I am sure there will be other meetings today, as well, but I really enjoyed seeing Margy and Lyuda in Birmingham yesterday. We also met Caroline and her mother from Sweden. There was so much to see, and purchases to make (or avoid in my case!). The standard of art quilts was high, and there were many that I photographed. There were several exhibits that did not allow photographs, which was a pity, but understandable as they were selling catalogues. I will post my photos to a Flickr account later and give the link.
I love how quilting brings us new friends!
Julia
Friday, August 9, 2013
Thursday, August 1, 2013
Memories
When I ask people about their memories, the first thing that
comes up is how simple things were “back then”.
We remember riding our bikes without a helmet, sitting in the front seat
of the car, eating watermelon with seeds, or when a phone had a rotary dial and
was attached to the wall with a cord.
My, what a simpler time.
My quilt represents how we start with a very simple
beginning and as we branch out, our lives become more cluttered and full. Even when I think about my early quilting
days, I started with a simple pattern, a few colours and quilting that blended
into the background. As my quilting has progressed over the years, the patterns
have become smaller, the quilting more detailed, more colours are being used,
different threads and even the odd bead has been added. I cherish those early memories, but also look
forward to continuing on the road of creating more great memories in my future.
Techniques: hand applique, hand embroidery (French knots,
running stitch, whipped running stitch)
Materials: commercial cottons, embroidery floss,
beads, perle cotton thread
The Next Theme: The Sound of Silence
Silence
can be a positive thing, like peace after your noisy kids are asleep, or a
negative thing, like people not speaking after an argument. There is also the
silence in bars of music, Beethoven going deaf, snow falling, owls' flight, the
global winter, Simon and Garfunkel, to name but a few!
With
modern life and its constant twitter, silence can be elusive.
What
do you think of when you think of the sound of silence?
Good
luck and have fun!
Julia
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
The Factory Girls
The Summer holds a challenge for me to read as much as I possibly can. For our June/July challenge themed "memories" my mind turned to novels, conjuring characters and creating their fictional memories. Next life, a novelist! Oh to have such a talent.
In the meantime here is my summer novel, created in the form of a small, whimsical quilt. "The factory girls" Can you imagine their story? Can you imagine their memories?
Image transfer, piecing, applique, machine stitching.
With special thanks to Betty London for providing the photograph that was used in this piece.
quilted by Heidi Wulfraat
TBCBEM
Memories, how do you chose one? I couldn't.
So I decided to try and represent them all using colour and then explore the way memories are formed, reinforced and then lost through fragmentation. Research of scanning electron microscope photos and the explanation of the formation of memories gave me the starting point for the quilting patterns.
The colours: walking through long grass, misty mornings, joy, pain, all can be captured through colour.
The strips and dots are memories, some overlapping, some being reinforced and some disintegrating. The quilting well that's the science and then the recall of events. Hanging from the bottom are the ends of the binding cord with a knot, so I won't forget.
And that weird title, that happened when my daughter, a psychologist, walked in and saw the quilt and said that's the bio cognitive basis or explanation of memory It's unwieldy but the perfect name and it stuck.
The quilt is made from cottons, some commercial some hand dyed, Super soft polyester wadding, cord, beads and 100 weight invasafil thread. The background is pieced and the surface fabrics stitched down with straight stitch close to the edge. this will allow the fabrics to fray over time much as memories do.
Margy
MORNING APPLE
This theme
was the easiest for me among the previous ones.
We all are
full of memories especially when the half of the life has gone. These memories are
different – good and bad. I try to keep in mind only good memories and very
seldom remember bad things.
I made this
quilt in memory of my grandmother and it has taken only two days, may be because
I wanted to make something about grandma for a long time.
My grandma
had a long and very difficult life. She was born in 1890 and gave birth for 8
babies but only 5 from them grew till their twenties. These five were two sons
and three daughters. Her husband died when she was 40. One son had disappeared in
1941 during The World War II and grandma has been waiting for him till the end
of her life…Second son was killed in 1945 during the war between the USSR and Japan . Daughters were with her till
the end.
I spent each
summer at grandma’s house. It was really small house with only three little rooms
which were full of things that grandma made including weaved rugs. So I put
similar little rugs in my quilt. My grandma lived in a village close to the
mountains and there were two rivers which skirted the yard so background
symbolizes mountains and rivers. Water in the rivers usually has looked grey
that’s why I chose this color for background. There were also a lot of linen
things at grandma’s house: curtains, table runners, towels. So I decided to use
this fabric for background. But the best
of all was big orchard that she owned. There were different kinds of apples
each summer so I sewed apple from many pieces which symbolizes different tastes
and colors of apples. I'm an early bird. And usually first thing I did at grandma's after awaking I went to orchard, picked apple which was covered with morning dew and ate it. That's why there are beads on apple.
