Art Web Blog

Archive for March, 2008

Art Round

March 31st, 2008 by chris

Welcome to the latest edition of Art Round!
This week we have included a round up of what’s new on The Artists Web

Welcoming Our Latest 3 Artists

Poppies
Gill Bowditch | website

22 images uploaded, painting mixed media
My work lies somewhere between abstract and representational. I use nature as inspiration but will change and alter the colour and form to create my painting. Therefore my work is both real and imaginary, aways working with an element of chance.

Path%20One
John Ellis | website

6 images uploaded, mixed media prints
landscape

Rib%20pot
Doreen Spears | website

38 images uploaded, ceramics
Handbuilt and Thrown Ceramics

New Work Uploaded

1123 new items uploaded sinc! e 17/03/ 2008.

Count Price in GBP
692 Not Priced Yet
139 1 – 100
185 100 – 250
65 250 – 500
24 500 – 1000
10 1000 – 2000
8 2000 – and above

Some randomly selected new works:

  • natures secret
  • Green car, Stanley Street
  • Blakers Park in the snow, Brighton
  • billy-bum
  • Belize Siesta (Jaguar) - Frame example
  • canadian goose

Most common tags since 17/03/2008:

#letter li { display: inline; } #letter li img { border: 1px solid #AAA; } #letter a img { border-color: #AAA; } .tinythumbnail { float: left; margin: 2px 4px; } #cloud { margin: 10px; background-color: #FFFAFA; border: 1px solid #DDD; text-align: justify; color: #333; line-height: 1.7em; clear: left; } #cloud b { display: block; float: left; border-right: 1px solid #DDD; border-bottom: 1px solid #DDD; padding: 5px 10px; margin-right: 4px; color: #AAA; font-size: 1.2em; } #cloud ul { padding: 12px; }

Website Updates – April 2008

March 25th, 2008 by admin

Hope we’re all having a great Spring and the artwork is blooming!So he’s a break down of the latest updates on The Artists Web user control panel:

Better Security For Your Images

  • Image Watermarking – The image copyright option now adds a watermark to your image so greatly increasing the security and effectiveness of this facility. The watermark is subtle but clear enough to be a visible deterrent to copying. To update your existing copyright notice: Presentation -> Image Sizes -> Regenerate Images.87394_untitled.jpg
  • Stopping People Saving Images – There will be a new option to disable right click, so people will no longer be able to ‘right click -> save image’. You will be able to enable this in Other Details -> Preferences.

Better Presentation Options

  • More Website Templates to choose from and new colour schemes.
  • Style Editor Improvements – The style editors have a new colour picker with more intuitive operation.

Other Miscellaneous Improvements

  • Improved Layout – Most of the control panel links, terms and buttons are the same, but we have made some subtle improvements and refined the layout of the control panel to and menus. Hopefully you will find the changes provide for more ease of use and clarity.
  • Adding Stat Counter (and others) Tracking Code – Due to the popularity of using third party statistics services, we have added a facility so you can include stats tracking code to all your pages by just submitting the code in one place. You will be able to do this in Other Details -> Add Third Party Stats Code
  • Multilinugal – the control panel now has a multilingual compenent, current with language as English or Japanese.

    88373_untitled.jpg88375_untitled.jpg

That’s all for now!Best RegardsChris Kirkland and all at The Artists Web

Art Round

March 24th, 2008 by chris

Welcome to the latest edition of Art Round!
This week we have included a round up of what’s new on The Artists Web

Welcoming Our Latest 3 Artists

Green%20Dragon
Steve Elliott | website

39 images uploaded, mixed media sculpture
processional sculpture

little%20eye
Nicky Higgs | website

25 images uploaded, painting
still life and landscape paintings

Pines%20that%20catch%20the%20sun
Hazel Money | website

15 images uploaded, painting
Landscape paintings, special interest in trees and the shapes and spaces they create

New Work Uploaded

946 new items uploaded since 10/03/2008.

