Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Very Small Pieces, 13

Sunday, October 31st, 2021

A couple of days back I posted this one, inspired by some drawings and stitch seen in a couple of places on Pinterest. Of course, I understood making such a pattern would be easy, especially if you were going for the lightly off-straight look, and therefore no thread-count precision is required here. The neon orange heavy duty polyester thread never actually lies down on the fabric as do all embroidery threads made from natural fibres – wool, linen, silk and cotton. But I really like this quality, as it lends a kind of hand-drawn look to whatever marks you make with it.

I had used little squares of fabric in a couple of earlier samples in his project, and so I fused some on to this piece’s final row. The fusing between the background and the cotton poplin was fine, BUT once I began stitching with the darning needle I have to use to sew the polyester thread, the bonding gave way – so completing this row with the outlines was fiddly to say the least. I thought I’d further explore this idea by stencilling squares onto fabric.

I still have about 7.75m of that neon orange ripstop nylon which makes great stencils, so I cut a small one to fit inside the 3.25in. square, painted one, then decided to stencil repeats until the small amount of paint left was all gone, so I ended up with another two.

Not thinking, though, I put them onto really dark grey poplin, would you believe? (apparently I was having a slow learning day) The large stitches on the front that you can see in this next one worked ‘ok’, but fastening down the corners on the back side required a fine needle and a thimble to do, and was ridiculously hard work. Note to self – never hand stitch on poplin fabric ever again! However, I was thrilled with the effect.

“Is this going to be a series?” asked Nancy Ann, the coordinator of the 100 Days Reboot challenge when I posted it on the challenge album for that day. I answered that my series tend to emerge rather than be declared at the start, but as I’d stencilled another couple anyway, I knew that poplin or no, I would finish them. Note this next one features a lot of machine stitching and a minimal amount of hand stitch, and still needs the same tortuous process to mount it on the foam core.

I have another print, and will probably use it up soon. So yes, Nancy Ann, it looks like a series might be emerging – but the next ones won’t feature any poplin anywhere!

Very Small Pieces, 12

Saturday, October 30th, 2021

Couching is one way to lay down lines particularly, using thick threads and thin cords that you can’t sew with on the fabric you’ve using. I’ve never used it much really, but think I need to more. So in the current series of little sample thingies I’m experimenting, and here are a couple more featuring couching:

I spotted this printed paper raffia in a merceria last week. I’m not sure what I’ll do with the other 9.85m I bought, but it will come in handy some time, I’m sure.

It wasn’t easy to work with, took me a while to learn how to handle it properly. First, I did appliqued the circle (a bit clunky) then stitched the line beginning in the lower left corner finishing near the left edge, and finally added the little ring with ends sticking out. As I felt I got better, I didn’t remove the less competent start – left it there to remind me. I hadn’t seen this printed paper rolled into a raffia-like ‘thread’ so bought 10m at the haberdashery I was in, and as I say, it could be useful some time. I sometimes find unusual things speak to me and really influence a turn I take in my work, but maybe not this one – it might sit in the drawer next to the 2m string of pearlescent sequins and the 4m string of gold vinyl stars …

Stencilled organic blobs shapes were perfect to add to with an informal grid of hand couched fine cord using metallic thread.

Couching can be done by machine, too, and during the week I had some correspondence with an embroiderer who said she’d only couch if it could be done by machine. I’m sure that’s wonderful sometimes, but I am pretty focused on hand stitch myself! And, I love that it is possible to couch in such a way that the sewing thread is not at all visible, so the cord just seems to be sitting or resting on the fabric. I’m tempted to say that working by hand allows finer twists and turns in the line, but being so far out of date with fancy modern machine technology, I can accept that may not be true these days. Couching one cord over the top of another as above, may or may not be easily done by machine, I don’t know – perhaps someone will enlighten me..

Very Small Pieces, 11

Tuesday, October 26th, 2021

In the SAQA 100 Days Reboot challenge I’m currently participating in, I’ve been using it to explore different materials and combining some surface design techniques with basic stitch. As I outlined at the start of this series, instead of just throwing them into the large shopping bag I normally use to receive my sample bits and pieces, I am mounting these ones on small pieces of foam core board cut to the same size.

Some have been excitingly successful and will no doubt lead to some new directions in my surface designs, others came out less interesting, but every one of them has shown me something, and at least my curiosity about a few dud ones is now settled 🙂 Many of them I’ve posted on Instagram @schwabealison, and quite a few have appeared in this Small Pieces series of posts, of which there’ll be another two or two before the 100 Days challenge finishes on November 3rd.

Many of you know I’ve been interested in sheer fabrics for some time, with burnt layers in some of my Timetracks series, which featured nylon organza. Sheer fabrics include tulle, organdy, organza, chiffon, and their character has been used to great effect by some contemporary textile artists in the Korean Pojagi medium , others such as Rosemary Claus Grey, and Christine Mauersberger whose installation Timelines seems to float on its fine tulle substrate.

I recently (2019, 2021) bought some clear plastic to experiment with as the ultimate sheer, a flexible but solid, soft material that could be stitched through without drilling holes in it, as UK artist Clyde Olliver often did to stitch on really solid materials, like slate and wood.

These next two samples require thinking of heavy duty clear plastic as ‘fabric’ … Working on 100% see through sheer material means you need to be thinking of what the thread is doing on both sides to make the pattern as viewed from the front.

Tailor’s tacking. ~3.5in.

