Photographer Tracy Waters helps Lake Conroe Lions bring their sassy back

Photographer Tracy Waters helps Lake Conroe Lions bring their sassy back

Lake Conroe Centennial Lions Club opened its last General Meeting with a blessing by President Shirley Abt followed by her leading us all in a pledge of the American Flag and then the Texas Flag. After the reading of the minutes and the financial report, President Abt opened the floor for “Good News!” Several members stated that a 2023 graduate was in their family and one member stated that she just found out that she will soon become a grandmother! Congratulations to all!

Then Program Chair, Marie Underdown, introduced our Guest Speaker, Tracy Waters with Tracy Lynn LLC Photography, Tracy, a wife of almost 33 years and a mom to two beautiful daughters, presented a program entitled “We’re Bringing Sassy Back.”

From the beginning, Tracy was a girl behind the camera. As a matter of fact, in high school she got a job at Olan Mills Studio, selling photo packages. Even back then, she had a vision as Tracy told the photographer “If we would do the ladies’ hair and make up first – we’d sell more packages.” She was ahead of her time, because a few years later Glamour Shots came along!

Tracy continued her education by studying copywriting and desktop publishing in college which earned he a job in advertising. Again she was ahead of her time as she was scanning in photos and editing them in photoshop before that was “a thing.” Apps were still in the distant future.

After the birth of her daughters, Tracy wanted the flexibility to be able to spend more time at home with them, so she bought a mannequin and started a business. Using the mannequin to display different accessories, she taught women how just the changing of accessories can dramatically change the look of an outfit. Tracy continued this business for 12 years.

Her children grew as did her business, to a point where she wasn’t spending the quality time with her girls. At that point, Tracy felt that God was telling her that it was time to stop and enjoy her daughters while they were still at home. “I have never regretted that time!”

Unfortunately, a decade or so later, Tracy and her husband went through some difficult times: times of hopelessness and despair. Now empty nesters, the couple moved to Montgomery to start over.

Her first job in this area was working at a boutique, helping women choose outfits that make them look good so that they feel good. Then it hit her: let’s make women of all ages feel good about themselves: to feel beautiful! Thus her dream was born: To help other women get out of their pit-whatever it may look like- and get their confidence back: in other words, their Sassy! Tracy had been toying with the idea of a photography studio and viola! She did it!

Tracy’s home studio is gorgeous, complete with a glamour closet filled with fabulous accessories and a dramatic spiral staircase, just perfect for that sassy pose. In addition to the clothes and accessories, clients also are treated to a hair and make-up artist. The photos are the icing on the cake!

But the program was not finished yet! Tracy then presented a slide show of an actual client: Marie! First the before, then after Tracy’s professional work! Wow, what a difference! (PS I almost didn’t recognize myself!)

Then to top the program off, Tracy had a drawing where she gave out lots of fun goodies. LCCLC members bought tickets to win lots of fun prizes that Tracy raffled off, and all the money from that raffle she donated to the Texas Lion’s Camp! Way to go, Tracy! We not only enjoyed but were inspired by your story.

For more information, check her out on Facebook and insta@TracyLynn LLc,
TracyLynnLlc@gmail.com
or call or text 832-291-0584. (Note: Tracy will donate 10% of all proceeds to Montgomery County Women’s Shelter. She eventually wants to have a program offering grants to help women start small businesses.)


For more information on Lake Conroe Centennial Lions Club email President Shirley Abt at
shirlgirlmk@hotmail.com

Fall 2023 BFA Exhibition | Orlando, FL

Fall 2023 BFA Exhibition | Orlando, FL
The Fall 2023 BFA Exhibition provides the opportunity for senior undergraduate students specializing in book arts, ceramics, drawing, experimental animation, illustration, painting, photography, printmaking, and sculpture to share their research and artistic practice. Please join us for the…

Mural installation at Philadelphia Premium Outlets celebrates landmarks, family fun

Mural installation at Philadelphia Premium Outlets celebrates landmarks, family fun

Shoppers at the Philadelphia Premium Outlets can take a break from shopping to enjoy two murals painted by a Pottstown artist — focusing on family fun and iconic landmarks in Montgomery County.