Count Price in GBP
609 Not Priced Yet
115 1 – 100
117 100 – 250
79 250 – 500
20 500 – 1000
3 1000 – 2000
3 2000 – and above

Some randomly selected new works:

  • Out of the Snow
  • lovely girl
  • Winter Boats at St. Ives
  • busy ladies
  • LCD Soundsystem
  • Sketch 18

Most common tags since 10/03/2008:

Art Round

March 17th, 2008 by chris

Welcome to the latest edition of Art Round!
This week we have included a round up of what’s new on The Artists Web

Welcoming Our Latest 3 Artists

little%20eye
Nicky Higgs | website

25 images uploaded, painting
still life and landscape paintings

Pines%20that%20catch%20the%20sun
Hazel Money | website

15 images uploaded, painting
Landscape paintings, special interest in trees and the shapes and spaces they create

Still%20life%20on%20Biancas%20cloth
Pam Simpson | website

38 images uploaded, painting drawings
My paintings evolve from a love of looking – at colour, light, form, space. The subject matter is varied. Still lifes come from the voluptuousness of form and pattern; landscapes from fleeting glimpses and memories; seascapes from changing light and weath

New Work Uploaded

993 new items uploaded since 03/03/2008.

Count Price in GBP
647 Not Priced Yet
161 1 – 100
86 100 – 250
79 250 – 500
12 500 – 1000
3 1000 – 2000
5 2000 – and above

Some randomly selected new works:

  • Camouflage
  • Hair-raising
  • Ely Cathedral
  • Trafalgar Square, London
  • Ladder Hill from Windgather Rocks - Peak District
  • Scrapped Harrier

Most common tags since 03/03/2008:

Mark H. Wilson – After the Dawn

March 13th, 2008 by ahindson

mark-new.jpg

In this edition of Spotlight, we are joined by Sheffield-based artist Mark H. Wilson.

 

Mark Wilson knows only too well the breathtaking and hypnotic power that light has had on many artists before him. Before Mark had even begun his schooling, he was exposed to some of the great masters, with the images of Cezanne, Gauguin, and Turner being strongly present in his recollections. Influenced by his art-teacher father and painter uncle, he began to understand early on how light does not just illuminate the scene – it is an active participant in the drama. Marks own unique methods of capturing the atmospheric effect of light, be it glistening over the forest floor at dawn, or beaming resplendently through dark clouds after a storm, are gaining him his own kind of notoriety. This journey so far has taught Mark that just like for his 18th-century predecessors, the road to becoming a professional artist is by no means an easy one. We caught up with Mark at his Sheffield winter studio:

 

1) Firstly, thank you for joining us Mark. So tell us, when did you first realise that you were meant to be an artist? What was the road like leading to that decision?

 

I guess that I was very young when I first realised that I wanted to be an artist. My father taught art and taught me the basics and our house had prints of paintings on the wall. The ones I particularly remember are “The Card Players” by Cezanne, “The Laughing Cavalier” by Hals, and works by Gauguin, Turner and Constable. My Uncle Frank was a talented painter and we had some of his original paintings on the wall, which I could look at for hours. I went to see a Van Gogh exhibition at the age of 5 or so and that has had an everlasting effect on me, so I was introduced to great art at a very early age.

'Les joueurs de carte', Cezanne (1890-92) 'Fighting Temeraire' (1839) Joseph Mallord William Turner

2) A lot of your work highlights the brilliant interplay that colours in nature can produce. Why does light inspire you?

Light and colour are everything in my work. As Turner said; “the sun is God.” I am inspired by the constantly changing sky around where I live. I love storm skies with the sun trying to break through the clouds. I can look at what some people just call a grey sky and find so much colour in there, blue greys, pink greys combined with sunlight are what excites me. Blue skies are nice but a bit boring. I always try and watch the sunrise and sunsets over the city, my favourite times of day, as each one is so different and that’s where I get my colours.

I am inspired by the constantly changing sky around where I live… I can look at what some people just call a grey sky and find so much colour in there..

Evening Sky [Last Sunlight] 5

3) Why did you choose Sheffield as a base, and what does it offer to the
working artist?

 

I was born in Sheffield and have been back here for 10 years or so. I have found Sheffield has much to offer the working artist. Upon my return here I began by exhibiting in local church exhibitions, then in the Great Sheffield Art Show, the biggest art show in North England. I still show in this plus various Open Art Exhibitions, where I have won awards; an event called Art in the Botanical Gardens; also an open studio event (Open Up Sheffield), where you open your home over two weekends for the public to visit you. I keep my home as a permanent gallery, which attracts a steady stream of customers. There are also numerous art fairs in the region that I show at. So I would say there are numerous opportunities for artists at any level to get their work shown in and around Sheffield.