Here I thought I might just as well tie a knot in the thread and leave it on the front anyway! But, if I were going to use this kind of thing as a background, to frame something, I’d probably start and end the stitching where it would be behind that ‘thing’ once that was put in place. I joined the pink to the yellow with a knot on the front for the same reason – the limitations of a completely non-traditional material can require different thinking, and here, this can be made a feature of the surface texture.

Early in 2020, I began what was for me a new technique of hand oversewing raw edged strips of fabric (Pandemic Pattern resulted from this experimental technique) While oversewing one small wall quilt with metallic gold, I realised that for every stitch showing on the front, there was as much again hidden behind the work. This meant I needed to join threads twice as often, (a handsewn metallic thread will tend to fray fairly quickly) and at the density of my stitching, I realised I’d soon go crazy turning it over every couple of minutes to finish off conventionally. So I joined those threads with knots on the outside/front, and there were so many of them that the knots made a pleasing additional surface texture. We think of metallic as ‘hard and cold to the touch’ and this surface looks brassy, but it is surprisingly soft to touch.

~3.5sq.in Couched cord – largely invisible, because I used fine toning thread.

Couching: when threads and cords too thick or textured to actually sew with are laid onto the fabric and hand or machine sewn down with a finer thread, visible or not. There are many potential variations to this technique. Couching will come up again soon.

Browsing With Pinterest

Sunday, October 17th, 2021

In addition to this blog, I also post to my other blog, pickledgizzards.com, writing about foody things including memories of the family from which I came, and my own family’s life, plus for the duration of the pandemic, writings on the StitchClub workshops I’ve been undertaking as my Pandemic Treat. Posts there include two on the Richard McVetis workshop and a more recent one by Shelley Rhodes, UK which I really liked too. I post these jottings in pickled gizzards because they don’t necessarily have anything to do with the textile art I’m developing right at the moment; but of course sooner or later there is an influence on any following works.

My regular readers know I also regularly browse around on Pinterest, as one of the ways to keep up a bit with what people are doing just as in other times I used to send for textile magazines and catalogues. This morning while filling in a little time before we went out, I pinned a few things to different boards.

First to catch my eye was detail of a textile work in white with black thread that had been covered by other white threads and emerging every now and then as a slub. The technique used to achieve this is irrelevant, it is the pattern made with the discontinuous line of blobs that I like, and so I pinned it to my contemporary hand stitch board to think about, or not … if I ever want to do such a thing I can think of several ways to achieve it in stitch. I’ve always been struck by the outline and filling potential of intermittent lines with or without the inclusion of blobs – this being one example. I also have pinned others on my lines and shapes board.

Left – “Morse” tetrahedron 18cmx18cmx18, 2016. Intermittent lines of stich (running stitch or quilting) with periodic dots/blobs.

Next, I pinned an image of I don’t know what and followed the link to reveal a bunch of what seemed to be textile art images, as there were a couple of textile artist names there I know, but this image wasn’t part of any of those, which is interesting! What had caught my eye was the ‘grid’ structure, apparently slapped on with wild abandon about which I thought: “hand painted grid, in gold, with metallic stitching – pin it” So I did, feeling I will think more about it, as I love paint on fabric, and love metallic glitter, especially gold.

At this point I came across a work by the artist Alberto Burri, 1915-1995, whose works often come up in my searches I love one of his unmistakable style, saatchi, that began in his time in a WWII Tunisian prisoner of war camp when he made art with whatever materials he could salvage around him, that in his hands became a fusion of painting and low relief sculpture, very often expressed through mended burlap and other non-conventional and industrial or agricultural materials showing signs of staining, wear and tear. When looking at his work I’m unsure what might have already been on the material when he picked it up to work with it, and what he might have added as part of his mark making.

SAQA Challenge, Day 70

Monday, October 11th, 2021

It’s hard to believe we’re on day #70. Pictured here are three of the most recent ones all in a related theme. I’m using Mistyfuse adhesive bonding web to at least hold the fabric pieces in place until they’re stitched down. Synthetic fabrics (in the 3rd sample the orange organza) don’t hold as well as natural fibres, like cotton, linen and wool; and leather works but tends to buckle or curl once enough heat’s been applied to actually bond it to a fabric. So making samples with a variety of fabric types does teach a lot about individual handling, which helps shape plans for larger project use of particular materials and techniques.

3.25sq.in fused circles, hand stitch.
3.25sq.in fused circles, hand stitch
3.25sq.in fused organza, hand stitch.

I haven’t done today’s little piece yet, but there are several on the list; think sliced stuffed olives. I made 3 in the last couple of days, having slipped behind a little last week ( talk about pressure! ) So I need to do today’s, plus at least one more today to get ahead a little. Tomorrow I have a long dental appointment (but it is within a few minutes’ walking distance) The next day I have a medical one (25mins Uber trip away, but the appointment will be brief). So I’m adding a necessary hair cut and a little urgent shopping in the same part of town as my polyclinic, that way I can kill 3 birds with one stone… but it will take the best part of 4+ hours, a sizeable chunk of the day.

This morning, checking through one of the daily lists Pinterest sends of things I might like, I paid close attention to an interesting work on the cusp between soft sculpture and contemporary stitchery, by fibre artist Wendy Watson of New Zealand. It’s calling to me to do something like it if I can, and I have in mind threads and techniques she might have used, though I’m not planning to go into encaustic with it as she has.

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