Vol.12,
No.67, 2009 Best of Show by Charalene Denton
There was a country
fair in an isolated
northern outpost. For a
city in the middle of
nowhere, fairs seemed so
unlikely, but it occurred
three years in a row. The fair had an
origami category that looked
intriguing. I had entered other
categories and was finding it hard to
get a first place. I am very
competitive, so I wanted first place or
best of show, but it was only
happening in the baking division. I
got best of show for beet jelly. It
tastes like grape jelly and the award
was a shock to receive. Having done
it I figured getting one in origami
would be no problem.
I went to the library and found a book
on origami. Several had interesting
objects I picked and I tried what I
thought was the most complicated or
outstanding project: a snowflake. I
tried and tried. I could never make it
look like a snowflake so I went to
stars. I doubled the size and used two
sets of paper. Yes, it worked and
looked professional. I entered it in the
Country Fair, and received no reward
for my efforts. It turns out they were
too big, it counted if you made them
the size of your palm, not your face.
Here bigger was not better.
Several years later when I had moved
to a farm community an hour outside
Alberta’s capital I was still interested
in origami and especially snowflakes.
It was a problem I had not resolved.
While thinking about the situation I
found inside a winter issue of “Martha
Stewart Living” several snowflake
cutouts. I decided it would be nice to
have snowflakes on our front window
for Christmas. Martha’s flakes were
easy to make, but I wanted a variety of
white wonders. I found them in a
book of nothing but snowflake
patterns. It was like a knitting book
only with snowflakes instead of
sweaters.
A circle of different snowflakes didn’t
take long to make, but these flakes
were the most painful of all the
snowflake projects that I would do.
The tips of my fingers remember the
scissor’s sharpness, and my eyes
remember the small red blood bubbles
appearing on my skin, but never
staining the white paper. I taped the
flakes to the window where our short
haired grey tabby cat did her
vigilance.
The cat tree had three platforms. The
middle shelf was the right height for
filching white wonders off the
window. She destroyed two and was
headed for a third before I nabbed her.
The seven pound smarty pants had
been with us for over eight years. I
had long ago stopped punishing her
for her bad behaviour, or I would have
put her and her tree by a mini window
in the basement for the holidays.
Instead I placed the tree far enough
away from the window and her claws.
There was never another missing
flake, but I am sure it was not from
lack of repeated efforts on the part of
our smart feline.
There were, however, hundreds of
small pieces of white paper on the
floor when I made over two hundred
of the same snowflake for a haiku
hologram. The editor of The Haiku
Canada Review asked members to
make up one haiku (a seventeen
syllable poem) two hundred times, and sign each for a special year end
anthology. Out came the pattern book
and a new flake. It had to be scaled
down to fit the anthology box.
Photocopiers work wonders when it
comes to scaling down. I created a
haiku and arranged in on the
snowflake. It took about twenty tries
before I could get started on the two
hundred. The snowflake had a candle
in the middle. Yes, I made mistakes,
but watching the flakes add up gave
me the energy to finish what I had
started. It was heart-warming to see
what others had created for someone
they didn’t know. The anthology is
one of my most treasured possessions,
and it doesn’t hurt that a copy of it is
now worth over sixty dollars.
The next time I made a snowflake it
was even bigger and required a lot less
cutting and lot more gluing. It wasn’t
as complicated as the snowflake in the
origami book. The first time I set eyes
on this ivory wonder was at a local
library. A teacher from one of the
schools in the area had used it as a
class project. The finished project
hung in the library. I asked the library
staff member about the giant flake and
she was kind enough to give me the
directions. It required eight pieces of
letter size paper, the paper was folded,
cut, twisted into a cone shape, then
each cone was glued together to form
a circle. It must have taken half a
bottle of glue to put the eight by eight
by eight by eight inch flake together. I
sure wouldn’t want to be outside if
this freak of nature fell. I placed it on
a light fixture in the kitchen with a fat
white twenty-four inch ribbon. It was
a joy to look at during the holiday
season.
I was proud of my accomplishment.
When an art gallery I was a member of
asked me to send a photo of my
artwork for a special gift I took a
photo of the giant flake and sent it to
them. Several months later they sent
me a business card using the paper
snowflake. It was surrounded with a
black border, and had my name and
address below it. They gave me ten of
them. I cried, “But this is not the kind
of work I normally do as an artist.”
My work is considered ugly art:
American Gothic. How on earth was
I going to give out business cards that
so misrepresented my practice. I did
and beamed with pride when I
presented them. I kept one to
remember the experience, and have
considered different ideas for a new
one, but have never had one as good
as the elephant flake.
Next time I brought out the snowflake
pattern book it was to create a
memento for each member of my
family. The mementos would connect
me with those living thousands of
miles away. I cut out one of a kind for
each member of the family, one each
for my two sisters, one for my brother,
one for my son, then one of each in the
same pattern for myself. I sent one
with their Christmas cards, and hung
the others up on the plant hangers on
the ceiling in the living room. The sun
coming in through the living room
during the day was such a pleasant
reminder of what I had done for the
holidays. It was the jewel in the
holiday crown.
What had started out as a motivator to
achieve an end goal that was no easy
task (making an origami snowflake
with thirty-two separate steps the size
of my palm) turned into making heartwarming
gifts that put lasting
memories in my mind as well as the
minds of others. The projects and the
results were better than the best of any
show.