“In Fourteen Hundred And Ninety Two…

August 14th, 2023

Columbus sailed the ocean blue” go the famous first two lines from a children’s poem on American history of which I first learned while we lived in USA, 1987-94.

Probably in 1991, before the quincentenary of the discovery of what became known as The New World – the Americas, Quilters Newsletter Magazine announced some competition or call for an exhibition to go in their pages to help mark this huge event in modern world history. I don’t remember the exact details of it, however I clearly remember making my entry, which unfortunately was not selected:

“In Search Of The New World” 1992, 130cm x 130cm

Last week I realised that although this quilt was listed in my ‘master list’, I hadn’t noticed a photo of it anywhere for a very long time. Since then I have been searching, knowing it has to be in my computer somewhere – and eventually just an hour ago I found it in an external hard drive I haven’t accessed for years. Please share my joy! One possible reason for not finding it is I didn’t have the title exactly right in the search – duh. Anyway, I immediately re-saved it into this computer, and now it will probably pop up somewhere just because I’m no longer looking for it…

Detail “In Search Of The New World”, machine pieced and quilted.

I was a bit disappointed when my work was rejected, but I’d already had acceptance and rejection experience so took it philosophically. When the selected ones were published later that year, I saw there were some some much better ones than this one.

Now looking at it, I know the shiny blue fabric said ‘water’, and the earthy coloured strips said, to me anyway, ‘earth’. If you look carefully, in the detail shot you can see spherical shapes representing the round earth, (as many at that time still believed the Earth to be flat) but now I see those spheres were way too subtle, but it’s an interesting idea I might revisit some time. Probably the horizontal strips of fabric should have had some green in them, to suggest ‘land’. Plus the strips themselves were perfectly straight edged, not at all land like… I had not yet learned the basics of improvisational cutting and piecing, but If I’d known them then, those strips might have looked more like islands in the blue, and been more appealing. The best features of this landscape+history inspired work are the wonderful cerulean blue polished cotton furnishing fabric, and the inspired freehand watery machine quilting pattern.

Innovative Irregularity In 1993 …

August 11th, 2023

As so often happens when I’m looking for something in particular, although I haven’t yet found the thing I was looking for, I did come across a couple of older pieces I’d quite forgotten about, like this one, “Forecast Cooler, Windy”.

“Forecast Cooler, Windy” 1993, 98cm x 98cm, irregular edge, photographed against black.

I made this nearly 30 years ago, in 1993, while we were living in Denver. In that part of the country as the end of summer gives way to the Fall, leaves turn mostly yellow-browns as colour fades from everything except the evergreens in their dark to smoky greens. As the season advances and the weather becomes colder, it becomes quite windy, blowing the dry leaves to the ground.

Having recently learned the basics of improvisational cutting and piecing, I had begun to insert or reverse applique strips into backgrounds of freehand pieced designs – here signifying air movement across a vague suggestion of ‘Landscape’. The Bernina machine I had at that time had embroidery stitches that were programmable to either just keep sewing until you stopped them, or to have the machine stop after completing just one motif, so that was great to embroider individual motifs in gold metallic thread, scattering them across the quilt’s surface like leaves blowing in the wind. Machines like mine were being used to give some wonderful machine quilted textures as quilters explored their potential, producing relatively innovative stuff, with ‘art quilts’ still being a fairly new thing. What was really innovative in this work, to me, was the irregular shaping of the quilt’s edge. There was very little irregularity in edges then as not too many people had worked out how to use serious shaping on the sides and along the tops of quilts in such a way that the shaped bit didn’t flop forward, so any shaping was pretty modest by today’s standards.

Art quilt exhibitions were still relatively new, too, but rapidly spreading. I’m not certain, but it is very likely I made this to enter into a local art quilt exhibition like Front Range Contemporary Quilters, as Colorado textile artists were right at the forefront of these developments, which already included Quilt National, Visions; and most quilt guilds by this time had some art quilt sections in their members’ exhibitions. Wherever I entered it, I remember feeling I had to note on the paper entry form that the edges were deliberately irregularly shaped and that the quilt hung flat against the wall – I feared someone would see the image as incompetent workmanship 🙂 Within the next 2-3 years I’d produced several works with far more extreme shaping along the top, such as “Waterweave”. As I remember it, the Quilters Guild of New South Wales, as part of their effort to promote all forms of quiltmaking, traditional and art quilts, asked me to design an irregular shaped quilt with instructions to make it and finish such edges, to be a chapter in a book compiled by various art quilters in Australia… something like that, but the detailed factual info is in storage in Aus, along with my copy of the book, sigh.

Planning diagram and finished art quilt, Waterweave , 1996, 110cmw x 130cmh.

The link in the text just above the photo has some ideas on how to finish irregular edges – email me if you need further help. Of course these days, quel horreur – some people are just leaving torn or raw cut edges, without any binding or facing at all!

Stripey Things

August 3rd, 2023

At their best, social media can provide wonderful communications with people you’d never normally come across in your daily life or your travels.

