Browsing With Pinterest

November 16th, 2020

As we all know, Pinterest gathers together images that their algorithm flags as things that may interest each of us, given our previous searches and pins. As I scroll down their latest selections I’m always on the watch for patterns that people are making with stitch. Indeed one of my Pinterest boards is titled ‘Contemporary Stitch’ and the introduction to it reads “These are pins of stitch as art – “ and it’s where I pin interesting images of what people are doing with hand stitch – one of my long term loves.

So this image caught my eye and my reaction was (a) Oooh, lovely colours, and (b) Nice stitch patterning … but as I followed the embedded link I found this was not stitch but painting.

Painting class samples, Laura Horn, https://www.laurahornart.com/blog/2018/9/11/so-much-more-than-a-new-class. (Reproduced with permission)

They’re examples illustrating a then-new online painting class Australian artist, Laura Horn was announcing However, they could have been stitching texture patterns, right at home in the art of Dorothy Caldwell Christine Mauersberger, Rieko Koga and others whose fibre art I admire. I have found stitch filler patterning in other painters like Agnes Martin , Liam Murphy, and many contemporary Aboriginal painters. To me dots=french knots, short lines=straight stitches, and longer lines=couching, maybe – all of which there are plenty in this photo.

Hand Stitched Raw Edge Applique

November 15th, 2020

Following on from my previous post on sampling breakthroughs, another bit of progress relates to the applique of leather, which can be tough to sew through; but I do want to use leather shapes in the large work I’m just starting.   About 10+ years ago I made a number of pieces in the Tracks Series in which I hand basted leather shapes from the reverse side, catching part way into the layer of leather, so though attached, the stitches were not seen from the front.  It was hard work then, and my hands are a bit arthritic now, so I wouldn’t dream of doing what I did back then.

Left: gold leather with various sewing machine marks and patterns left with an unthreaded bluntish needle, producing a linear surface texture  Right: these leather shapes are all hand stitched into the reverse side of the leather from behind, so that no stitches are visible from the front.

I love french knots, especially stemmed ones, and here are a couple of examples: one from earlier this year as a Stitch Club workshop project (Haf Weighton) and the other from 2006, Timetracks 2.   Considering I was already having hand problems, finding leather becoming harder to work with, I can only wonder that I didn’t think of this before.  But now I’m concentrating far more than I ever did on hand stitch, so perhaps it’s not so surprising after all.

L – a get-well message medallion with stemmed french knots border which I didn’t realise until later looks very COVID themed 🙂     R – detail of gold leather appliqued by stemmed frenchknots in very fine thread.

What I realised yesterday:

  • that I can machine applique the leather shapes I want on this piece using a long/basting stitch or whatever else I choose by way of stitch pattern
  • I can then sew the stemmed french knots, straight stitches or even a bead, using the holes in the stitching which will be removed when that’s all done
  • and voila! a hand appliqued leather shape! (left, below)

 

L- appliqued scrap leather – top 3 french knots, middle 2 straight stitches bottom 3 stemmed french knots and the last 3 holes left vacant in the leather after the machine stitched were removed.       R- nylon organza+MistyFuse with stitched edging possiblities.

I think the bonded nylon organza will be good for the ghostly figures I have in mind – the edges are oversewn with gold here, but something in a less brassy gold, or silver-grey metallic might be more appropriate – back to a little more sample making.

Sample Making Satisfaction

November 13th, 2020

I have in mind something about 2m wide by about 95cm high, which is largish for me, and with the hand stitching that’s on my mind just now, I’ve been thinking of how to apply large areas of colour – well there’s paint of course …

I’m always inclined to set personal challenges to somehow use stuff already in the house, much of which I bought years ago on some whim or faded intention.  A few years ago I bought several metres of slightly dusty white cheesecloth in an old downtown store – I’ve asked myself a few times since what on earth I was thinking.  The other day from somewhere came the idea that I could paint or spray it, and thought it would go well with what I have in mind (see previous post)  I just happened to have a new can of gold spray paint, it was a nice day, so I cut off 3m x ~50cm, took it outside, and emptied the whole can on it.  Outside, with the fabric folded over so spray passing through the holes would get picked up as it moved through, with re-folding periodically, I regard that as a successful move… though I forgot about an apron so now have a new painting shirt, and managed to get some drips on my foot amazingly missing my sandle, and a few drops on the ceramic patio tiles, which didn’t cause any angst anywhere.

Gold gauze and a sandy coloured waxed string machine appliqued with invisible nylon thread to secure the edge, which was then hand stitched with one of my many gold threads.I suppose I fiddled around for at least an hour, ironing the gauze, and trying several ways to stitch it down, none of which I was happy with until this combo,  so it ticks all the boxes –

  • I can invisible machine applique large sections of this gold gauze, and the edge will not fray and become unstable as I stitch and handle the rest of the piece
  • The effect of this gold gauze is earthy, not brassy – very pleasing.
  • In addition to the horizontal strips I at first tagged it for, I now know I can use it for other shapes that would fray even more on handling if not for my technical breakthrough.
  • I have a lot of this colour gold thread, but as it’s just the edge being oversewn, it will be much more economical with the feature thread than the oversewn strips on Pandemic Pattern (which did fray, and that was a chosen option, so AOK)

 

 

Lines Marks and Stitches 5

November 10th, 2020

Patterns of lines – straight, wavy and zigzag, triangles, squares and other geometric shapes, arcs, circles, concentric circles, scattered dots, grids of dots, dotted outlines, spirals, these are are some of the most basic shapes that make up patterns that humans put together. I always think of them as primal, because if you put a mark making implement in any child’s hand he will come up with at least some of them and gradually assemble them into pictures, regardless of his cultural background. I googled childrens’ drawings and was faced with lots of vibrant pics, with various subheadings, so I selected one, psychology . There I found some fascinating and some very disturbing stuff! I could have googled around for hours.

