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Archive for the ‘art quilting’ Category

Eli’s art flag: a quilt project to be?

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Eli, our younger son, came home with a TON of graded papers and whatnot just before the April vacation.  Amidst the social studies, writing and math, was an art project from (I think) FCS (Family Commercial Sciences or something similar, what used to be called Home Ec).  Mrs. Burwell (FCS) and Mrs. Andersen (art) are great friends, and get together some AWESOME projects for the Camden-Rockport Middles School students.  Personally, I’d like to TAKE the art classes!

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Anyway, the project was to create “Your Personal Portrait Flag.”  The handout notes “One way we communicate is through symbols.  Symbols can be ancient or modern.  A flag is a type of symbol that consists of several parts that represent different meanings.”  The sudents were to sketch their personal flag, reflecting on “four different aspects of you and who you are.”  The students were to answer these questions (taken from the handout):

  1. 1. Interests-what things do you love to do?
  2. 2. Abilities or skills-what things can you do well?
  3. 3. Values-what is really importnat to you?
  4. 4. Personality-attitude toward life, ways you behave, etc.

The students then answered the question, learned a bit about design and composition, were to find/create symbols, transfer the designs to fabric, paint the designs, then iron, sew and hang their flags. On the back of the handout, the child listed 1-4 items for each question, then came up with a symbol for each reply.  For pets, Eli drew a cat and a pug, a saxaphone for his music, a soccer ball and goalie gloves for sports and soccer skills, trees for his love of being outside.

How COOL IS THAT???? I want to do it!   At this point, I have to get some work stuff done, like a pattern ready to go to the printer, the first panel of a possible commission done, and other “must do now” stuff, but I think this would make an AWESOME journal quilt type of project….or even something larger…. great creativity stuff!  Hooray for Mrs. Burwell and CRMS (again!).

Bloggers Quilt Festival

Sunday, April 19th, 2009

Hi all!  Thanks to Loreen Leedy, and the post on her blog, I found out about the Blogger’s Quilt Festival.

Since I, too, won’t be in Chicago for Quilt Festival Spring Edition, I decided I’d love to play too.  The hard part, though, is deciding which quilt.  See, you are supposed to post your favorite quilt, then blog about it.  Is that the most recent quilt (Little Brown Bird, a corner seen here) ?  The one of which I’m most proud (probably Bijagos Warrior) ?  The one that features my kid(s) (two kids/rooms combined into one composite quilt)?  The mystery quilt that is the favorite of the entire family for snuggling under (bright colors, fleece backing and super cuddly even tho the fleece is now old and pilled)? The Queen sized Mariner’s Compass, the second quilt I began but, thanks to living in Africa where it was too hot to sit under the quilt when I started on it, finished ten years later on cool San Juan Island, Wash.?  The answer:

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Bedtime, of course, because it is my kids.  Made for the I Remember Mama exhibit, it was juried in to the third year of the exhibit (the last one on the list of accepted quilts…eeek?  did I just barely make it in?).  Karey Bresenhan conceived of the 3-year exhibit as a way to honor her mother, Jewel Patterson, who died several months before the first exhibit.  (Because of the short-notice, there wasn’t enough time to make quilts specifically for the exhibit, so that year  you could enter quilts made at any time related to the theme…the “kimono” quilt that I made for my mom’s 80th Birthday was in that first year.) There was a book, too, so my quilts are in that.

To make this quilt, I dragooned hubby into taking pictures of me sitting in bed reading to each of our kids, one of my favorite pastimes.  In the end, I decided on a composite picture.  The face on the boy is Joshua’s (my oldest), but the child pictured is aged between what my two boys were at the time of the photos.  The room is Eli’s (our youngest), and the quilt on the bed is made from leftover blocks from his “big boy bed quilt.”

The bedstead in that room is one of two my mom bought for my grandparents, and which I remember in their bedroom.  After they died, the maple bedroom suite went to mom and dad, and daddy used it in his room.  When daddy died, Mom sent it to me, and now the fourth generation, in the shape of Eli, is using it.

