Inspiring Patterns

June 30th, 2012

It’s a cold dank day here in Montevideo, and at 11-30am the fog still hasn’t lifted – it might not.  The airport is prolly closed- I haven’t heard any planes on what is usually a busy morning. Despite the fog many were out on the beach walking/jogging/running/fishing, and my own time on the beach today again led me to some interesting water drainage patterns on the sand.  In the collage above you see two pattern photos I manipulated in a program which made them look like pencil sketches, an interesting effect.  It’s not that I can’t draw, I can a bit, but I love how I can get this effect by moving the controls back and forth over the image and clicking into place when all’s done.  I first discovered it when just fiddling around, (as you do and should do, my son first reminded me years ago)  If you work on copies etc you can usually undo or at least do no harm if something doesn’t work out.  I have taken many pics on the beach, as my regulars know, and some of them I converted to pencil sketches like this:

which I included in a submission for an inaugural contemporary quilt exhibition being held in a gold mining district of Victoria, Australia, next year.  Full details later – its not till february next.  But having been accepted a few weeks ago, my attention has now turned to creating what I had in mind.    The title of the exhibition, “Golden Textures”, is hugely significant for me, and not just because I love a bit of glitter! My husband has spent a lot of his professional life looking for and finding gold deposits, which has meant I spent a lot of time in Kalgoorlie Western Australia in particular, but have visited and passed through many other gold mining centres, ancient and modern, too.  Since studying geomorphology at uni in the ’60’s I have been fascinated by the earth’s textures and those processes that shape them on large or small scales.  My first solo exhibition of original creative embroidery,  1987, I titled “Sunburnt Textures”,  was an early reflection of that ongoing fascination, and you’ll find a few pics from it in the first drop down gallery at the top of this page.  Any kind of earth texture, sunburnt or not, is a principal underlying theme in my textile art.

In addition to the resume and outline of my proposed entry,  the submission required images of previous works, and so along with full views of several relevant and important works, I made and included this collage showing some details of how my inspirations have translated into designs and my use of materials and techniques my work would include if I were selected :

So, the actual work began this week.  While in Colorado a few weeks ago, visiting with Boulder friend and colleague Judith Trager, we just happened to drop in to a fabric store, as you do, where I found this wonderful greyish-purplish-brown gabardine and bought it; and as it happened this was the day I later received notice of acceptance into “Golden Textures”.  What serendipity there – it’s perfect background fabric for what I outlined in my proposal.  The designs of each piece roughly correspond to shapes in the ‘pencil sketches’ and are starting with patches of gold leather attached to the background in arrangements suggested by each pattern.   I have chosen several very different patterns of sand ripples, but each piece will have materials and technique in common.  The completed size of each work will be 40cm x 60cm.

I don’t yet have any title for this multi-part work, but have plenty of thinking time available;  something just right will surface in due course.  Feel free to leave any suggestions below!

Having a Go

June 27th, 2012

The monthly newsletter from the Contemporary Quilt Group, CQG, a subgroup of the West Australian Quilters’ Association WAQA, just arrived in my inbox.  I am a very remote member of both,  (still hoping to resume residence in Aus)- and these e-letters keep me abreast with what’s happening back there.  Recently  a group of The Modern Quilt Guild  http://themodernquiltguild.com/ formed in Perth, and apparently at a recent CQG meeting someone suggested that the CQG should to ” have a go” at that style of quiltmaking, and quoting from the newsletter this was  “received entusiastically. Many members wish to try modern quilt techniques that include using traditional blocks, but in a contemporary way”  which they’ll be exploring at a future meeting.  Excuse me CQG girls – absolutely nothing has ever stopped any of you from experimenting with irregular piecing or using traditional  design characteristics including blocks in a ‘new’ way – and nothing has stopped you taking a fresh look at colour, using whatever fabrics you wish, modern or not – and nothing’s prevented you from personally focusing on the more functional bed covering role of what we all do.