The murals are part of the Valley Forge Tourism and Convention Board’s ongoing ArtsMontco initiative, which highlights the county’s more than 200 arts and entertainment venues, attractions, and galleries.

The installations feature the work of artist Carrie Kingsbury, owner of Promiseland Murals and Pottstown resident, who completed the projects in May.

“It’s been a great honor and privilege to work to create murals that celebrate all that the Montco area has to offer, and I hope to work for these organizations in the future,” Kingsbury said in a statement.

The first mural, located by the Brooks Brothers entrance, focuses on Montgomery County’s most iconic landmarks, including Valley Forge National Historical Park, Bryn Athyn Cathedral, and the nearby Philadelphia skyline. The second mural, located at the Michael Kors entrance, focuses on the county’s family-friendly attractions, including Elmwood Park Zoo, Arts Montco, youth sports, and more.

“Both murals are absolutely amazing, stunning and vibrant.  Shoppers are having fun taking selfies at the murals and have expressed pride in seeing all of the featured iconic local landmarks,” Gerilyn Davis, Philadelphia Premium Outlets director of marketing & business development, said in a statement.

Two murals have been installed at Philadelphia Premium Outlets in Limerick focusing on family fun and iconic Montgomery County landmarks. They were painted by artist Carrie Kingsbury of Promiseland Murals. This photo shows the family mural. (PHOTO COURTESY VALLEY FORGE TOURISM AND CONVENTION BOARD)

Kingsbury began painting commissioned work in high school, and went on to attend Bismark State College in Bismarck, N.D. and Kutztown  University, earning degrees in graphic design and fine arts. She dedicated her career to mural painting in 1999, when she started Promiseland Murals LLC. Among her mural projects are: St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children, CHOP at King of Prussia, and the Malvern train bridge. Her work was also featured on the television show Extreme Home Makeover (Berks edition).

Kingsbury’s studio is located in West Pottsgrove, Montgomery County. She has expanded her business to include portrait commissions, teaching workshops, children’s book illustrations, book cover art, and designing up-cycled jewelry. To view her mural projects at www.promiselandart.com.

According to a press release, Kingsbury approached the creation of each mural for the Philadelphia Premium Outlets project differently. During planning, she presented a digital mockup of the landmark design, and a watercolor rendering of the family design. Once the final details were decided she got to work creating both pieces.

A two-part anti-graffiti UV protectant clearcoat was applied once both murals were finished.

“This installation is a celebration of our county-wide Arts Montco brand, and a wonderful way to provide exposure for this incredible artist with the outlet center’s high foot traffic,” Rachel Riley, Valley Forge Tourism’s associate vice president of communications, said in a statement.

The arts and culture sector represents $100 million in positive economic impact for Montgomery County, according to the tourism agency.

The new mural installation is one of four art walls located in Montgomery County, and the second located at the Philadelphia Premium Outlets. The King of Prussia Mall currently features artist Jeantrix on Level 1 of The Court, and the Centre Theater in Norristown features multiple Black artists as part of the Charles Blockson Exhibition currently on display.

Wyoming Arts Council Fellowships Deadline Extended to June 16

Wyoming Arts Council Fellowships Deadline Extended to June 16


Wyoming Arts Council logo

The Wyoming Arts Council is extending the application deadline for all 2024 Fellowships (Visual Arts, Performing Arts, Native Art, and Creative Writing). The application deadline is now June 16. 

Applications are juried by noted artists and professionals in the field who are from outside the state. All fellowship recipients will receive a $5,000 unrestricted award as well as an opportunity to showcase their work in the state. Fellowships are open to Wyoming residents, and are merit-based awards.

The Visual Arts Fellowships are selected based on the artist’s portfolio and honoring work that reflects serious and exceptional investigation. Artists working in any medium may apply. Up to three fellowships may be given each year. Applications must be submitted online through CaFE . The jurors for this year’s Visual Arts Fellowships are Lawrence Diggs and Ginger Porcella.