Anyway, back to shapes. My very first art quilt, Ancient Expressions 1, 1988, featured a section across the middle quilted in a pattern I’d found in a book on rock art in America’s Southwest. A jeweller working in silver also probably saw pictures of the same rock, or read the same book, because I once came across a beautiful belt buckle engraved with it, too.

I used a variation of this kind of pattern again in Dreamlines 3 (2015) There are many ancient and modern objects and art works from different cultures with this kind of primal pattern on Pinterest.

I’ve loved it for a long time, and am seriously thinking of using it again in a large piece, 2.25m x 1.25cm. That size suits our dining area wall which needs a fresh piece on it. I’m contemplating hand stitching to oversew whatever I come up with in terms of lines and semicircles … heck why not think big, there’s a pandemic on, so I have plenty of time for a big project – and next year there’ll be an Art Quilt Australia exhibition, too. I’ve got fabric for several background possibilities, and just have to think about the fabrics for the appliqued shapes that might go on either a black, tan or cream. Something earthy and natural, primitive? Perhaps something very bright in splashy colours? I also have yardage of a soft light-mid grey with a sateen finish which could look lovely with all neutrals on it, so while I’m pondering all that, I need to complete the girt by sea landscapes project. I’m doing a bit each day, and at this stage it’s very time consuming. I’m hand stitching small iconic Aussie images onto them:

Sydney Harbour Bridge, ~5cm x ~2-3cm. Backstitch

Sydney Harbour Bridge took me a couple of hours yesterday (including perhaps 1/2 hour to unpick and re-sew a bit), but I’ve got a good supply of recorded books!

Lines, Marks, Stitches, 4

November 9th, 2020

For stitchers like myself, embroidery options range from following traditional patterns like pulled thread work or hardanger and more, to following instructions from a book or stitching over commercially printed fabrics. Whether challenging or routine and automatic, most people find hand stitch, hand embroidery, therapeutic and calming. I’ve been a keen stitcher since my first efforts with a needle and thread around age 7, and in the past 40 years creative embroidery, has been a really important part of my creative life.

Over the last 20 years there’s been a general resurgence of interest in hand stitchery (including Japanese boro, sashiko and Kantha from W.Bengal and Odisha regions of India bordering Bangladesh), and that includes a renewed interest in mended vintage fabrics. ‘Visible mending is now a real thing, along with something called the ‘slow stitch movement’ which I’ve mentioned here before in 2010 post, to which the comments in response are particularly interesting. In the 10+ years since I wrote that post, there’s been a conflation of that term with ‘hand embroidery’. The straight stitch itself has become a means of creating art, being placed end to end, side by side, crossed over another, scattered at random, and placing it in other, more complex ways to make lines, filler textures or repeat patterns. It is the most basic stitch, and well known to quilters of course.

My regular readers will have been noting the development of the raw edge hand applique technique I’ve recently been using, and will have noticed how thrilled I was that Pandemic Pattern was recently selected for Quilt National 21.

Raw edge, hand stitched applique, a tecnhique I’ve been exploring for the past year. Lower centre row – a detail of “Pandemic Pattern”

By the time I began Pandemic Pattern, I’d found the most comfortable needle for me working this technique is a long fine one – of the kind some manufacturers label ‘darners’ – because people used them when darning or mending knitted jumpers and socks particularly. Until I began sewing this way, apart from using them for hand tacking/basting, I’d never needed these needles much, and having two seemed plenty. Recently though, I dropped one on the light coloured carpet in my sewing room, and couldn’t find it, and came to realising that having only one spare was a bit precarious. Although I’m long sighted and even grabbed a torch to help, I just couldn’t see that needle anywhere. Frustrated and a bit irritable, I came downstairs for a change of activity including some lunch and checking emails. When I returned a couple of hours later, the angle of the sun had changed and I now saw the needle sticking up out of the carpet pile, right beside where my foot had been when I dropped it. The next day Mike and I visited several haberdashery stores – mercerias – including quite a few downtown. The only large needles I was shown were of the kind you might sew canvas sacks with, more like a toothpick more than anything.

I’ve been shown some long thick needles but what I want is fine by comparison!

There was nothing fine and long, except occasionally just one lurking in among sets of about 30-40 other needles, but I already have more hand sewing needles than I’ll need for the rest of my lifetime, and was beginning to think I’d have to get one of the offpsrings to send a packet or two of darners down from the USA. First though, I decided I should put out a call for help to my book group and the mahjong girls (only one friend is in both) Sure enough, as I hoped, someone came good with two she found in a merceria over in a part of town I hadn’t thought to go, and someone’s promised to look in her mother’s stuff. At this point I had 4, which was wonderful – and then joy oh joy, a wonderful surprise – I found another one lurking in the bottom of a little sewing kit I keep with the cream hexagons that I’m adding to the Grandmother’s Flower Garden quilt, see previous post . So I won’t have to have some couriered in, after all.

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