The Lost Garden
Mono-printed and painted calico, machine-quilted and hand-embroidered.
And some close-ups:
Greta
Givergny
The difficulty with this theme was deciding which memory I would turn into a quilt.
I am currently hand-piecing a quilt using a multicolored batik fabric in soft pastel hues that ofen reminded me of Monet's wonderful garden in Givergny. While I was stuggling with my first idea a few weeks ago several of our group members wrote about their visit to Givergny. I decided to take this as a sign that Monet's garden in Givergny would be a much betterstarting idea for a quilt.
I first saw paintings by Monet at the musée du jeu de paume in Paris during a one day class trip in 5th grad. Later I saw a few paintings by Monet in a museum in New York the first time I went to the USA. As I grew up near Paris about one hour drive from Givergny I had had the opportunity to visit this garden several times. For years I have had two reproductions of pictures of the water lilies hanging in my home.
The quilt is made using the english paper piecing technic with 1/2" hexagons. This technic holds also memories of my City and Guild course where I used it for the first time.
As I wanted to give the quilt a more modern look I decided to machine quilt with a zig-zag stitch around each flower and each flower center using two different variegated threads.
I am currently hand-piecing a quilt using a multicolored batik fabric in soft pastel hues that ofen reminded me of Monet's wonderful garden in Givergny. While I was stuggling with my first idea a few weeks ago several of our group members wrote about their visit to Givergny. I decided to take this as a sign that Monet's garden in Givergny would be a much betterstarting idea for a quilt.
I first saw paintings by Monet at the musée du jeu de paume in Paris during a one day class trip in 5th grad. Later I saw a few paintings by Monet in a museum in New York the first time I went to the USA. As I grew up near Paris about one hour drive from Givergny I had had the opportunity to visit this garden several times. For years I have had two reproductions of pictures of the water lilies hanging in my home.
The quilt is made using the english paper piecing technic with 1/2" hexagons. This technic holds also memories of my City and Guild course where I used it for the first time.
As I wanted to give the quilt a more modern look I decided to machine quilt with a zig-zag stitch around each flower and each flower center using two different variegated threads.
Material: batik fabrics, cotton thread for piecing and quilting, poly-cotton batting
Technic: english paper piecing, machine quilting
Sabine
'Two Little Chairs' by Linden Lancaster
This piece tells the story of an empty nest. These little chairs have been kicking around my home for over 25 years. Now they are a constant reminder of my two children, now grown up and flown to the 'Big Smoke'.
'Two Little Chairs' by Linden Lancaster |
![]() |
'Two Little Chairs' detail |
![]() |
'Two Little Chairs' detail |
Dissolution
In psychology the
concept of tabula rasa is that at birth the mind is a blank slate and that as
we go through life we collect a store of sensory images and write on this slate.
I propose that these sensory images, or memories, create a map of our lives that
in turn creates our self identity. When we lose our ability to access this map
we lose our sense of who we are, our sense of self.
In Alzheimer’s, the
pathways that allow us to connect to our memories become interrupted by
inflammatory reactions within the brain tissue. At first these interruptions
are intermittent, much like a short circuit in an electrical wire, and account for
the good days and bad days that Alzheimer sufferers experience. As the disease
progresses the connections become permanently damaged and access to the
knowledge and memories permanently lost.
Along with the loss of
memories there is a loss of self identity, the knowledge of who we are, who
others are, how we relate to the world around us. In the earlier stages of the
disease the sufferer is often aware of the gaps that are appearing in his
knowledge and awareness. This is often a time of confusion, fear, anxiety and
helplessness.
The word dissolution
is used here to describe the fading away and gradual disappearance of the
memories and therefore of the self awareness that makes us who we are.
The colored areas in
the quilt represent the parts of the self map that are still accessible. The
quilted but white areas represent where the memories are being lost but may
still be intermittently accessible, while the large blank areas are where they
are no longer accessible.
The image of the
elderly face is isolated from everything and gradually disintegrating,
disappearing as the sense of self dissolves. The image is dissolving and
becoming less solid in appearance. The eyes show the fear and confusion of the
earlier stages of the disease when there is still enough awareness to realize
what is happening.
The materials are hand
dyed cottons and cheesecloth and mono printed fabrics that have been fused,
painted, thread painted and quilted.
Memories of turtle hunting and turtle races
This quilt is a memory of some moments in our lives with grandchildren. The boys were 6 and 4 and were visiting from Vermont. They went fishing on our stockpond but soon decided it would be more fun to catch turtles. I took the photo as they were about to quit. They had quite a stock of turtles -- all sizes--and they wanted to keep them in the water in a stock tank. Several days later before they left for home we had a Great Turtle Race. The big turtles got a chance to trudge to another stock pond and the little ones got a ride back to their pond.