The Performing Arts Fellowships are given to honor excellence in the artists’ field and are based on appropriate media samples and artist statements. Up to four fellowships may be awarded; two in the category of Music and two in the category of Theatre and Dance. Artists may only apply in one category (Music or Theatre and Dance) and applications must be submitted online through Submittable The juror for this year’s Performing Arts Fellowship in Theatre and Dance is Mathew Roberts and the juror for the Music category is Mark Rabideau.

The Creative Writing Fellowships are awards of merit, based on a writer’s body of work, and honoring Wyoming’s literary artists whose work demonstrates exceptional writing. One fellowship will be awarded in each category of Poetry, Creative Nonfiction, and Fiction, for a total of up to three fellowships. Writers may only submit in one category and applications must be submitted online through Submittable. The jurors for this year’s Creative Writing Fellowships are Ramona Ausubel for Fiction, Juan J. Morales for Poetry, and Katherine E. Standefer for Nonfiction. 

The Native Art Fellowship is based on the artist’s portfolio, honoring the work of Native artists based within Wyoming. Artists working across any artistic discipline or medium (visual, literary, performing, folk & traditional, etc.) may apply. This fellowship is designed to raise the profiles of the highly talented Native artists in Wyoming and celebrate their artistry. Fellowships are open to Wyoming residents, and are merit-based awards. This year’s jurors are Karen Ann Hoffman, a Haudenosaunee Raised Beadwork artist and citizen of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin and artist Daniel McCoy, of the The Muscogee Nation, who resides in Santa Fe, New Mexico with his family.  Applications must be submitted online through Submittable.

Sure it’s cliché, but at the end of the day we really do judge a book by its cover

Sure it’s cliché, but at the end of the day we really do judge a book by its cover

Book cover art needs to stand up and stand out in smaller internet form.

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We’ve all heard the phrase: you can’t judge a book by its cover. Yet, oftentimes, that’s literally what we do.

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Last year, 52 million English language books were sold in Canada, according to BookNet Canada. And publishing industry insiders say what makes a book stand out is, in large part, the cover.

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“There’s nothing like that initial impression to help you decide, ‘Am I going to give this book a chance or not?’ ” said Suzette Mayr, author of the Giller Prize-winning novel The Sleeping Car Porter. “It’s kind of sad, but I think we’re visual creatures. I think humans apprehend an image way quicker than they do words, so I think that covers are super, super, super important. I feel really lucky I have had some great covers.”

The cover of The Sleeping Car Porter is one of those ‘great’ covers. On it is a well-dressed man. But, upon closer inspection, you notice there are woodland animals around him including a frog in his breast pocket. The image is Stratford painter Janet Hill’s piece titled Unapologetically William.

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Photo of the book cover of The sleeping Car Porter
The Sleeping Car Porter, by Suzette Mayr. Courtesy of Coach House

“I bought the print, and I showed it to Coach House (publisher), and they ran with it,” said Mayr, who came across the painting while surfing Etsy. “What their designer did was she took that painting and she superimposed it with a railway timetable from the time (1929). It looks like a ghost presence.

“I love that cover so much. I think it reflects the book perfectly.”

Shuswap area author Gail Anderson-Dargatz — not surprisingly for a thriller writer — wants a little intrigue with her first impression.

“It’s the cover that is going to draw the reader in and it certainly draws me in,” said Anderson-Dargatz, whose latest suspenseful offering is The Almost Widow. “The books that grab me are ones with more complexity on the cover. Things that make you pick it up and go: ‘Oooh, what’s going on there?’ ”

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photo of Gail Anderson-Dargatz
Author Gail Anderson-Dargatz likes book covers that don’t reveal the whole story. The Shuswap area author’s latest thriller is The Almost Widow. Photo: Vida Anderson-Dargatz

But Karine Hack, editorial assistant at the Gibsons-based publisher Nightwood Editions, says it’s important to avoid anything so obtuse that nothing about the book’s contents is conveyed.

