Monday, January 31, 2011
on my design wall
today. I spent the weekend arranging and rearranging the blocks. They may or may not stay in this arrangement since before I start sewing them together I plan to embellish them.
mirthful inchie
The word for this week's Every Inchie Monday challenge is mirthful. This fiber inchie is made from mottled yellow cotton fabric, a bit of lace, a rose cut out from another piece of fabric, and an overlay of fine slightly sparkly netting. It's embellished with beads and a bird charm.
"The kiss of sun for pardon. The song of the birds for mirth. One is nearer God's Heart in a garden Than anywhere else on earth." ~ Dorothy Frances Gurney
"The kiss of sun for pardon. The song of the birds for mirth. One is nearer God's Heart in a garden Than anywhere else on earth." ~ Dorothy Frances Gurney
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
collection of hearts
from last year. It looks like there may be a couple of candidates for transforming into focals for necklaces.
quietly remembering
It is steadily snowing. At first it was lightly and sparingly sprinkling outside but it is now coming down harder. This is a heavy snow and our street has not yet been plowed.
But inside I have plenty of beads and wire and fabric and thread. Twenty-six years ago it was snowing, too.
But inside I have plenty of beads and wire and fabric and thread. Twenty-six years ago it was snowing, too.
Monday, January 24, 2011
frozen
In the meantime
it's still frozen outside
on the outside, looking in
on the inside, looking out
maudlin monday
Not really. But the word for this week's Every Inchie Monday challenge is maudlin. This has been the most difficult one to conceptualize so far.
From http://wordsmith.org/words/maudlin.html
From http://wordsmith.org/words/maudlin.html
"After Mary Magdalene, a Biblical character who was a follower of Jesus. In medieval art she was depicted as a penitent weeping for her sins (she washed the feet of Jesus with her tears) and her name became synonymous with tearful sentimentality.
The name Magdalene means "of Magdala" in Greek and is derived after a town on the Sea of Galilee. The name Magdala, in turn, means tower in Aramaic. So here we have a word coined after a person, who was named after a place, which was named after a thing."
This inchie features Titian's painting of Mary Magdalene and a photo of a sign for a place called Maudlin, which I believe is in England. The images were digitally altered, printed out onto paper, and mounted on a paint chip.
This inchie features Titian's painting of Mary Magdalene and a photo of a sign for a place called Maudlin, which I believe is in England. The images were digitally altered, printed out onto paper, and mounted on a paint chip.
Saturday, January 22, 2011
an unintentional addition
may become a permanent one. Loosely intended to be a modern version of a crazy quilt, each improvisational square was created using a stitch and flip foundation piecing technique. I used the brightest colors in my stash and then embellished the top with beads. A doily ended up on top of it when I was moving some projects around, and I'm considering incorporating it.
Thursday, January 20, 2011
inside the studio and out
Monday, January 17, 2011
something from last year
While gathering fabrics for the contents for this year's Erosion Bundle project I came across a little quilt I had made from some of last year's bundle materials. It was with the leftover materials and was totally forgotten. I thought about adding it to this year's bundle, which is why it's photographed the way it is, but changed my mind.
caring
This fiber inchie features a heart created by cutting the shape from the top muslin layer to expose the red velvet middle layer. It is further embellished with white and clear beads. Sides of the inchie were deliberately fringed.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Erosion Bundle Project 2011
In addition to Every Inchie Monday, Kris Henderson is again hosting the Erosion Bundle Project. The idea is to create an artistic bundle from one's choice of materials and then "hang, bury, submerge, or just place" it outside in the elements as a collaboration with Mother Nature.
The contents of my bundle include cloth and paper doilies,
Other additions include . . .
some dried poinsettia leaves,
rose petals and a marigold head,
The contents of my bundle include cloth and paper doilies,
bits and pieces of a variety of papers,
and an assortment of fabrics . . . cotton, silk, vintage and new, and a couple of pieces that were leftover from last year's project . . . they get to have a second time around.Other additions include . . .
some dried poinsettia leaves,
rose petals and a marigold head,
The fabrics were rolled around the rusty things and bundled together with a sprinkling of leaves and berries with the other items tucked among them.
Everything was wrapped in a vintage napkin and then encased in a mesh bag that formerly contained limes. It's hanging from a hook on the side of our woodshed in the backyard.
Thursday, January 13, 2011
the game of love
I've long made quilts and small fiber pieces and years ago I made heart brooches from vintage fabrics. For a while I added ribbons to them, making necklaces for my daughters.
Lately I've been enjoying making necklaces. Recently I was inspired by some work by Nina Bagley that has inspired me to combine both the fiber work and necklace making.
After making the fiber heart and starting to assemble the necklace, I realized many of the additions were game pieces, including several Industrial Chic and scrapbook components, hence, the name for the necklace, "the game of love."
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
journal mining
mostly I've been busy taking care of Mollie who has been sick.
Dalla tries to help.
In the meantime I've been going through years and years of old journals, notebooks, really. Some are bound but most are collections of half-sheets of paper punched with a single hole-punch and held together with a ring. At various times some of them have been in 3-ring binders and organized according to subject matter.
Some are notes taken at meetings from when I was a librarian.
Some are to do lists and range from as far back as when my children were small.
Many of them are small collections of quotes and these are what I've been mining.
"Everything comes to us that belongs to us if we create the capacity to receive it." ~ Rabindranath Tagore
Monday, January 10, 2011
powerful
The word for this week's Every Inchie Monday is powerful. This inchie represents "the power of gold" and is comprised of slivers of gold fabrics, paper, gold threads and beads and mesh, all attached to a red paint sample chip.
Sunday, January 9, 2011
heart in progress
front
This is a small fiber heart work in progress. Intended to be a part of a larger piece, we'll see how it goes.
winter wonderland
This fiber holiday greeting card is a lovely surprise I received yesterday from my friend Nina Lise.
"Each friend represents a world in us, a world possibly not born until they arrive, and it is only by this meeting that a new world is born."
- Anais Nin
"Each friend represents a world in us, a world possibly not born until they arrive, and it is only by this meeting that a new world is born."
- Anais Nin
Monday, January 3, 2011
needle pulling thread
eclectic inchie
Eclectic is the word for this week's Every Inchie Monday. Challenging is the word for how difficult it is (for me, anyway)to photograph something so small.