The image of the boys, grandpa and the boat were made with a technique -- upside-down applique that I learned in a class at Quilt University. The shoreline involves fusible applique. The boy's features are painted on. This was such a fun quilt to make with all the memories attached to the image.
The image of the boys, grandpa and the boat were made with a technique -- upside-down applique that I learned in a class at Quilt University. The shoreline involves fusible applique. The boy's features are painted on. This was such a fun quilt to make with all the memories attached to the image.
![]() |
Turtle hunters |
![]() |
detail of shoreline |
![]() |
Detail of boat and one turtle |
Holiday
This theme was quite a challenge. There were so many
thoughts about this word, many positive and some negative, so my first thought
was to make a weave of positive and negative memories, printed words on dark
and light fabrics and then weave them together.
The word "Memories" also made me think of
all those lovely holidays I and my family spent in Italy every spring for many
years , about 35-40 years ago. Trying to interpret this lovely time I painted,
with acrylic paint, a seascape with sand, water and sky. The beach is stamped
with irregular circles also seed beads and some cotton beads and stitching were added in
order to attain texture. Parasols, sun
and glitter were fused. The piece is hand quilted with silk and metallic
threads.
My intention for this quilt was to make a simplified seascape
which should give an impression of a peaceful and lovely time on the beach.
This was the first time I made a wholecloth quilt
painted with acrylics.
Material used: Cotton fabrics, acrylic paint,
seed beads, cotton beads, silk and metallic threads, cotton and polyester batting.
Snookums
Some memories are strong and return like waves on the shore. This memory is over 60 years old!
At a very tender childhood age I was admitted to a hospital for treatment to my damaged finger. My hospital room in a big old house looked out onto the seashore and I could smell the sea. I remember so clearly how scared I was in that big bed, until a trip to the toilet acquainted me with the hospital cat, Snookums.
Snookums came back to bed with me for comfort, but that didn't last long!
I have always loved that cat and all cats ever since.
Further on, most childhood weekends and holidays were spent on family sailing adventures. The movement of waves against the hull and wind in the air is instilled into my memories.
Further on, most childhood weekends and holidays were spent on family sailing adventures. The movement of waves against the hull and wind in the air is instilled into my memories.
My choice of blue fabrics relates to memories of the seaside. Also a more recent visit to Yves Klein exhibition knocked my socks off me with his use of blue. My range of fabrics relate to Klein blue, as close as I could manage, moving to greenish shades of the sea.
From my large scale naive sketch of a cat (to reflect my childhood), I machine appliqued pieces over white fabric background using button hole stitch. The facial features were machine stitched for additional enhancement and bugle beads finished the watchful eyes.
No binding was applied - rather a pillowcase finish allowing the waves to continue the rhythmic motion of memories.
Castle of dreams
When I was about 9 or 10, we went occasionally to my grandmother's house. This was in the era of motorbike and sidecar and then a very old Austin 7 car, so 30-mile journeys were not frequent. Not far from my childhood home stood a fairytale castle hidden in the woods, which you could catch a brief glimpse of, rising up out of its moat, from that car journey. We always waited with excitement to catch sight of the magical place for an instant before the woods swallowed it up. Winter was better, because there were fewer leaves on the trees. That castle (Leeds in Kent, UK) is now fully open to the public and easily seen from every angle. I go and stroll round the grounds when I visit my mother, and you can picnic in the park for free. It is stunning, but the magic of elusiveness has gone.
I found a piece of polyester with satin blocks, which absolutely conveyed castle walls to me. Bonded onto hand-dyes, it formed the centrepiece. Other hand-dyes and commercial cottons appliqued. The plaid for the doorway came from a fabric my mother used for some tablemats, and, as she has been in hospital for a month with a broken wrist, I wanted to include that - it also has a portcullis vibe, which seemed apt. Entry to the castle is by boat, obviously!
When I get home to my studio in September, my intention is to add some variation of value to the shrubs with paint or crayon. I have very limited supplies at my mother's house.
Remembering
I thought a great deal about this theme. As part of my process, I asked my mother to send me pictures of the two of us together, hoping that one of the pictures she sent could be recreated for this challenge.
As it turned out, it was the combination of the note she sent to accompany the pictures she selected that led me to this piece. My mother sent pictures from a family vacation. In her note, my mother wrote, "Do you remember this wonderful day on the dunes?" Well, if you saw my face in the picture, you'd know that I had a completely different feeling about the day and hence, a completely different memory of it.
