Aug. 16, 2025, 10:20 a.m.

The Fold: Keeping Cool

The Fold, a letter from artist Sarah Atlee

The Fold: Keeping Cool

Acrylic painting by Sarah Atlee of a man's head above the surface of the water in a swimming pool. The upper portion is an abstracted version of floor tiles and lane lines. In the lower right a man's head comes just above the surface of the blue water. The tiles on the bottom of the pool are included.

Submerge, acrylic on canvas, 2009 by Sarah Atlee.

Remember like 3 months ago when I said I was taking a short break?

Yeah, ha, ha haaa ha ha ha. Ha.

Summer 2025 has felt like this:

Animated image of a person jumping into a puddle that turns out to be a super deep hole.

Not at all polite.

I didn't even realize it until I'd been hit by the Hammer of July so I couldn't turn it into a swan dive. Anyway, we're here now.

Let's talk about falling into holes on purpose.

   Painting from the perspective of being underwater in a swimming pool. The tiles on the pool bottom are geometric and recede into the distance, while the water's surface is all wiggly lines.
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I believe this work is by Alex Dodge but was unable to verify it.

Wet Palette: Swimming Pool Art

Years ago I created a Pinterest board for swimming pool art. I like to revisit and refresh it this time of year.

​Click here to look at Wet Palette.​


What's the name for when you're cranky because you're too hot? Like hangry plus sweaty? Swangry? We'll workshop it.

Little things I'm doing to stay cool this summer:

  • Always have a smoothie in the fridge. Earlier in the season, I got a good deal on bananas, blended a bunch of smoothie-stuff, and froze it in the form of ice cubes. Hashtag smoothie life.
  • Fill the ice cube tray every day. (My freezer doesn't have an automatic ice maker and I hate running out.)
  • Put ice in my water bottle when I have a job to do. Better yet, spike it with lemonade, orange juice, etc.
  • Remove any guardrails around stopping at OnCue for a cold beverage.
  • Have a fan in every room.

These might seem small and/or obvious, but they are adding up to me being more comfortable.


Cool Stuff From Around:

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Did you know you can dye buttons?

Neither did I! Read all about it on Tanner Frost Bowen's Substack, Garbie.​

​How to fold jeans in under one second. Via Liz Haywood and her excellent newsletter about zero waste sewing.

Portrait of the artist Ramekon O'Arwisters in front of one of his fiber art sculptures. He is wearing a tweed jacket, dark blue shirt, and a scarf with lots of fringe. His work is composed of many many strips of colorful fabric loosely woven together.
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Image of Ramekon O'Arwisters via Craft Contemporary.

​This five minute interview with artist Ramekon O'Arwisters is packed with inspiration. (Content advisory: mentions racism, homophobia, and police violence.) Remembering how his grandmother taught him to make quilts, he says, "Now, she couldn't change the pattern outside. She couldn't do anything about Jim Crow or homophobia, but she can help me calm myself enough to navigate a hostile environment."

View looking west of the Split Rock Lighthouse sitting on the rugged shoreline of Lake Superior. // Image captured at: 2025-08-15 20:48:16 UTC // Current Temp in Two Harbors: 73.32 F | 22.96 C // Precip: overcast clouds // Wind: WSW at 10.178 mph | 16.38 kph // Humidity: 81% Click image to view source.
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Need something bigger than a swimming pool? Live views of Lake Superior.​

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Source: Wikimedia Commons.​

​Gyotaku is the traditional Japanese method of printing fish, a practice which dates back to the mid-1800s. This form of nature printing, where ink is applied to a fish which is then pressed onto paper, was used by fishermen to record their catches, but has also become an art form of its own.


A GIF For Those Who Read This Far

Animated image of a yellow dog jumping into a pool to retrieve a ball. The text above reads MAKING A SPLASH
Golden Retriever Splash GIF by Diamond Pet Foods

May your ice be cubed, your slushies slushed, and your pools abundant.

xoxo Sarah

You just read issue #45 of The Fold, a letter from artist Sarah Atlee. You can also browse the full archives of this newsletter.

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