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Saturday, November 12, 2011

Deliverance Quilt Shop


On the way to Southern Oregon for the opening reception for the 'Text Us' show, we pulled over to change drivers.  We managed to pick a spot with a ... guess ... quilt shop sign!  However, this has to be one of the few times I decided to pass.  Would you take a chance at shopping here?  I can almost here the screeching music tempo going on in the background.  If any quilters go missing in Oregon, I know where they might start looking.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

The Second of Small Pleasures


Too bad having a job gets in the way of quilting time.  Bringing work home is a slippery slope, too.  However, I have managed to finish a second Small Pleasures piece.  I like this one better than the first.  I think the first one was just a warm-up.  I felt looser doing this one and I think it shows.  I'm not sure of my titles yet but this one just might be simply, Red Carnations.  They were my maternal Grandmother's favorite flower.

Oh, here's the first piece finished as well.  I changed the rim of the bowl to a print.  I think it added a little more pizazz to the whole scene.


Monday, October 31, 2011

All Hallow's Eve


KEEP AN EYE OUT FOR THE SACRED AND PROFANE FOR THIS DAY COMES BUT ONCE A YEAR.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

The First of Small Pleasures

It's time to start sewing on my pieces for an invitational show, Small Pleasures, at the Jacobs Gallery here in Eugene.  The show will run through December and no piece can be larger than 12" on any side.  I'm planning on 6 pieces, two series of three pieces each.  This is the almost finished first piece of the first series of small still lifes.  Here's my construction process:
First I made the background by piecing a selection of off-white strips.  By seaming them on a right angle and then placing it on an angle, it seems to give some depth to the scene.  I gave the edge between the  table and the wall a slight curve to suggest a table edge.
I usually make a rough sketch, to size, of where I want to go with a piece.  It helps me get proportions right and I use it as a reference as I proceed.  From this drawing I made a pattern of the bowl using tracing paper over the three basic pieces of the bowl.  I wanted to give the bowl some light, medium and dark areas to make it look more 3-dimensional.
Here are the three pieces laid out on a piece of blue fabric that had a lot of color gradations all within the same print.  I cut the rim piece from the lightest part and the bottom from the darkest part.
Here are the three pieces after having been cut out.  I have adhered paper-backed fusible web to the back of each piece so they can be slightly overlapped and "glued" together.  By pressing on a Teflon sheet, I can then peel the whole piece up and off the sheet as a single unit, but it can still be ironed to another piece of fabric and fuse it in place.

Here's the bowl out together but not trimmed to shape yet.
Okay, done.  It can now be laid on the background and ironed down once I'm ready.
First, I needed to add the fruit pieces.  They are all assembled in the same way as the bowl, so each one is it's own little unit.  Each one is also backed with the fusible web and can be ironed in place once everything is placed to my liking, which is what it looks like in the top photo.  I just need to finish quilting all the pieces in place since the fusing process is not permanent.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

La Conner Quilt & Textile Museum

There are always great shows at the La Conner Quilt & Textile Museum in La Conner, Washington.  I just saw the show that features Ann Fahl's work.  There are so many of her pieces that is was fun to see how prolific she is.  Many of the pieces have been shown in her two books but seeing them in person is a real treat.  Her thread work is amazing!  Check out this close up.

Here's another close up of how she uses multi-colored threads and some of her patterning.  Very cool!

I liked this one with the vase as well.  Having done a piece with a vase, ans now starting a new one, it was interesting to see how she handled the subject using a sheer fabric.


Wednesday, October 12, 2011

New travel inspirations

I know there is plenty of artistic inspiration close to home but it seems that I have a harder time "seeing" until I leave my familiar surroundings.  My recent trip to Whidbey Island was full of wonderful eye, and camera, candy.  The Deception Pass Bridge was half enveloped in fog the day I was there.  I loved these two images that make it look like a "bridge to nowhere".

It was that time of year when the sun would be out in one place but then not only a few hundred yards away.  There was that sort of cloudy bright lighting that made everything look more dramatic.  I took a couple pictures of fields that seem like they could be good quilt inspiration some day. 



Of course, the madrone trees, which grow so well there, always add drama with their peeling bark and warm colors.


Friday, September 30, 2011

Finished at Last

Well, it seems it took an eternity equal to the entire sea, but my ocean piece is done.  I really got hung up on the foreground for a long time.  The greens I used were too bright and the eye would just get stuck there.  I wanted the horizon to be the focal point and the foreground took that away.  I finally dulled all the colors down using Shiva paintsticks in dark navy, brown and various greens.  I also wanted lots of small yellow flowers amidst the grasses.  They had to go.  Again, they were too bright and pulled the eye to the foreground.  I dulled the large rock on the left, as well.  

I'm pretty happy with the end result mostly because I had a September 30 deadline to get it done.  It has been entered in the Oregon SAQA show Oregon: Sate of Diversity.  As one of the organizers of the show, it would look embarrassing to not even get my entry finished.  So, we'll see if the jurors pick it or not.   Here's a detail shot of some of the stitching.


Thursday, September 15, 2011

Acceptance!

I often apply to Calls to Artists for art galleries, not just quilt show entries.  I did recently get an acceptance letter to the Umpqua Valley Arts Association Center.  The theme of the show is Text Us, where text was supposed to be the main design element.  I submitted this one piece and it made the cut.  Hooray!  I'm always happy when I make it into a traditional gallery setting.  After quilts can be ART, too.  It's just a different medium for expression.

The title of this is "Just Read Between the Lines, Dear".  It is meant to be hung so it can be viewed from both sides.  Here's an image of the back side and a detail shot of that same side.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

The Days Just Fly By!

Yes, they do, but they sure can be fun!  After a very cool, wet start, most days have been a perfect summer this year: low 50s at night and low to mid 80s in the day.  I haven't done much sewing or quilting, I must confess.  My garden at my "new" house is coming along really, really well.  I'm loving the colors and textures that are starting to emerge.  Here's the latest finished part.  The stone walkway was the last part to go in.  This following picture is what this part of the yard looked like almost exactly a year ago when I first started the rework of the back yard and the last picture is what it looked like when I bought the house.  Look out Home and Garden magazine!
Here's another before and after view standing with the vegetable garden to my back.  Still need to lay more gravel on this pathway but the plants are looking pretty happy.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Most Recent Art "Struggles"

OMG, I have not been able to blog since dropping my camera but adventures have continued.  With new camera in hand, I am back!  My latest art class was in June at the Oregon Garden Resort in Silverton, Oregon.  What a lovely,peaceful place to concentrate on making art, more drawing to be specific.

Here is one of our exercises that I felt came out the most successful.  We were challenged to draw the draped fabric (sorry bad exposure) showing the value changes that result from light hitting the cloth.  Color aside, the assignment was to capture shadow and highlights.  I was pleased with the results.