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Kids & Co. in Buffalo Grove

 

Our first big mural job of the decade

It was an innocuous enough email requesting some murals for a children’s rec center. How were we to know the scale of the job? We met the owner, Steve, at the site in Buffalo Grove during the “before” phase. It looked like a cute office with long hallway for toddler play with a room to the side for a play house and a fun diner on the other.

We tossed around ideas and thought we were about done. We went into the art room, then two party rooms and then a huge play room, but wait there’s more, a theater!

And it's opening soon!

http://www.theclubforkids.net/

It’s in Buffalo Grove, but they will easily draw from Lincolnshire, Northbrook, Deerfield, Kildeer, really, all the Northern suburbs.

In the toddler area we created a sweet house exterior with bright cheerful flowers to draw the little homemakers into the play space - a room filled with all the domestic parafanalia you could dream of. There is also a closet of costumes, because wouldn’t you rather be a pirate or a princess than a mere mortal?

As this was a big job with an ASAP timeframe we brought in another couple of artists to assist. Terry is a skilled Faux Finisher, and BJ is an artist who turns her hand to many projects: printing, Public murals, and other forms of art.

The hallway itself leads to the “construction corner” where there will be play cars, work benches and other typically, but not exclusively, boy type toys. that was our most dramatic kid’s mural of the whole place. The construction workers are all animal (insert your own joke here), including a kangaroo with a jack-hammer and a bear electrician. The human contruction workers kept coming and checking it out. They felt right at home.

Paula gave Terry a quick lesson in volume & shadow and those french fries look like they are ready to pop right of the wall. On the far right you’ll notice what must be a custom left-handed purple electric guitar. I can’t imagine they were mass produced. BJ had pizza for dinner the night she painted the slice on the wall. Coincidence? I think not!

Paula & I drew the outlines and our wonderful Assistant Artists, BJ & Terry got right to work filling in the colors. It was also Terry’s first time using a scaffold. She was a great learner, and I bet she could put one together by herself now if she had to. Who'd want to though, if you can have help?

Terry with the flowers.

Across the hall is a glass enclosed 50s style diner. The logo has irridescent foil on the marquee “lights” that reflect different colors. The center is blackboard paint so a birthday child can receive all the attention they are due.

Neat little diner chairs!

We painted the diner motifs on the upper half of the wall. The nice construction workers let us have access to the walls, before they installed the booths. Yay! It was nice not to have to be climbing and crawling in the contorted ways we are used to.

Leaving the details to me and Paula the others started basepainting the decor in the HUGE playroom.

Paula was particularly thrilled with how the squiggly design going around the corners worked. A great way to cover lots of space with an energetic zap ... and let the solid color of the different walls do most of the work. A kind of punctuation!

That’s me painting the art room.

While I was in my own personal happy land, Paula HAND LETTERED the theater marquee.

That’s us finishing up the marquee. Terry, the wonder Assistant, took many of the pictures.

Zap, pow!

 

The Huntington Woods Mural Project

 

Continuing the Saga

October 1st 2009 I drove out to Huntington Woods & hung around with my video camera while the guys from ASI Signage did all the work. I was just there to make sure nothing went in upside down.
I'm putting this in now as they'll have their big dedication soon, this coming April ... so I'd better have caught up with the process before the final hoo-ha!
They used a wonderful (expensive) special tape, and some silicone goop, to stick the panels to the wall. Lots of measuring, first.  Here is a short version of the panels going up:

We have 2 videos on our account at You Tube (the long & short of it), so far. More to come, hopefully soon!

 

 

Binder Park Zoo, Battle Creek, MI


Hello again!


More updating from projects past.
Last April we went to Binder Park Zoo again. Previously we had painted the Australian landscape mural in the Koala exhibit, and then a couple of years later painted many different murals in the then newly renovated Conservation Discovery Center.
If you want to go to the coolest place ever to see animals:
http://www.binderparkzoo.org/
The zoo re-opens April 22nd 2010.
They have an amazing (big) (nice walkways) (shuttle to get there) African exhibit. My favorite part is where you buy the biscuits for the giraffes and they amble on up to the elevated walkway where you can feed them. (I suppose alternatively you could eat the biscuit yourself, but feeding the giraffes is ever so much more fun).Their big long black tongues whip thru with happy greed, and their heads are like huge ungainly organic hockey sticks swaying & curving.
Oh my, such adjective overload!

Back to The Amphitheater

In 2009 our mission was to jungle-up the new amphitheater.
Nice eh?
Read more... [Binder Park Zoo, Battle Creek, MI]
 

Return to Which Mountain?