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My favorite part of the quilt, though, may be the pajamas.  Both boys had the light blue/navy blue jammies from Hanna Anderson.  As usual for them (and alas this continues to this day), they trashed them.  Ran outside in them.  Played in them.  Skidded on rough stuff in them.  Ripped out the knees. Snagged holes in the legs and elbows.   Ahem.  Clearly I am more into the boys having fun than discipline about what they wear where.  Ahem.  So I took the tatters and rags and made the pajamas on the quilt from the pajamas from real life.  And I can still stroke the cloth and remember when they were little (not so long ago).  Some day, I hope I’ll show the quilt to their (I hope they have) kids and say hey, that was your daddy/uncle and their rooms when they were your age…..

Naiads, revisited

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

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Late last year, Lisa Chipetine from the Studio Art Quilt Associates, invited me to participate in an online Quilt Critique session with Sandra Sider.  Never having been through a real critique session, I was nervous, but was so pleased to have been asked that I rustled up some courage and said yes, thank you!  Boy am I glad I did!   Since I didn’t have much in the way of new work (my time the past 24 months has been taken up with writing my manuscript and family crises, all now resolved).  So I offered up Koi and Naiads.  Since there is more going on in Naiads, Lisa suggested I use that one for the critique.  I will state up front that I was quite happy with this quilt as it was, and it had already won a Judges’ Choice (Lisa Erlandson) award at Maine Quilts last year and an Honorable Mention at the Lowell Quilt Festival show last summer, also.   Guess what:  it COULD be made better!

Here is the before,

Naiads, Original "complete" version

Naiads, Original "complete" version, notice the ripple over the swimming figure

Here are the before and after, side by side:

Naiads, Revised full version

Naiads, Revised full version

Naiads, Original "complete" version

Naiads, Original "complete" version

Sandra spotted three things that could stand improvement, one of which I had already noticed.  What she mentioned first, however, is something that totally escaped me:  the seated figure on the left–her leg, the one in the water, was disproportionately long!  Even though I thought I had drawn carefully, Sandra was absolutely right.  So the water was rendered opaque, covering up the extra length since re-doing the figure would have been a horrid amount of work:

Naiads, original version, too-long leg

Naiads, original version, too-long leg

And after:

Naiads, Revised, leg "shortened" and center figure improved

Naiads, Revised, leg "shortened" and center figure improved

Sandra also noted that I had done a very good job (thank you!) of making the water LOOK like water, which she said is hard to do in cloth.   Because of that she suggested that I shorten the willow branches on the right so that the feeling of rushing river water would be enhanced.  I didn’t want to cut them as short as she suggested (above the river bank), but I did shorten them so that only the longest branches reach the top of the river.  I agree… it looks better and more “flow-y”.

Finally, the naiad swimming in the middle.  I had not quilted over her center, because quilting on painted cloth (the figure) looks weird sometimes, and the other figures weren’t quilted, plus I wanted to preserve the illusion of transparent water washing over her body.  Alas, that meant a somewhat unsightly bubble.  Sandra (using a blur/cloning tool I think) showed in her doctored jpeg during the critique (more on the how of the online session in a minute) how the focal point of the three figures is enhance by covering the lower half to 2/3 of the swimming Naiad’s body.

I wanted to retain the illusion of water, where you can see the body through the water, but agreed this section dearly needed help, so I split the difference.  I covered her hip and middle with more of the same fabrics used for the river, but left her feet and a bit more of her torso revealed.   I think the overall effect is VASTLY improved! as shown in the “Revised” detail photo.

OK…so how does an online critique work?  Lisa’s description of the “webinar”, here, is the best, plus there is a YouTube type “video” here, but in a nutshell you need a phone (toll call), an internet connection, and to show up at the designated time.  The four or five participants in the one-hour session send jpegs to Sandra about 2 weeks ahead of time, giving her thinking and “Photoshopping” time.  The critiques occur in sequence, and “silent participants” can call in and listen but not engage in the conversation (it costs less to listen than be an active participant, a mere $5 per one-hour session for the silent one, and a modest $20 for active participant).

Sandra will show the before, ask the artist (unnamed) their goals, concerns, etc., then offer suggestions.  At this point, other critique participants may also chime in.  I can tell you that I learned as much from looking and listening and commenting on the other art quilts as from the review of my own.  I have a major project/commission coming up, and once I get detailed cartoons/sketches done and maybe some initial work on the first of six panels, will go back for a good critical eye before I get too far into construction.

The bottom line?  A very worthwhile and educational experience!

New Art Quilts (!!!)