That got me thinking. Two people may share some of the same facts of an event (dunes; summer vacation; Mom, Dad, and me), but our emotions, circumstances, and biases can tumble up those facts into a completely different recollection. As time goes by, our memories often become more of a collage, as opposed to a clear picture, of what happened. Let me reference the following from documentation from the New Jersey criminal court system, describing in-court instruction for witness identification:
Human memory
is not foolproof. Research has revealed
that human memory is not like a video recording that a witness need only replay
to remember what happened. Memory
is far more complex.[1] The process of remembering
consists of three stages: acquisition -- the perception of the original event;
retention -- the period of time that passes between the event and the eventual
recollection of a piece of information; and retrieval -- the stage during which
a person recalls stored information.
At each of these stages, memory can be affected by a variety of factors.[2]
With all this in mind, I decided to created a piece that tried to visually represent the passage of time on memory. Acquisition, retention and retrieval -- three different elements of remembering -- are braided together to create our personal memories.
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Looking for inspiration
I had an idea for Memories, but it didn't work the way I wanted, so I went to my fabrics and thread to find inspiration. This fragment of fabric from past work, together with the silk embroidery-thread from a forgotten century - maybe they will play a part?
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Quilting holiday in rural France
Quilting in Peace Studio |
If you love quilting and quiet holidays, and happen to find yourself traveling to Europe, especially France or the UK, then you can’t go past spending a few days, or more, at Quilting In Peace, in rural Brittany, France, owned by Lucy and Derek Allan.
Having just spent a week in this glorious place, I can attest to the restorative qualities of the environment and the inspiration a lovely studio, in the countryside and away from home, can offer!
The latest reveal from the Latitude Quilters occurred during my visit, so I was able to sit with my little laptop and enjoy the visual feast that unfolded on Reveal Day!
After some time in the UK visiting family in various places, I took the night ferry from Portsmouth to St Malo, France - an overnight journey on a very comfortable ferry with well appointed cabins. Hiring a car in St Malo, the journey to St Vran was a challenge, as I'm not used to driving a left hand drive car, on the right side of the road, and my French is subsistence level, to say the least. Only once did I find myself on the wrong side of the road - to the astonishment of the person in the car behind me! Fortunately, it was on a quiet country road, so no harm came to anyone.
Quilting in Peace, St Vran, Brittany |
Lucy and Derek run a small B&B, quilting breaks and workshops, or you can just do as I did and sit-and-sew in the beautifully appointed studio, with a feast of fabrics and notions on offer. Coming from overseas, I arranged with Lucy to use her machines and equipment as I was not able to take much with me. If you want to do this, you need to make sure you arrange this with Lucy when booking.
Lucy runs workshops and often has fellow patchworkers and quilters come along for a day to 'sit and sew'. I met two wonderful friends of Lucy's when they spent a day at the studio during my visit.
The B&B and studio are housed in a fully restored, 300 year old French farmhouse, with a beautiful outlook over surrounding countryside. When it’s warm, you can sit outside with your coffee and enjoy the sunshine and flowers! There is plenty to see and do in surrounding towns and villages, with views and experiences to stimulate any quilter!
So, if you need some time to yourself to be creative, you can't go past spending a few days - or more - at Quilting in Peace. At the end of my stay, my work is far from finished, but is something to look forward to completing at home. Lucy is waiting for a photo to replace the ‘unfinished’ work she last saw!
For more about my trip to 'Quilting in Peace', France and the UK, see my blog.
Friday, May 31, 2013
ORANGE BEAD
I started
thinking about this theme from finding information about “what is mark-making?”
Here what I’ve
found:
“Mark-making is the process of applying pencil to paper or applying
anything to anything! (scratching marks in plaster, using pen and ink, paint on
canvas, anything that leaves a mark on the page could be considered mark making
that's what is so nice about it:)”
Definition:
“Mark making is a term
used to describe the different lines, patterns, and textures we create in an
artwork. It applies to any art material(s) we use on any surface(s), not only
paint on canvas or pencil on paper. A dot made with a pencil, a line created
with a pen, a swirl painted with a brush, these are all types of mark making.”
Ok, now I know
for sure what mark is about!
The other
question was: What I can leave as my mark?
1)
My fingertips?
2)
My hand contour?
3)
My signature?
4)
Colours- my
favorites for now are violets and greens;
5)
Lines which I like-
smooth
6)
The technique that I
like – simple and easy to sew
After summarizing
and discarding unnecessary this is what appeared.
I used some of my dyed and stamped fabrics, beads, machine and hand quilting, weaved circle.
Leave your mark.
For this challenge quilt: Leave Your Mark I chose to leave marks in several ways on white cotton fabric. First I stitched the fabric for shibori. Then I dyed it in an indigo vat and pulled out the stitching when it was rinsed and dried and dyed the peach fabric using MX procion dyes. The quilting marks on the blue fabric were added with indigo-dyed rayon embroidery thread. Altogether a very satisfying way to leave marks.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)