Alright, back on the wee screen again!
(The mountain of 'things to do', of course)
We haven't made an appearance here for a while - sorry about that ... off doing other stuff. Which of course means I have a lot to catch up with. Well, we knew that. I had a lot to catch up with, anyway!
What I really want to get up here, though, is the Huntington Woods Mural Project, because that was such a big deal, happened a while ago yet is still current as they will have their big dedication this April. 2010.

THE HUNTINGTON WOODS MURAL PROJECT

So - it was back in the Olden Days when I worked for Decovis Interiors that we put in a bid for a Public Works type thing. It went into the pipeline, we forgot about it, then eventually here that oh my, we're still in the running. Oh good.  Then after another while we hear that we got it - cool!
Huntington Woods (referred to hereafter as "HW" so that I don't have to keep typing that out) has a Beautification Committee, and a big wall next to some drive-thru mailboxes. As part of their re-vamp of the whole mailbox area they were after some public art.
Here's the wall once things were all cleaned up and nice. 37' long.
And here's what happens on the other side: Larry repairs big machines.
Other people drive in & out and do things too - but since Larry posed for me & I only saw him fixing stuff?   ... I think it's his place.
But the whole HW idea was to put more of the W in the HW ... so their architect had done a rough of some parklike setting. We tossed around how-to options & changed our minds a couple of times. The pretty wall wasn't pretty yet, and yes it did take at least the estimated 2 years before it was. Was it more? Claire? Cheryl?
Claire Galed & Cheryl Riskin were the two organizers we talked with the most. Lots more people were involved, of course. It's the Larry Effect, again.
Claire (her office is in there behind the wall)
Cheryl
After various ideas being thrown in & out of the pot we had a design, knew what materials we wanted, and just had to wait for the go-ahead.
July 2007 saw us ordering 17 panels of Econolite (signwriter's board, 2 sides aluminum, corrugated plastic in the middle), a small boatload (OK, a box - but more than we'd ever ordered in one batch before) of Createx Autoair, and getting all our ducks in a row to meet at Janice's place in Galesburg, MI. Janice has a nice big barn, would let us stay, and who could ask for a more beautiful painting environment?
.
Paula
.
And Janice even had family that we could rope into working, too!
Rachel files the nasty burrs off so that no-one opens up their hands in the name of art. Garth hauled, they both sanded.
projecting
spraying basic layout and base colors
Bringing previous ones back in to check line-up, then its out to the art production line.
Jean Weir, Paul Nehring, Kitty Rockafield,
Jean  
Back to look at the whole thing
Jean is a wonder with landscape and botanicals!
.
Kitty   Paul
Kitty, our tool maestra ... she also built us our outside-easels. She paints, too, but stubbornly wouldn't this time. Just a social call with some tool use - I love my friends!
Paul is normally a sculpture guy, but he really got into some serious trunkage with all our foreground trees.
Christina, who was a student at Western Michigan University, at the time. And made it into the paper very photogenically with those panels. I think she was stuck in the Land of Leaves at that time, not sure.
See - we had all these panels, and they all had to line up the right way. And they're big. And the whole composition is bigger. So we had 4 different areas - 2 for 3 panels at a time side-by-side, and two for up-and-down alignment, and we kept switching everything around between workstations.
.
And the chickens were hilarious.
Every now and again one or two of them would escape. You'd come back from lunch to find one perched on your painting.
Notice the trampoline. Artist's resort, eh?
Eventually we did have to stop painting. When you can't really see what you're doing anymore that is usually a good signal it's time to stop.
But it's just so much fun, see? But after quite a few long days we proudly put all the panels together and figured it was ready to go.
Debby, Christina, Jesse, Janice, Paula, Paul.
So we were just left with the clear-coating, clean-up, and packaging the panels up sensibly for pickup by the HW truck.
So now seems like a good time for a break. More on the saga tomorrow!
 

Return to Lekotek

The saga continues:

After Debby & I painted in the sky & basic green background, sorted out the figures and structures for the play areas, set up the paints, palettes & new brushes, we were ready for the volunteers.



First things first - everyone gets the " ... and this is the business end of the paintbrush ..." lecture. "This is the ferrule, don't you dare dip the brush in the paint past the ferrule, you can get a nice edge like this, wash your brush between colors, see how a transparent color over a light color can make it look kind of glowy ..."  etc etc.

Plus a safety lecture for anyone going on the Jungle Gymn (scaffold), set everyone up with colors & destinations, and off they go ...





















And then some final touching up ...



... and to we'll continue the saga later with some final pics (added a few bits of grass in there, cleaned up, moved boxes out of the way and so forth).



 
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Images copyright © 2005-2009, Deborah Spertus and Paula Clayton