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

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Hi all!  It is frustrating sometimes to be working, working, working, and feel like I can’t really share stuff yet!  In this instance, I finished writing my next article for Machine Quilting Unlimited (click here for more info on the magazine), which will be on negative space (basically, the spaces between….alas you’ll have to wait for the magazine to come out to learn more!).

For the magazine, I decided to use one of the exercises I illustrated to make a design which I then used as a quilting motif, and made a small wholecloth quilt.  The picture above is a detail photo….you’ll have to wait for the design, but I’ve decided to upload it to my blog/website as a free pdf for folks to download when the article is published in July…let’s hope that I can get the pdf thing to work!

Anyway, I totally love how this little quilt turned out and think I may enter it in an art quilt show this summer.

I also needed an alternative to the photo/illustration I intended to use in a different part of the article.  I had hoped that I could repeat an image from one article (in the April issue) to the next to illustrate my points…both to save on work, but mostly to show that the design principles I’m teaching  are all interrelated.  Alas, no go.  So I whipped out a new sample, and here’s another detail:

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I really like this one… it would work well for traditional quilters, and art quilters can really soup it up….hope you like it!

Champlain Valley Quilt Guild

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

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How time flies when you are on the road and busy!   This week I had the great fortune to travel to the Burlington, Vermont, area thanks to the Champlain Valley Quilt Guild to give a lecture on Journal Quilts and Journals for Quilters, then my Fine Finishes class (all about bindings, alternative edge finishes, and display options for smaller quilts).   Alas, I was SO BUSY during the lecture and the class, that I TOTALLY forgot to take class pictures!  So if anyone from the guild has a few to lend me, please let me know!

To get from Camden, Maine, to anywhere, requires a lot of 2-lane highways through beautiful, EMPTY space.   Basically, in New England, all (large-ish) roads lead to Boston.  That means anything that runs east-west is small, twisty-turny, and takes a long time.  Even though it was only 300-325 miles one-way, it took over seven hours (including pit stops).  Luckily, there were some gorgeous places en route. As I drove through the lakes district in sorta-south, western Maine, with the snow melting and the air warming,  I passed this beautiful view

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While at a rest stop in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, I was pulling back on to the road, looked to my right and immediately stepped on the brakes, grabbed the camera and lowered the window…. see the picture at the top, too!

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Then, around a bend, I came across the White Mountain Lodge, which looks as if it must have been built in the late 1800s…. isn’t this gorgeous?  And let me tell you, there isn’t much near it!

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After my lecture on Tuesday evening, was show and tell.  At least I had the wit to snap a picture of Andre’s gorgeous bird quilt, made from a pattern by a designer from Texas.  LOVE IT!

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My hostess in Vermont lives just across the road from Lake Champlain, and from their front rooms, you can see between the big homes across the street to the lake and the mountains in New York.  After class on Wednesday, while the lasagna heated up in the oven, Janet, Claire (the two co-program chairs) and Claire’s son Noah (look for his unbelievable miniature quilt at the upcoming Vermont Quilt Festival! It is amazing!) and I went for a lovely walk on a causeway out into the lake.  The day before I had thought, as I made my requisite donation to the local quilt shop (Yankee Pride, with a lovely and WAY too enticing selection of batiks), it occurred to me that one way to deal with beloved batiks that go out of print would be to make thermofax screens and print my own designs inspired by the batiks.  So I took some pictures of the ready-to-leaf-out treetops with that in mind:

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Plus, look at this COOL pattern in the granite….good quilt and screen and stamping inspiration:

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On the way home, I dipped south a ways to Springfield, VT, where my on-line friend Jacquie Scuitto lives.  Known on the quiltart list as the Quilt Muse for her poems on quilt and art and life, her home is about 2 hours south of Springfield but, thanks to those twisty-two-lane-roads, only added an hour to my trip home.  I got a tour of her home and quilts, met a few of her quilty friends, and was treated to a homemade corn chowder before starting my trip home.  Here’s a picture of Jacquie with her Second Day of Christmas (Two TURTLE doves) quilt,

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and another (with her hiding) behind this fun variation on the traditional Drunkard’s Path quilt… I love the setting:

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Jacquie came to visit me a while back when she, hubby Lou and brother Don had come to Maine for a family get-together (blogged about it here), and I’ll get to see her again this summer when her daughter and two granddaughters visit from Germany and travel through Camden…yeah!