Showing posts with label George Welgemoed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Welgemoed. Show all posts

Friday, August 16, 2013

Moon Memory - Real Pretend Poems


Wyoming County Fair - August 15, 2013
Photo by Amy LV


Click the arrow to hear me read this poem to you.

Students - Today's offering is one of those "this just happened to me" poems. Well, sort of.  I mean, we did spend last evening at the fair.  That part is true. And I did see the moon.  (See it in the photograph?)  While I didn't ride the Tilt-a-Whirl, I did think about Moon on our car trip home, I wondered  about her looking down on the Wyoming County Fair.  Does she ever wish she could ride the Tilt-a-Whirl?

In my first drafts of this poem, Moon never does come down to Earth; she stays longing up there in the sky.  But then I thought a thought that many writers think. WHAT IF?  What if Moon DID ride the Tilt-a-Whirl?  And what if I sat beside her?  Such a happy thought for me...

This is something a writer can always do.  We can take real memories and write half-real and half-pretend. 

George Welgemoed is in this week with two more of his wonderful Poemdesigns.  You can see the complete collection here, and clicking on each image will enlarge it.  Thank you, George, for sharing your ability to so fantastically combine words with images and fonts.  



Cathy Mere is sharing her DIGITAL or PAPER notebook question and exploration at Sharing Our Notebooks. Stop by to learn about all kinds of notebook apps and learn what Cathy has discovered about these and about herself too.  There is also an app giveaway, many thanks to Cathy.

Lisa is hosting today's Poetry Friday at Steps and Staircases.  Stop on by to find out what is happening poetry-wise in the KidLitosphere today.

Please share a comment below if you wish.
To find a poem by topic, click here. To find a poem by technique, click here.
Like The Poem Farm on Facebook for more poems, articles, and poemquotes.
Visit Sharing Our Notebooks to peek in all kinds of notebooks.
Follow me on Twitter or Pinterest!

Friday, July 26, 2013

I Build, Fun Poetry Mondays, and Poemdesigns



Our Daughter Hope Built a Stool
Photo by Amy LV


Click the arrow to hear me read this poem to you.

Students - Today's poem is a shortie and a sweetie.  It is about something that I believe is very important: making things.  I love making things, and I love watching other people make things too.

Did you notice how each line except the last one begins the same way and then the last line is an invitation?  I very much like inviting readers right into a poem.  What do you build?  (Me?  Poems!)

Today I am very happy to welcome second grade teacher Laurie Luft and her students from Terry Taylor Elementary in Spencerport, NY.  I had the opportunity to visit their classroom in June, and I learned about something new and neat: Fun Poetry Mondays. Welcome, Laurie and students!

Teacher Laurie Luft
Photo by Librarian Mrs. Paul

Click the arrow to hear a Fun Poetry Friday welcome!

The Fun Poetry Friday Folder
Photo by Laurie Luft

Have you ever heard of Fun Poetry Mondays?  This was an idea that my student Meghan had for sharing poems over the loudspeaker of our school each Monday after announcements.  She quickly had three other students get on board with her idea: Trevor, Arriyanna, and Taylor.  They planned and practiced.  First, they decided to write and share theme-poems about famous people.  Then they worked on the roles each one of them would have in the group,

The Fun Poetry Monday group met daily, wrote the opening and closing "jingle", decided on the poem to be read the following Monday, and then practiced the announcement. It was so exciting to see a student-driven project like this come out of one student's love of poetry! 

I was the facilitator and would check in with the group periodically throughout the week to provide guidance and make suggestions. The group performed three Fun Poetry Mondays during the month of June, and I am so proud of them for their creativity, collaboration, and ability to apply those 21st Century critical thinking skills on this real-life project. 

These students got to share their love of poetry and their project idea with Mrs. VanDerwater when she visited. They were so excited! 

Meghan wrote and shared a poem about Amelia Earhart.

Amelia Earhart 
by Meghan

I will find her.
I know I will.
Amelia Earhart.
Her story is sad but I will find her.
She should be somewhere in the Howlind ISlands.
I will.  I know I will.
Amelia Earhart wrote a letter
to her husband
Before she left on her big flight.

It said...

"I want to do it because I want to do it.  Women must try to do things as
men have tried.  When they fail, their failure must be but a challenge to others."

Meghan and Amy with Meghan's Poem
Photo by Laurie Luft

Click the arrow to hear Meghan read her poem, "I Will Find Her".

Trevor, Arriyanna, Taylor, & Meghan with Amy
Photo by Laurie Luft

It was an absolute delight to visit Laurie Luft and her second graders, and I was so happily surprised to find this wonderful slide show of our time together at the class blog.  Thank you, poet friends and thank you, Laurie Luft, for opening your classroom to me.

