My veil is done!! Just as I had hoped, I'm really proud of it, and love wearing it (even though the pine needle attachments on the front dig into my forehead a bit when it's in its proper position), which is a bonus. The headpiece is made of a willow branch, to which pine needles and rose stems/vines (as well as the start of the veil itself) were attached. The veil is made of folded tulle (with a total of 4 layers), with pinecones and rose petals. In both sections, hot glue was used to a large amount, and it essentially became my best friend throughout this process even though it burned me a few times (oops). Above, you can see the two sections, as well as a few selfies for the purpose of modeling the veil. (I'm not really smiling properly in any of them, but then again, I was modeling the veil, not myself.)
During the process, many *fun* things happened: I got two ticks while pinecone-hunting; I broke my first willow branch while trying to shape the base of the headpiece and had to use my backup; I got burned many times while using the hot glue gun; I accidentally attached paper to the veil when I was hot-gluing it together (I got most of it off, and hopefully the small strip that remains isn't too noticeable); etc. I also hated my first idea of where the rose petals would go (surrounding the pinecones in equal, planned, near-perfect rings), but absolutely loved the second and ultimately final idea (dropping the rose petals randomly on the veil, avoiding dropping any directly on the pinecones, and seeing where they ended up). Though the process was somewhat troublesome, I'm very proud of the end product and am very excited that it is now on display in the main hallway. The title of the piece is 'Til Death Do Us Part, and I came up with that while running through several wedding-related phrases (here comes the bride, to have and to hold, etc.). I eventually stuck with this one because, as the nature (hehehe) of the human-nature relationship is often parasitic, it will not end until one force (either the human race or the environment) dies; they will not part until death separates them.
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AuthorMolly Goodman Archives
May 2019
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