Monday, August 25, 2008

Journal Art Quilt Project

I was so excited last week to learn that my quilt "North Carolina Forests - Under Fire II" was juried into the Journal Art Quilts Project "Elements: Earth, Wind, Water, Fire" that will open at the International Quilt Festival in House at the end of October. It will also be in the IQG in Chicago in the Spring and I guess the IQF at Long Beach in the summer. Wonder if they will go to Lowell, too, or if they are too close together. The 2007 exhibit was split - half went to Long Beach and half to Lowell. A friend in Lowell said she went to see the exhibit and was drawn to a piece with beaches when she looked up and saw my name. That was pretty cool.

I have to say that the whining and complaining on the QA Digest has been very disgruntling. People whose quilts were not accepted throwing little mini-tantrums because they didn't know "why" their quilt wasn't chosen. This was the first year that Karey Bresenhan, found of the JQ Project, decided to have it juried so she wouldn't be overrun with a thousand little quilts. People were not happy about that, but entered anyway. Obviously - everyone couldn't be chosen. I don't know why mine was, but I am thrilled. Some of the names of well-known people (not the whiners) whose quilts weren't chosen really surprised me and made even prouder that mine was accepted. I wish I could post a photo of the quilt, but not until the show opens.

So Saturday I spend half the day driving around Winston-Salem looking for paper foil. I went to Michaels, AC Moore, JoAnn's Fabric, and some other little place. Not one of them sold foil. I was so psyched about doing a picture of the Northern Lights using some cool foil. Nada. I went home and tried to paint them - but just didn't do it justice. I should have ordered it last week when I saw it online. I have ordered it now, so one of these days I will get back to it and try to capture that glowing, undulating mass of brilliant greens and irridescent purples.

I've also decided that I'm going to get started on my Christmas cards to get them out of the way. (Also because I'm teaching a class making them in October.) Then I will make my Christmas gifts and then I will have Christmas time to play. I want to really focus on the butterfly project. I have pretty much figured out what I want to do, but can't make myself go to it. I really want to clean up and reorganize my studio before I begin so I can think clearly. I need a place to store my quilts (the ones I can't hang around the house because there's nowhere to hang them). I think I will use a skirt hanger that I believe someone on the QA digest mentioned. It hangs straight down but has several bars with clips for hanging them flat. I also need to find a better place for my boombox and cd's. I'm thinking I'll clear off the top of the dresser and put them up there, out of the way. Right now they are on one of the twin beds beside the pile of quilts. Things have a way of encroaching on the quilts - especially as my music library increases. Well - that will be a couple of months away. Man, I just know that as soon as Labor Day comes and goes, Christmas will feel like it's a month away and will creep up on us too quickly.

No photos this time. I'm sure I'll have some next week as the whole family is coming for Labor Day, which means I get to see my Cutie Patootie again!

Friday, August 15, 2008

I started teaching a new class on threadpainting last night at Lynne's shop. I was actually better prepared for this one, having fused shapes onto background fabrics for them to practice beginning stitches on. They did well - they are all very good quilters, so that's no surprise. One of the students is particularly good and very fast. She will need to learn to slow down a bit, but I think next week when we move into making "real" stitches, she'll have to. I think it's a fun class and I think they'll be surprised at how well they will do and how much they will like it.

I finally got to Rocky Mount to see my quilt hanging in the Rocky Mount Arts Center (Imperial Centre). Steve drove and I was so happy that Keri and Abbie wanted to go with us. The building is an old tobacco warehouse that has been updated, but lots of things have been kept, like the old pipes and steam boiler, that give it so much charm. It's a very cool building


This is the sign you see when entering the gallery.


The gallery at the Arts Center is spacious and it was very well done. I was thrilled to see my quilt as one of the first pieces, hanging beside a painting the same size. They just looked so right - hanging there together. Judy Glover, from PAQA-South, also has a piece hanging in the show. Christine Zoller, whose work is fantastic, had a small, private wing to herself. Beautiful work.


