March 30, 2009

Background ready and a quandry

From Felted peaches


I strip pieced a background from a recycled silk skirt and cotton fabric. I meant to have the lines be more random but they ended up looking uniform, kind of. Now I'm working on samples to figure out how to attach them with thread painting to the background.

And now for the quandry. Here's my yoga tree.
From YogaTree
It started out as a Bead Journal Project 2" square concerning yoga. You can see the square in the middle. I decided to put it on this beautiful piece of hand dyed fabric from Anne Marie and stitched my heart out on the tree and embroidered the trunk. Then I thought I would like to make it as though you are looking through an arch and seeing it. So I added more fabric to it, don't like the seams, but that's what happens sometime, my project gets bigger than I expected. anyway... so then I've sewn on this beautiful vintage trim (from a vendor at IQF) and I've stitched it on several different ways and I'm not happy with any of them.

So I've decided to lay it out and try two ways and see what you think. What do you like, or how should I handle it? I don't want to cut it before I know I'll like it, so that's why I'm trying the trim, but I think seeing the rest of it outside the arch makes it hard to visualize. Hmmm...maybe I could stitch a stucco feeling/looking background and put it on top of it, creating an arch opening in the stucco top piece. hmmm..

anyway, here are some ideas.

From YogaTree
or
From YogaTree


Here's another of the squares done for this project, this one celebrating a winter play day. Shh, don't tell anyone, but this is as far as I got on the BJP project....
From A Year in Beads

March 26, 2009

Look what fell from my embellisher!

From Leaves
Well, here's today's production. leaves done in various ways with the embellisher. one I left the pieces attached so you could see it. It's on a gold/green mesh to which I attached roving and then used a space dyed thin ribbon for the edges...you can see it sticking up at the tip. In reality, the blue isn't so visible at all. These leaves are for a project, to be attached, either with handsewing or thread painting/FME.

11:43 Posted in Needle felting | Permalink | Comments (1) | Email this | Tags: leaves, nature

March 25, 2009

Peaches!

Well, today was a VERY productive day...following four days of massive art supply reorganization and assessing what I have and where I want to go! I was considering renting an artist studio, did a final reorganization to see if I really needed it, and realized with creative rearranging, I can stay right where I am, using my bedroom as a studio, but having places for baskets for each work in progress, and cleaning up after I'm done.


I think this was a suggestion in the last Studios issue of Clothpaperscissors, allow 10 minutes to clean up before your alloted studio time is up. Another trick I did was to include tools with the supply in question. For example: I tied scissors and tape near the gift wrapping section of the closet, the eyelet setting tool with eyelets in the Altered Book section, etc. I also made a spreadsheet with all my supplies and their location so that I can easily do a keyword search or scan the alphabetical list and see where something is. Hopefully this will avoid double buying of supplies (with the extra money I would have paid in rent -- Credit Wendy with that suggestion!)

From Felted peaches
So, my four works in progress are a journal quilt on Carlsbad Caverns, another on the Gila Cliffs, a larger piece on childhood memories of South Allentown, and a "happy" piece of needle felting in yellows/pinks/oranges. So I dragged out the South Allentown piece, of which I have fabric gathered and a study of porch steps finished, and pulled out shiva painted blobs I painted before, with thoughts they would become peaches, and sure enough, it WORKED!

Here's what I started with, shiva paintsticks blobs on a textured type of interfacing. Don't know what it really is, an estate sale find.

From Felted peaches
And here's the reverse side:

From Felted peaches


What I learned from this is that what I thought was the front side (i.e. the side I was working on) became the backside because the fuzziness of having the fibers protrude from being meshed into it was really what I wanted. I used images of how to paint watercolor peaches to help with the lights and curves, and when I attach these to the quilt and add some extra threadpainting to supplement them, I think they'll be smashing! And I using the 'back" as the finished piece let's me use eyelash and other fibers that look too stringy when embellished and the front is used, but if they're the right color, they look fabulous on the fuzzy back. I did the leaves from the finished side, so they don't have as fuzzy a look. one of the stems is a piece of brown/gray velvet.

I'm also pleased with scheduling studio time worked so well for me. I scheduled three hours of time, turned off the phones and the computer, and just had fun (once I got over my initial strange fear of getting back into working). how odd. I even considered puttering more on the reorganization and never starting the actual WORK/FUN of it all. Ever have that happen to you?

November 20, 2008

Cactus Pin

From Fiber Art
I forgot to post this little beauty. She went with me to Diane's house to the Houston Quilt Festival, and she has her new home there. This was quite fun to do, to experiment with putting down white on the back to get the ribs of the cactus to show on the front. I may do more of these....they're addictive!

November 11, 2008

Finishing up pieces

From Fiber Art
Here's little Belle, prior to winging her way over to Lincolnshire, England to join in the CPS swap that Wendy's hosting. I've stitched up her sides, put beaded tips on her wings, and added a name label on the back. Whew! Done in time.

And here's the prototype of the flat box made three D from the wonderful book Three dimensional embroidery by Janet Edmonds. I talked about it in the previous post.
From ClothPaperStudio projects
and here's the box flattened, as it would be mailed:

From ClothPaperStudio projects
I'm not totally happy with the cords and stitching it up, nor with how the paper tore while machine stitching, even onto felt. but I put a coat of a clear/matte glue onto the rest of the piece, we'll see if that makes a difference.

October 21, 2008

Belle Butterfly

From Fiber Art
Here's my entry for the Clothpaperstudio Wild Woman pin swap, hosted by Wendy. I am so spoiled, I know, but I bought a Huskystar embellisher machine last weekend, and had such fun creating the fabric of the wings of this butterfly. Then with the addition of a trim given to me by a friend, from the textured collar and trim of her old coat, to make the body of the butterfly, and then beading for Belle's body and hair. Fun, fun!

I think I'll be moving on to a series of Barrel cactus women. I see one on my way down to the kids' school, and it spots make it look like a face...and of course the spikes and flowers are just RIPE for bead embellishment. so that's my next thought....