      Not only is that a waste of money that they need to get to the fundraising goal, it also would open up a ton of liability and be against the law. Restaurants have to follow very specific laws - they pay $$ for their building, for commercial equipment. The employees go through either ServSafe or Food Handlers classes or both. 

      They have to carry certain types of insurance (commercial liability, liquor liability if they have a liquor license, music licensing if they have music, property insurance, car insurance if they have commercial vehicles, excess/umbrella, etc. ) They have to renew licenses and undergo extensive permitting.  They have to submit plans (all of which come with a fee), every time they change things.  Everything is inspected and regulated-  seating, business plans, outdoor seating, signage. It's extremely expensive to start a restaurant and I don't know why anyone would want to, the margins are so low. They require so many employees and there is so much overhead. 

      The bake sale where some kids sell each other cosmic brownies at lunch a few days a month is one thing, but setting up a permanent location where you ship orders, or operate what appears to be a bakery that skipped the legal process is another.  

      I guess I'm just a little confused if we are talking about the same thing. Because a place with dedicated staff, display cases, and seating sounds like a bakery to me, more than a bake sale.

      And more so than the unfairness of a charitable group being able to operate an unlicensed business at a lower cost than a business that invested heavily and paid for the right to be able to operate, we are talking about food and food safety. Which should be regulated because foodborne illness can kill people. 

       

      No, definitely talking about the same thing. Both the places I was involved with in Germany ran it like a cafe/sale hybrid during the school fairs or the open days and had space to store the cabinets during the rest of the year. Plus enough people to bake things and then have people staff it during the day. No clue how other places handled things.
      At my kids school here in NZ we do a similar cafe/bake sale hybrid in one of the classrooms for the school fair. The rest of the year, any of the classes wanting to raise extra money for camp or so do a straight bake sale just outside the staff room (which has a kitchen.) A parent or teacher will pre-cut any cakes or slices, a teacher will supervise the cash and the kids serve the baking. Covid has definitely made covering things and wearing masks more of a thing!
      As we are a food allergy family, it’s not my favourite, but it is super common here and would be front page news if someone got food poisoning anywhere in the country from one. 

      • Upvote 1
      • I Agree 1
    • Maggie Mae

      Posted

      5 hours ago, formerhsfundie said:

      "Fundraising is getting so much harder. I blame the price gouging that’s affecting everyone except the extremely rich. People can’t spare what they used to, because life is getting more expensive. Food, housing, and everything else is climbing up and up."

      "The poorest are hit hardest because of the greed of the richest. I truly don’t know what we are going to do. We need to move again because we can’t afford to stay in this area. Moving itself is expensive, too. We haven’t received any donations yet toward moving."

      And honestly I do think it’s because so many people are struggling more than ever. We just don’t have the “same $20 to share around” that we had even a couple of years ago. And that is scary.

      They aren't completely wrong. Inflation IS making it hard for everyone. Wages aren't and haven't matched inflation in a long time.  However, economics is a complex topic and there are a thousand reasons why food, housing, and basic supplies are more expensive. [snip long paragraph of stuff no one cares about] 

      The "I truly don't know what we are going to do" is ridiculous. I have a suggestion. 

      Get. A. Job. 

      Like every other person who wasn't born into the 1% (and even they have jobs.) Plenty of people are struggling with mental and physical health and still go to work. Go sign up for a temp agency. There are tons of jobs that are just one or two days - company needs someone to catch up on filing. Company Y needs someone to sort out some boxes. Company Z needs someone to fill in and answer phones for a week. It's money that can help.  I can't see how someone who has experience with public speaking, can write coherently, and operate computers and basic software couldn't keep a job. I see people every day who don't email, can't figure out websites, don't know a browser from a bulldozer. Unemployment is at like 4%, everyone is having workforce shortages. We've hired so many terrible receptionists and had an administrative assistant who called out 25% of the time and we still worked with them. 

      4 hours ago, Mrs Ms said:

      Any I have been to in Germany and New Zealand had one person handling the cash and other people serving. Plus power and hand washing facilities. Usually with a few tables and chairs right next to the sale area to sit and eat immediately. 
      Plus all the ones in Germany I saw had display cabinets for the products like in cafes. I think the ones in NZ usually had insect shields and/or see-through lids and weren’t right at the front edge of the table. 

      So in the US, a bake sale is usually something put on by a group - like the French club wants to go to France, or the Band needs to raise money to get new uniforms, or a church group wants to raise money to send to a natural disaster type place.  They are low-key -usually, people donate some brownies or cookies, and it's just a couple of card tables in a hallway or on a sidewalk somewhere. They aren't going to buy glass display cases and set up a storefront. Maybe in areas wealthier than mine? 

      Not only is that a waste of money that they need to get to the fundraising goal, it also would open up a ton of liability and be against the law. Restaurants have to follow very specific laws - they pay $$ for their building, for commercial equipment. The employees go through either ServSafe or Food Handlers classes or both. 

      They have to carry certain types of insurance (commercial liability, liquor liability if they have a liquor license, music licensing if they have music, property insurance, car insurance if they have commercial vehicles, excess/umbrella, etc. ) They have to renew licenses and undergo extensive permitting.  They have to submit plans (all of which come with a fee), every time they change things.  Everything is inspected and regulated-  seating, business plans, outdoor seating, signage. It's extremely expensive to start a restaurant and I don't know why anyone would want to, the margins are so low. They require so many employees and there is so much overhead. 

      The bake sale where some kids sell each other cosmic brownies at lunch a few days a month is one thing, but setting up a permanent location where you ship orders, or operate what appears to be a bakery that skipped the legal process is another.  

      I guess I'm just a little confused if we are talking about the same thing. Because a place with dedicated staff, display cases, and seating sounds like a bakery to me, more than a bake sale.

      And more so than the unfairness of a charitable group being able to operate an unlicensed business at a lower cost than a business that invested heavily and paid for the right to be able to operate, we are talking about food and food safety. Which should be regulated because foodborne illness can kill people. 

       



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