Evening Storm Light (Tinsley Towers)

4) How do you think success can be defined artistically?

 

There are a number of factors that I would define as being a success artistically. Obviously it’s really rewarding when someone likes my work so much they want to buy it, and having to make a living through painting this needs to happen. It is also rewarding to receive awards for my paintings. Last year I won three awards, a commended at the South Yorkshire Open, a highly commended at the Rotherham Open and a Gold Award for my display at Art in the Botanical Gardens. It is also good to hear from young people and students asking me about my work for art projects and theses.

I find it satisfying to know that people want to know about me and my work. I also like to keep an eye on the stats on my website, knowing that my work is being seen all over the world. I do have my paintings in many private collections abroad including Japan, Australia and the USA. and that is a nice feeling. Overall though, I would say the best thing is making a living by doing what I want to do, difficult as it is at times.

I find it satisfying to know that people want to know about me and my work. I also like to keep an eye on the stats on my website, knowing that my work is being seen all over the world.

Approaching Storm [Black Nab, Saltwick Bay] 1

5) Tell us about ‘Bluebell Vista’. What steps did you take to so adeptly
capture this scene?

 

My ‘Bluebell Vista’ paintings are the latest in a series of woodland paintings that I began some ten years ago. My favourite times of the year for walking in the woods are autumn and when the bluebells are out. I just love the vibrant colour, especially in the morning and evening with the low lying sunlight sweeping through the trees casting long shadows and a shimmer through the leaves. I spend a long time waiting for just the moment I wish to capture and to do this I use my camera and also make quick pencil studies. I try to veer away from a traditional, twee depiction of a bluebell wood and attempt to create a more contemporary, painterly image creating depth, texture, and an impression of one particular moment in time.

I just love the vibrant colour, especially in the morning and evening with the low lying sunlight sweeping through the trees casting long shadows and a shimmer through the leaves.

Bluebells 07 [Ecclesall Woods] no.2

6) How would you describe your following in Sheffield? Could you tell us
what a typical buyer might be like? (For example, have they heard of your
work prior to visiting your gallery?)

 

When I first started selling my work in Sheffield, I never really knew who was buying it. I have sold so many paintings over the years and have no idea where they all are, and I kind of liked the idea of that. Over the past couple of years however, since selling my work through my home/gallery, and art fairs etc., I do actually get to meet the people who buy my paintings and these range from students who can maybe just afford to buy a study to retired people who have taken up art as a hobby and interest. I would say that the majority of my customers are aged between 30 and 55, professional people looking for something original, something that no-one else has with a contemporary feel, people with an interest in art & design.

7) Has there ever been a difficult period for your through your art career? How did you get through it?

 

I have had many difficult periods. Sometimes it’s got me down, I’ve become despondent, wondering what the point to it all is and I’ll never be a Picasso and all that stuff. I’ve taken unrelated, part-time jobs over the years too, just to pay the bills. However, what has given me a focus and confidence in my art was meeting my wife eight years ago. She’s got belief in what I do and egged me on, changed my approach and my presentation, got me to be more business minded (a difficult task for a lot of artists), given me deadlines to work towards, talk to people, enthuse about myself, network, all that malarkey. All in all, a more professional approach. So far so good.

Morning Autumn Sunlight

8) How do you keep yourself motivated?

The main thing that keeps me motivated is wanting to get better and better at painting. I want to move on all the time, learning from everything that I’ve done. I want every painting to contain a new discovery. I want to avoid repetition. I feel that I am developing but have far to go and much to learn and one day I may create the masterpiece I envisage in my imagination. I tell myself; ‘keep painting and the magic will come’, and my motto is: ‘If you don’t change your direction, you may end up where you were headed.’

 

Thankyou Mark for your engaging and personal insights into your work. We wish you every success with your work in 2008. You can visit Mark’s website at www.markhwilson.co.uk. We’ve found a quote which we think embodies the journey of every artist:

 

‘It is only when we are no longer fearful that we begin to create.’

Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851)

Art Round

March 10th, 2008 by chris

Welcome to the latest edition of Art Round!
This week we have included a round up of what’s new on The Artists Web

Welcoming Our Latest 3 Artists

little%20eye
Nicky Higgs | website

25 images uploaded, painting
still life and landscape paintings

Still%20life%20on%20Biancas%20cloth
Pam Simpson | website

26 images uploaded, painting drawings
My paintings evolve from a love of looking – at colour, light, form, space. The subject matter is varied. Still lifes come from the voluptuousness of form and pattern; landscapes from fleeting glimpses and memories; se! ascapes from changing light and weath

Willow
Jill Waddington | website

34 images uploaded, sculpture video
mainly 3-D based, but video and projection aswell

New Work Uploaded

1146 new items uploaded since 25/02/2008.

Count Price in GBP
694 Not Priced Yet
236 1 – 100
100 100 – 250
84 250 – 500
21 500 – 1000
4 1000 – 2000
! 7 2000 – and above

Some randomly selected new works:

  • lemongrass and garlic
  • Unique Handmade Jewellery
  • sunset in the west
  • Woodpile Baby
  • Child of Air 2
  • Index Tunbridge Wells Feb 2008

Most common tags since 25/02/2008:

Brian Petrie – A Place in the Scottish Sun

March 6th, 2008 by ahindson

Brian Petrie in his Westhaven, Scotland studio

 

This month on ‘Spotlight’ we are joined by Scotland-based artist Brian Petrie.

 

On any given morning, you will find Brian Petrie hard at work at his easel, elbow-deep in the luminescent sunset pinks, and deep velvety ocean greens he so adeptly uses to depict his local coastline and surrounding landscape. After lunch, Brian puts down his paintbrush and picks up his social commentator cap to work on his regular cartoon feature for The Scottish Sun newspaper. As he signs under a different name for his cartoons, fans of Brian’s oil paintings are often amazed at the discovery of this second, unique artistic talent. We spoke with Brian from his Westhaven studio, overlooking the waves on Scotland’s beautiful East Coast.

 

1) So Brian, could you tell us, what initially drew you to becoming an artist?

 

From a very early age I was never going to be anything else. Art books, drawing books and cartoons were my main interests, even before I knew you had to actually work for a living. Plus art was really the only subject I was interested in at school.

 

 

 

Auchmithie Surf - Coastal Scene

 

 

 

2) When did you know that it was meant to be your chosen career? And did you have any trouble grappling with the decision?

 

I never thought of actually earning a living from paintings, so after studying design and print at College I started work as a magazine designer with a large publisher. I then moved on to drawing cartoons for a number of publications and painting as a hobby to supplement my income. It did take me a few years to pluck up the courage to leave the safety of a large firm and start working for myself as an artist and cartoonist but I’m so glad I did.

 

Home by the Sea

 

3) What inspires you in your work?

 

I am constantly inspired by the coastline and countryside around where I live and work. Plus a huge chunk of my inspiration comes from visiting galleries and seeing howother artists paint and compose similar subjects to mine. A successful exhibition or a few good sales are also a good kick start if work is beginning to drag.

Cottages on Skye

 

4) How do you think success can be defined artistically?

 

Success for me is people liking my work enough to want to buy it and hang it on their walls. Also and probably more importantly, is achieving what I set out capture in a painting. And not going to bed with an artistic problem rolling about in my brain. Which happens frequently!

 

Landscape- Falls at Reekie Linn

 

5) Why did you choose your current location as a base?

 

My studio overlooks the waves at Westhaven on the East coast of Scotland and is so inspirational so it just had to be here. It’s an area I’ve lived and worked in for most of my life but I see it differently every day. Being a stones throw from the sea and only a thirty minute drive to the rolling hills of Angus it’s a good base for all things artistic.

 

Pittenweem reflections

 

 

 

6) How do people react to your paintings, as opposed to your regular cartoons?

 

I’m very fortunate that I get generally good feedback from the public to my paintings. I can also tell from my Artist’s Web pages which pieces are being viewed most often, which is a great help planning a direction as regards colours and subject matter for future work. As I use a different name for my cartoons, many customers of mine are surprised when they find out it’s me who’s responsible for the daily cartoon in the Scottish Sun. I don’t think the two paths interfere with each other.

 

Top Cop gets Burgled Parky and Emu- Michael parkinson to have emu as a guest again

 

7) Have you had any significant people help you to get to where you are now? If so, what role did they play in your success? (Ex: a supportive partner, a mentor etc)

 

My wife Paddy is my best support and critic and has a fair idea of what I’m aiming to produce. Often I get so blinkered with a piece I can’t see the wood for the trees and ultimately turn out a painting that just hasn’t worked and she can tell instantly. 99% ofthe time she’s right with her judgement.