What is happening is that this movement is attracting attention from many younger and some older people who have not previously been involved making quilts, and who would prefer generally to make quilts for practical purposes. These people are not phased by style and organisational customs or rules that have grown up around the whole craft of quilting over the past 2-3 decades.  The dreaded ‘quilt police’ have been sidelined, and the emphasis is on practicality plus fun, networking and pleasure in accomplishment.  The time taken to make a functional attractive bed quilt is being slashed as modern designs requiring less piecing and more plain non-patterned areas are favoured.

If you go through this link you’ll find a very fresh looking website, and scrolling down you find a description of the guild’s objectives and the characterisics of their aproach.  It’s  centred on using modern communications – you’ll find them on facebook and twitter etc – and there are lots of online tutorials.  Next year the first modern quilt guild festival/conference will be held, and it sounds remarkably like the giant Houston quilt festival; and in fact, the whole movement is starting to sound like a parallel world of The Quilting Industry as many of us now know it.  Books, tutorials and classes, dedicated magazines, particular styles of fabrics that are favoured in their popular designs… the list goes on.  Like many who have been quiltmaking for eons I applaud this fresh approach, and know that new exponents of the craft will (a) lower the average age of quiltmakers generally and (b) bring fresh ideas to the craft.  At the same time I’m a bit bemused at the breathless ‘we’re different!”  tone here,  even as I count myself as one of them.

 

Spring Bulbs or Potatoes?

June 26th, 2012

DH  found these things on a fruit and veggie stall the other day, couldn’t catch what the guy said they were, but did register that they were “like potatoes only more ‘suave’ “- which prolly means smoother, finer, less grainy.   They look like some kind of spring bulb to me, and honestly, if you look carefully some of them are beginning to sprout at one end, too.   He didn’t ask how to cook them, either !  So, last night we started with the basic process of boil and mash with a little butter, S&P.

Mashed taties or spring bulbs?

Bless him for his daring, considering how he would have dealt with these 47 years ago when we first met ( would have turned up his nose as their being way too unfamilar to consider eating)  Anyway, it might have been irrational negativity on my part since I didn’t know what they were …. but (unlike potatoes) they felt slimy as I peeled them,  and did indeed mash up very fine (a bit like potatoes), didn’t taste much of anything though (not even like potatoes) and overall whatever they are, so far they don’t get a  pass mark from me… but last night’s dinner was about 14 hours ago now, and no apparent ill effects, so that’s a plus right there.  We have about 8-10 left, so the next approach later this week will be to bake them (just like potatoes) and see what happens.  Think I’ll grow one, too – see what happens.  Stay tuned.  Oh, and if you know what these are, please let me know!  I’m not even sure where this fruit and veggie stall is/was to go and check for myself….

Oh, in answer to the other question – pollo a la cacciatorre – ie  chicken, onions, canned tomatoes, green capsicum, lots of garlic and plenty of freshly ground black pepper.  And some butternut pumpkin/squash,   followed by choc/almond, mint choc chip and strawberry iccream.

The Question of Embellishments

June 18th, 2012

One of my online quilting friends recently asked a question of her colleagues: whether we’d found adding embellishment had ever actually improved a less successful quilt.  IMHO it doesn’t; any real fixes are those that involve a bit of adding/deleting, unpicking and re-sewing perhaps – but anyway, things to be done before layering, quilting and finishing.  That’s just my opinion though, and there are clearly people out there who’d strongly disagree.

Tidal Shallows 2, 1995, 30inches square. machine embroidered with triple needle metallic thread before assembly and quilting.

Tidal Shallows 1, 1995, 36 inches, entirely beaded with tiny glass beads.

