A Break with Tradition
http://www.gabcast.com/mp3play/mp3player.swf?file=http://www.gabcast.com/casts/11562/episodes/1192157836.mp3&config=http://www.gabcast.com/mp3play/config.php?ini=mini.0.l
I’ve arrived in Wichita Falls, TX.
(Click the “play” button above to hear more.)
Cowboy Boots on Page 66
Yesterday, I found this photo buried in my cel phone.
In big round numbers, Marty photographed 300 pairs of boots for our book…over 10,000 digital images. Marty shot anywhere from 10 to 30 pictures for every pair.
Marty used nothing but natural light. In Austin, I held up a piece of foiled foam-core to bounce back the sunshine on a overcast day.
Man, it was cold in Austin. Cold and windy. I get cold again just looking at this picture. I think Marty spent the whole day on his knees or lying on his stomach in the dirt.
Here’s the finished photo…
Cowboy Boot Glossary: Variegated Thread
When I was working on my book, I struggled a bit defining the word “variegated” as in variegated thread. I wrote…
“Variegated Thread: Thread that has been dyed with patches of multiple colors or with different shades of a single color.“
I wrote this as if the reader would picture the thread on the spool or running through a sewing machine, just like I do.
Recently, I happened upon a fashion blog, called “The Coveted.” In her post, stylish Jennine writes about a pair of pink cowboy boots with “rainbow” stitching.
Rainbow! Rainbow really is the perfect word, because these boots are colorful… they have a kinda light-hearted airy quality.
Variegated thread around a butterfly inlay gives the design a kind of flutter …stitched row upon row gives the thread gives the look of broad brush strokes. At a distance, some stitch patterns look a little like watercolors.
Try this…flip through my book and look only at the thread colors used on each boot. Isn’t it interesting? I’ve used the comment section below to note the pages where I found variegated rainbow thread. Did I miss any pairs?
(EXTRA: How does a bootmaker line up the colors? …it’s a trade secret.)
Photos by Marty Snortum. This boot made by Paul Bond is one of the many many swell boots left on the “cutting room floor” while making my book.
Contest Winners
Yay! Thanks again and again to those who entered my “Amazon Review” contest. I appreciate your generous contributions of time, thought and creativity.
Andrew S. Rogers (Seattle, WA) is the lucky winner of the prize drawing, and will receive a hardcover copy of Texas Boots.
And since I can’t decide whether “noel49” or Kevin N. Faughnder wrote my “favorite” review… they’ll each be getting their own softcover copy of Texas Boots.
You can read all the reviews, here.