“Covers communicate meaning through the combination of images/esthetics and a book’s title. A really successful cover will give a reader a sense of what the contents of a book may be. And it will also say something about the book’s style or atmosphere. Covers that reach out and grab you often suggest a story or maybe pose some kind of question,” said Hack by email. “Covers are the first step in a reader’s imaginative journey. For me, a cover that sparks the imaginative process is a successful cover.”

The steps toward a successful cover for designer Jazmin Welch begin with a “really deep dive into understanding the content of the book.” After that, Welch, who is based in Hamilton and works with Vancouver’s Arsenal Pulp Press, checks in with the publishing group to talk concept and options. From there, two-to-five ideas are typically sent on to authors.

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“I love thinking up concepts. A book has so much within its pages. You can come up with many different ideas, so I often go overboard,” said Welch.

At Vancouver’s Greystone Books, creative director Jessica Sullivan says the cover process begins with a discussion with the author and editor. And those conversations can, at times, be tough.

“Sometimes the author’s hopes and dreams don’t match the vision of the publishing house, and they aren’t thinking about the cover as a sales and marketing tool. But we always try to figure out a way to reference or weave their desires into a design,” said Sullivan. “The ideal end result is one that everyone loves, from all the various perspectives and desired goals.”

For Vancouver author Robyn Harding, whose 13th novel, The Drowning Woman, will be released on June 13, the cover sometimes speaks volumes to the author about what the publishers think about the book.

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“How much effort they put into that cover is how much they believe in that book,” said Harding. “If a publisher or an editor really believes in a book, they will work their butts off to get a great cover. They realize how important it is.”

The cover is also a key area of concern for those tasked with promoting the book.

“Your cover and your title are going to be your most important sales tools because those are the things readers are going to encounter first,” said Cynara Geissler, director of marketing and publicity for Arsenal Pulp Press. “You want to make a good first impression. I know people are like, ‘Don’t judge a book by its cover,’ but I feel like that’s an outdated sentiment from when all book covers looked the same.

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“The designers put in so much effort, so we do look to book covers to be sort of directing the reader to choose what they want to read next.”

Photo of Cynara Geissler
Arsenal Pulp Press’s director of marketing and publicity Cynara Geissler says the book cover and the title of the book are the most important sales tools because those are the things readers are going to encounter first. Rebecca Blissett

In today’s world, a book cover has to do double-duty, working well both on physical bookshelves and online.

“One of the challenges now, in this market, is that we know people will encounter books through algorithms and online and probably on their tiniest rectangle — their phone,” Geissler said. “If a reader can’t very quickly figure out what a book is, there is a chance they will pass on it.”

Book covers, much like pretty much everything today, are also affected by trends.

“The whole publishing machine supports trends by the constant cross-referencing of books that have succeeded,” Sullivan says.

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And those trends often stick around until they’re tired and overused.

“For the thriller, for a long time, it was a woman running on a cover. Very often a woman in a red jacket on the cover. And that’s exactly what I had in The Almost Wife,” said Anderson-Dargatz. “That was one of the prototypes we looked at for The Almost Widow, a woman running through the forest. And we all went, ‘We’ve seen that too many times.’ ”

Instead, the cover of The Almost Widow is an aerial view of a dense forest with a distant figure in a red jacket near a campfire.

Harding said cover-style trends are definitely something she has clocked during her long writing career.

“This year, yellow type seems to be it. I have seen it everywhere. The Drowning Woman came with yellow type, and I said, ‘Could you do the gradation like the sunset,’ which they had sent me on something else and so they did. I think it looks a lot better and original.”

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Photo of the cover of The Drowning Woman
The Drowning Woman, by Robyn Harding. Photo by Grand Central /jpg

Welch laughs a bit when asked about trends and points to the overuse of something called “unicorn frappuccino.”

“A lot of natural organic shapes in really bright colours,” Welch explains of the term. “Circular blobs in bright splashy colours. Lots of colours on the cover to grab attention. That became a designer’s answer to how we make this cover impactful in a small scale, then we’ll throw really big bold white type on top of that. That started to appear everywhere in the last few years and now … we are starting to see a bit of trend shift away from that.

“I am seeing a return to minimalism.”

dgee@postmedia.com

twitter.com/dana_gee

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