Today I also welcome George Welgemoed with two more poemdesigns for poems he found here.  In each of these designs, George has used either his own or his son's photographs (yes, that is George's son's tarantula), and then, through filtering and various brushing effects, he brings the imagery to life. Notice how he uses different fonts and colors to create a mood for each poem. If you click on either one, you will be able to read the poems. I have made a special place here at The Poem Farm for George's work, and you can find it by clicking on the Find a Poem tab above, and then following the link to George's art.

Click to enlarge and read the poems.



Sherry is hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup over at Semicolon, and Matt Forrest is hosting over at Radio, Rhythm, and Rhyme. Poetry Friday is EVERYWHERE.

Please share a comment below if you wish.
To find a poem by topic, click here. To find a poem by technique, click here.
Like The Poem Farm on Facebook for more poems, articles, and poemquotes.
Visit Sharing Our Notebooks to peek in all kinds of notebooks.
Follow me on Twitter or Pinterest!

Friday, July 19, 2013

Foxes and Welcome to George Welgemoed!


Little Fox
by Amy LV


(I will add audio to this poem when my voice returns - it was a talky week!)

Students - This is a poem that I found in my old file of poems for FOREST HAS A SONG. It's a forest-y poem that never made it into the book, but I still like it.  You'll see how just as in After Marshmallows, I smushed some words together.  Yes, I do enjoy doing that.  

The other week, when our daughter Hope went to volunteer at the horse barn where she works, we saw some baby foxes playing in the woods nearby.  They were adorable, and once again I found myself wondering how something so cute could be considered so crafty.Yet, in Aesop's fables, the fox is indeed the crafty one. You can see this is so here in The Fox and the Grapes, The Fox Without a Tail, The Fox and the Goat, The Fox and the Stork, and so many more here.

So this is my question poem.  Are foxes really sly?  Or not?

Today I feel very lucky to welcome my new colleague and faraway friend George Welgemoed to The Poem Farm. From South Africa, George wrote to me in June asking if he might make designs to go with some of my poems.  As a furniture maker, George was searching on the Internet for a photo of a small key box. Through his searching, he Googled his way to poems about keys and found The Poem Farm.  Lucky me! Honored, I said yes, and today you can see two such pieces of his digital work.

George does design work and web design for the South African Police Service and says, "Designs, or art as you say it, is only a way to express some of my thoughts.  I read a lot on the net and every day search for a poem of something interesting, something that you can illustrate to give it more than the poem itself. Sometimes I have this idea with a picture and then search for a poem...I think that all poems should be visualized, to see the power of the words...I choose the poem by its power of words the strongest visualization or I choose a particular image and then search for a poem that fits."

Technically, George makes these designs by searching through the Internet by using Google search results, images that will fit his visualization of the poem.  He uses only pictures that are freely available (not copyright protected), layering multiple images to make something new with Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator.

George creates this beautiful work in the face of some physical challenges.  He walks on two prostheses due to amputations of his legs below the knees as well as amputations of both hands save for his right hand thumb.  He is also deaf.  George says, "With all of this, I am still living a 100% full life." With his strong spirit and love for life, George enjoys woodworking, planting gardens of roses and fuchsia, growing Bonsai trees, and spending time with his family.

When making digital designs, sometimes George finds a poem first, and sometimes he finds an image first.  Either way, he uses different fonts to form the idea of each poem, thus giving "more power to the words".  

"Designs for me are a way to express one"s thoughts," says George. At first he was very shy to do so, but he hopes to make people happy through sharing his designs. I'm so grateful to have met him, and I hope you enjoy seeing these interpretations of my poems as much as I have.  Please, I welcome you, to leave any questions or words to George in the comments of today's post.

(Click to enlarge each image.)



Thank you so much, George, for finding me here and for sharing your work with us!

I am home again after almost a week in Paramus, NJ at the Paramus Writing Institute, organized by principal Tom Marshall of Stony Lane Elementary.  It was a pleasure to work with so many wonderful teachers and to see my colleagues Stephanie Parsons, Karen Caine, the whole faculty of the institute, and the children's authors who spoke:  Vicki Cobb, Alexandra Siy, and Kati Hites.  I had a magnificent time and learned so much.  Thank you, Tom!  (If anyone is interested in reading the poems I threaded through my keynote on Tuesday, you may read them here.)

If you have not yet peeked into Linda Baie's notebooks, you may do so at my other blog, Sharing Our Notebooks, a place to highlight notebooks and notebook keepers of all kinds.  Tomorrow I will draw and announce the name of a new notebook winner.

Jone is hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup over at Check It Out.  Stop by her place and enjoy all of the rich poetic offerings in the Kidlitosphere today...

Please share a comment below if you wish.
To find a poem by topic, click here. To find a poem by technique, click here.
Like The Poem Farm on Facebook for more poems, articles, and poemquotes.
Visit Sharing Our Notebooks to peek in all kinds of notebooks.
Follow me on Twitter or Pinterest!