Take this example – on Instagram I’ve been following @stripeypebbles for some time. This UK woman, Julia Sugden, picks up/collects striped pebbles on nearby beaches as she walks, takes them home where they accumulate. She photographs them wonderfully, and after that I’m not sure what she does with them, but if she just rolls them around in her hands, places them on the table or window sill where the light catches their shapes and lines, or plays knucklebones with them – whatever – that’s pretty well what many fabriholics aka’ ‘quilters’, do with their fabric stashes! She also takes wonderful shoreline photos but I did have a feeling she draws or paints them, too, but I looking around her sites I couldn’t see reference to that. Today Julia commented she was taking some back to the beach, as they’re threatening to overwhelm her studio. I know plenty of traditional and art quilt makers whose studios could be said to be ‘overwhelmed’ by their stash of fabrics, too, and no, honestly, I’m not one… but I’ll write about that some other time.

Like me, she likes stripey things, and a photo she posted a day or two ago really reminded me of a favourite brooch I bought at an art/craft fair years ago. It’s so ‘me’, and has been aired quite a bit lately as, since the passing of Queen Elizabeth II I’ve made an effort to wear pieces from my minor collection of brooches more often.

Black ceramic brooch with gold strips design, ~3cm diameter.

Another thing about this photographer/collector is that she often posts her daily haul in what I think of as a 9-patch format quilt block – 3 rows of 3 squares of fabric, with play between two colours or light v dark values:

A very non-traditional use of the 9-patch – in this case hand appliqued squares.
A sample using the 9-patch layout..

The Nine Patch is really my favourite traditional quilt block from the brief time I spent making a traditional quilt (Flying Geese) when I joined a quilting bee for the cultural experience, and stayed on with that group, even as my own quilt making moved into the wonderful world of ‘art quilts’. Many others in that group were also veering off into the non-traditional fibre art, plus writing, hand dyeing and marketing fabric, book publishing, lecturing on legal issues and teaching. A very creative group of people, this was so far were the hardest group I’ve ever had to leave, anywhere – but I digress.

My regular readers know that much of my fibreart is based on pieced or appliqued strips and stripes as in these examples, but there are heaps more some of which you’ll find if you scroll back through older posts here.

Detail of Ebb&Flow 12
Ebb&Flow 8, detail

Knots Can Add Fine Texture

July 29th, 2023

Last year I made several layered textile works featuring a knotted surface. One of them, “Caribbean Crush” will go on show for the first time soon, at The Visions Museum of Textile Art, San Diego CA, from October 13th until December 30th.

A nearly-full view of Caribbean Crush, 2022, 98cmsq, and close detail of the hand stitched surface using a fairly thick polyester thread that’s impossible to press flat, which is why it is so wonderful for this kind of thing!

I’m pretty sure there will be ‘do not touch’ instructions everywhere, yet for my piece I almost think touching it should be allowed – the surface is so inviting, and surprisingly soft to the touch.

I’m currently gathering materials and ideas for a small project, to meet a call for entries combining textile and glass in some way, 2D or 3D, <20cm any direction. I have sourced glass fabricated in various ways without having had to take a crash course on glass blowing 🙂 In Egypt we visited a glass blowing artist and I simply had to gather up a ridiculously heavy bag of huge glass beads without any idea what I wanted to do with them… I once made a necklace which was a lovely idea, and I wore it once for several hours, but it was impossibly heavy to wear for that afternoon, let alone all day!! So here I am, 15 years later, and there’s a chance several of them might actually be included in this little piece…

Glass beads from Egypt! The fabric is fibre glass, and the other bobbly things are another purchase I simply had to make in Egypt… they’re thread ‘buttons’ for traditional men’s clothing. I’ve always thought them quite beautiful but they’re not very robust – several are unravelling even though about all they’re ever done is travel a day or two in a suitcase, then sit in a drawer and about once a year just slip through my hands for a few minutes….

Decades ago I fairly heavily beaded an entire wall quilt “Tidal Shallows 1” with tiny watery blue/green toned glass beads –

“Tidal Shallows”, 1998, 88cm x 88cm

About a decade ago I went to a beading class for a few months, so I have plenty of glass beads around, but I’m thinking I need to do some knots for texture to marry the glass and textile elements.

So when I looked on Pinterest for knotted stitches, I found some really interesting images, one of which led me to a blog article on 9 Important Knot Stitches in Embroidery , and I was struck by several I didn’t know – namely Danish knots, 4-legged knot stitch, colonial knots and Turk’s head knot (which you make with the thread/yarn/cord and then attach to the work.) I was pleased to see French knots there, and what the writer called pistil stitch which I’ve always called stemmed french knots – always one of my favourites.

I’m also thinking about a Stitch Club workshop I enjoyed in 2020 from Clarissa Callesen. Stuffed forms weren’t new to me, but the workshop was a fun and lively reminder of their sculptural potential. There’s always one of those constructions from that week kicking round my sewing room… and I see myself using something of that technique here:

Art Quilt Australia 2023

July 28th, 2023

One of my two entries was selected for this important Australian biennial, and I just shipped my work “Green Dimension” out yesterday, assured it will arrive at the National Wool Museum, Geelong, Victoria, early next week. The exhibition opens on Friday11th August, and will close on Sunday 12th November. Green Dimension is hand stitched using processes I really enjoy doing, and as green has always been my favourite colour, it was a pleasure to make.

“Green Dimension” 2023, 107cm x 103cm. Hand stitched.

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