 

Thankyou Brian for your interesting and insightful answers. We wish you every success with your work in 2008. You can visit Brian’s website here http://www.brianpetrie.co.uk/

March 2008, Make your work sell!

March 5th, 2008 by admin

March 2008 – Volume Six

A very warm spring greeting to all members of The Artists Web!This is the March edition of Artists Newsletter, your monthly source of information and news.

In this edition:

  • Tips to make your work sell – 10 must-dos when promoting your art
  • Protecting your work: Need-to-know information about your art and copyright
  • Art Competitions – March 2008
  • Website of the month

Tips to make your work sell

A popular topic in our online forums has been how artists can increase traffic to their site, and generally heighten marketability of their work online. We’ve developed a very helpful top-ten list of recommended actions for all artists to help make their work sell:

  1. Ensure to fill out the terms and conditions for buyers on your site (this is a legal obligation)            http://www.beta.theartistsweb.co.uk/myaccount/
  2. Submit site to D-Moz Directory (Run by Google) http://www.theartistsweb.net/wiki/How_to_get_your_website_listed_in_the_dmoz_directory
  3. Have a signature when posting on forums with a link to your site. (e.g. http://www.artistsforum.org: Login, User Control Panel, Profile, Edit signature) This will increase your incoming traffic and search engine results when potential buyers do a name search.
  4. Complete your profile properly on The Artists Web
  5. Tag your artwork: Login, Image Pages, List images, Open a gallery, Enter tags in tag box for each image. (Untagged artworks are difficult to search for)
  6. Add testimonials from past buyers to your website and profile on The Artists Web: go to http://www.beta.theartistsweb.co.uk/myaccount/ -> view profile -> and fill out the Testimonials form.
  7. Maintain a mailing list of people who have bought from you before, have enquired about your art or would be interested in your exhibition.http://www.theartistsweb.net/otrs/faq.pl?Action=&ID=47
  8. Encourage people to comment on your artwork. The benefits are two-fold, with comments working as a ‘review’ of your work, assuring other viewers that your work receives attention. Secondly comments attract more traffic to your profile.
  9. Ensure your work is priced.
  10. Resist the temptation to display every piece you’ve ever created. Show off your best! Although sold works should be displayed, a greater percentage of the work on display should be for sale.

For more tips on promoting your work, please watch the Wiki.

Copyright- Protecting your work

For all of our artists out there, one concern after creating that fabulous piece, is how to protect it. Firstly, to define terms, the UK office for Public and Intellectual Property state that copyright applies ‘to original artistic works such as paintings, drawings, engravings, sculptures, photographs, diagrams, maps, works of architecture and works of artistic craftsmanship’. As long as your work falls under the above definitions, this protection in the UK is automatic, and no action or bureaucratic process is required by the author in order to ‘copyright’ the work. In other words, no other party can make reproductions without explicit permission from you for the life of the authorship.

How long does automatic copyright last?

In the United Kingdom (for works created after 1989), the creator of the work will be the author and first owner (and copyright will las)t for the life of the author plus 70 years.

Simple protection measures

As previously outlined, no official action is required to formally copyright a piece of work, although it is useful because it informs the public that the work is protected by copyright, identifies the copyright owner, and shows the year of first publication. In addition, if a proper notice of copyright appears on the published copy or copies then in an infringement suit, no weight shall be given to a defense based on ‘innocent infringement’.For the purpose of digital images presented on a web page on the internet, a clearly identifiable copyright message, stating © or Copyright, or the author’s name and date of first publication is sufficient.

After I sell my artwork, have I lost my copyrights over that work?