 

Although I have never gratuitously added glittery charms or doodads, tassels,  shells, teabags and the like, I have extensively embellished several quilts with machine embroidery, typically double or triple needle stitching, and sometimes hand embroidery; but in one notable exception I totally beaded the one directly above, Tidal Shallows 1.  Perhaps I was exhausted after totally beading it, I don’t recall exactly, but I was working on them and another at much the same time, as they all resulted from a coastal holiday to a wonderful part of NW Western Australia.  I feel the quilt was already successfully ‘watery’, although the stronger design of the two, so perhaps that’s why I beaded only that one and didn’t bother beading of further embellishing Tidal Shallows 2.  A viewer of the beaded Tidal Shallows 1 exclaimed “How watery that looks” and so I did feel my decision to go all out and totally bead the quilt  was vindicated – but in no way was it an attempt to improve ‘a less than successful’ quilt.

 

Considering Colour

April 30th, 2012

 

Cynthia's Quilt - 2000, 90cm x 55cm. Commissioned and owned by Cynthia Harvey Baker of Kojonup Western Australia, this will soon be on its way to Austria, to be exhibited in a collection of Western Australian quilts later this year.

 

Colour surrounds us, and every day we make choices based on colours, instinctively wanting to make wise choices.  As we take clothes from our wardrobes, the weather, scheduled activities and even our hormones influence colour choices without us thinking of these connections.   At a salad bar, the colour of a food is a factor in choice; and did you know nutritionists have found that the more colours on your plate the better nutritionally balanced your meal’s likely to be ?

When young, most of us learn which colours suit our complexions, developing confidence with colour that stays with us for life.  However others struggle, saying things like “I’m no good with color”; they pay consultants to coordinate wedding details, decorate their homes, and get their personal colours done.  When I was young, all brown clothes made me look ‘washed out’ or ill.  Perhaps because of modern fabric dyes and the aging process, today I can wear more browns;  and as my hair colour changes periodically, that also changes the possibilities!

I have often claimed that in the world of art quilts and from those who teach within it, there is not nearly enough emphasis on design and color compared to the myriad of technical demonstrations and tutorials in magazines, dvds, books, tv, online and real time courses and classes.  Many quilt makers have high skill levels in all the construction techniques required to make wonderful quilts, but can lack ability and/or confidence developing colour schemes for their projects.  Collections of new fabrics appear several times a year in coordinated prints and solids to make copying a project from a magazine possible, but without basic knowledge of just how different colours work together, a quilter assembling her own individual color scheme may not even realize when a quilt shop assistant has helped her make ‘less good’ or even wrong fabric selection.

How colours work together, “colour theory”, is a large area of study by many artists over several centuries,  and it’s a bit daunting for those who find pages of terms and definitions wherever they look for information on working with color.  To help overcome this problem area I teach a one day, non sewing workshop – “Colour Confidence For the Theory Challenged Quilter”.  Using several  different visual sources, students experience several very practical methods of devising a colour scheme that really works.  Towards the end of the workshop, as these results are reviewed, students are introduced to basic color terminology,  colour/hue/tint/shade,  and  monochromatic/complementary/triadic  etc.  with reference to a color wheel.  Without knowing any technical terms these students have already successfully put together viable personal color schemes, and for most this eye opener is enough color information to enable them to continue creating confidently without deeper theoretical study;  for others it is a starting point for further study if they wish to pursue it.  But I think everyone  should  know of these online color resources which have recently appeared out on some of the lists I read :

www.design-seeds.com helpful in finding some basic color schemes from everyday things. http://colorschemedesigner.com an interactive, ie online, color wheel  – a real strength is that schemes are presented as balanced with major and minor colours in different proportions.  http://letschipit.com is an interesting little site by Sherwin Williams, the paint company.  It’s an app that lets you move your mouse over a photo online and it will produce a color card of up to 10 colours from that.  An interesting little ‘how it works’ video, and I was all keen to bring it on, but somehow I could only sign on through facebook, and I chose not to do that.

Cynthia’s Quilt – the colour scheme was developed around several pieces of fabric from her native South Africa that Cynthia wanted included in the work.  It was photographed against a black background.

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