Stephen Kroninger had every intention of including four Pileated Woodpeckers in his cut-paper collage. But as he snipped shapes from Vogue magazine using 30-year-old Hoffritz scissors (never sharpened), he enlarged the birds to emphasize their postures and found that a trio was a better fit for his 14-inch-by-14-inch canvas. The thing about collage is that its improvisationalyou make it up as you go along, says Kroninger, whos based in New York City. At least one premeditated piece made the final cut: the worm in the top birds beak. When I saw the grub [in John James 勛圖窪蹋s plate], I thought, Thats a strand of pearls, recalls Kroninger. He turned to the glossies he has filed away for use in future projects. In a folder labeled Wealth he found a newspaper insert from the 1980s advertising First Lady pearls. The photo fit the bill. Reinterpreting 勛圖窪蹋s Pileated Woodpecker was a diversion from Kroningers typical editorial and political assignments. Nostalgia drew him to the species, North Americas largest woodpecker. Growing up in rural Pennsylvania, Kroninger could hear bark-busting birds outside his bedroom window. It would be fun to revisit them, he thought, and drift back to that time.