Copyright is a form of intellectual property which, like physical property, can be bought or sold, inherited or otherwise transferred, wholly or in part. So some or all of the economic rights may subsequently belong to someone other than the first owner.In the example that an oil painter sells his or her work, this does not mean the artist has sold copyright of the work. Therefore unless specifically authorized, the new owner of the painting cannot make reproductions etc. without permission from the artist (the copyright owner). For more information about copyright and your work, please refer to The Artists Web ‘wiki’ at: http://www.theartistsweb.net/wiki/Image_Copyright

Art Competitions March 2008

Here are our picks for art competitions to get involved in this month:Royal Academy of The ArtsCompetition: Summer Exhibition 2008 Exhibition Dates: 9 June – 17 August 2008 Entry Deadline: Tuesday 18 March Details: The annual Summer Exhibition showcase for art of all styles and media, encompassing paintings, sculpture, prints and architectural models. Artists in the UK may still purchase forms by telephoning for them on 020 7300 5929/5969 before the 14th of March. For more information: http://www.royalacademy.org.uk/summer-exhibition Leisure Painter & ‘The Artist’ Magazine (in conjunction with Patchings Art Centre) Competition: Patchings Art Prize and Exhibition 2008 Exhibition Dates: June 5th-July 13th, 2008 Entry Deadline:  March 28th, 2008 Details: This multi-prize exhibition is open to both professional artists and leisure painters – from beginners to professionals. Artists are invited to enter two-dimensional works in any medium. Selected works will be exhibited at Patchings Art Centre, in Nottinghamshire. For more information: http://www.painters-online.co.uk/open/?page=patchings08 Royal Society of British Artists-The Mall Galleries Competition: Threadneedle Figurative Prize Exhibition Dates: 20 Aug – 6 Sep 2008 Entry Deadline: June 20th, 2008 Details: A new competition, decided by public vote aimed at encouraging innovation in figurative art. Set to rival the Turner Prize, with two major prizes totaling £35,000.A special Open Day will be held at the Mall Galleries on Saturday 19 April (10:00 am – 3:00 pm) for interested artists to see the Gallery space and learn more about the competition. For more information: http://www.threadneedlefigurativeprize.com

Website of the Month:

March’s website of the month is an Art Lexicon called ‘ArtLex’ (http://www.artlex.com) This website contains definitions for more than 3,600 terms used in discussing art / visual culture, along with thousands of supporting images, pronunciation notes and great quotations. It also cross-references styles, media, techniques, and other terms. Here’s our favorite quote from Mexican painter Diego Rivera (1886-1957): “To be an artist, one must . . . never shirk from the truth as he understands it, never withdraw from life.” Thanks for reading, and we hope March be a fruitful and enjoyable month for all our artists!Best Regards,The Artists Newsletter Team

Art Round

March 3rd, 2008 by chris

Welcome to the latest edition of Art Round!
This week we have included a round up of what’s new on The Artists Web

Welcoming Our Latest 3 Artists

women%20of%20jerusalem
Jess Wood | website

88 images uploaded, painting
figurative narrative paintings

Maroon%20Bay%201
Sophie Mahir | website

36 images uploaded, painting painting

From%20the%20Lfe%20of%20a%20Hare
David Harkins | website

11 images uploaded, painting

New Work Uploaded

1258 new items uploaded since 18/02/2008.

Count Price in GBP
762 Not Priced Yet
240 1 – 100
118 100 – 250
84 250 – 500
34 500 – 1000
10 1000 – 2000
10 2000 – and above

Some randomly selected new works:

  • Still life on a Kelim
  • North Berwick Law from Yellowcraigs Beach
  • green on grey cushion
  • A students painting
  • Winter light St. Ives
  • Star Trees

Most common tags since 18/02/2008:

Artists Newsletter April 2007 – Prints and Copyright

March 3rd, 2008 by admin

Welcome to the latest edition of The Artists Newsletter!This week we have included a round up of news and info on The Artists Web and beyondThis week we have a couple of newsworthy items for your perusal:

Image Copyright Issues

Not surprisingly the subject of image copyright is a common source of questions from visual artists e.g.:”What is copyright”"How do I protect my work”"Should I register my work”As there are not too many lawyer/painters out there, we thought it would be useful to research and add an article on this subject to the wiki. Read the Image Copyright article

Interested In Selling Prints Of Your Artwork?

>From a business point of view it makes good sense to offer prints of one’s work for sale. Popular prints can be a very lucrative income, even a short run of limited edition prints takes little effort to produce compared to the original and can certainly extend the income from one’s work.The Artists Web is interested to hear if who would be interested in selling prints of their work online via The Artists Web: Please Give your feedback on the forum 

New/Updated Articles On The Wiki

Recent Forum Posts

Date Subject Member
30/05/2007 eliseferguson
30/05/2007 gemmaclimpson
30/05/2007 judithwebb
29/05/2007 lajosvarkonyi
28/05/2007 wendypuerto

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