This is so cool - mostly because I rarely get to see my work actually hanging in the show. It's a thrill to be juried into one, but then you just roll it up and ship it out and it's gone for a month or even a year, then it comes back. You have no interaction with it during that period. You don't know if it likes where it is hanging, whether the pieces on either side of it are playing nice with it, whether it is tucked away in some hidey hole where no one really notices it, or whether it is in a terribly lit place that makes it feel a bit woozy. You just don't know because you can't see it. It's always such a boon when someone from the Quiltart Digest attends a show and takes a photo for you, like my friend Karen did at the Schweinfurth last year. Speaking of the Schweinfurth, it's just about that time again...


So anyway, I think NC Forests Under Fire likes being next to this lovely painting. Maybe it thinks it's a firetruck. Color is right...
So here is a closeup. This was the second Forest Fire quilt I did. The first was totally practice and terrible, but I learned so much from that. Then I made this one and I learned even more. This was not right, as I saw it in my head. It was okay, but it wasn't just right. I have made the third and I think this one is just right. Unfortunately, I can't post it now because I'm waiting to hear if it is juried into the Journal Art Quilts project for the International Quilt Festival in Houston. I'll get that much anticipated email next week - Friday, I believe. Anxious.

There is a company called Artomat that bought up a bunch of old cigarette machines. They have placed them in very cool places, such as the Rocky Mount Arts Center, and they sell little boxes of art. Actually, you have to buy a token ($5.00) to purchase your little piece of art. Most of it is in a small box the size of a cigarette pack. Some of them have a little description above their slot that gives you a hint of what might be inside. Some of them are just a five dollar crap shoot. I bought a couple of tokens and gave Keri one. She got a cool block of wood (cigarette pack size) that had been painted and had a very simple, but cool, design drawn on it. I got this. I don't know who made it, but it was exactly right. Okay, I could have purchased a plate with the same design from the dollar store, but it wouldn't have come from an old cigarette machine with little boxes of hand-made art. And it wouldn't have been so serendipitously perfect.



We saw this lovely bit of roadside patchwork on the way back to Raleigh from Rocky Mount. I thought it had wonderful potential for an art quilt.


Back at Granny's and we had a lovely afternoon on the patio sipping wine and watching the hummingbirds fight over the feeder. Keri and Abbie and I played Scrabble and by then the wine was so relaxing that my brain went numb. I certainly didn't win. I didn't even come in second. But I really didn't care.
Steve's Mom and Abbie went up to Bridgehampton for Memorial Day and brought back several old quilts. Granny (Steve's mom) is 91 years old. Her grandmother made this quilt. It has some damage and shouldn't be used, but Abbie just wanted to show it to us. I would have told her sooner had I known we would be using it for our blanket. Needless to say, there weren't a lot of queen-sized beds back in the day this was made. We were both "short-sheeted". It's a lovely old piece and should be restored.

I didn't get to see my cutiepatootie Sarah over the weekend. She was with her dad. I really miss that little munchkin.

So - this weekend I have a ton of things to do. Seems August 22nd is the magic day this month. Receive the email from JAQ, get my Abstracts Dancing quilt ready to ship off on Monday to the Threadlines exhibit at the University of Missouri, get some good photos of one of my quilts to submit to the Schweinfurth (only one is the right size), and try to finish my piece for the PAQA-South Member's Show - Reflections. Not sure it's going to work, but I still have the vision, so I'm going to keep trying. Busy busy busy!

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

It's been a couple of weeks since I last blogged because I didn't want to post anything without the photos. Now I have them and can add a bit more interest. There is still not a lot happening this summer. Kind of boring, actually.

First I want to post my piece for Breaking Traditions' "With One Voice" exhibit that will be held in Novi, Michigan, in November. The $10 registration fee will be donated to the American Cancer Society for Virginia Spiegel. The exhibit will travel to several cities - I believe there are 3 in Michigan at this time - before returning home to me. It is in the car and ready to be taken to the post office today.
Here is a photo of my art quilt:


"With One Voice" was created to celebrate those people or agencies or organizations who do good for the community, the county, the country, whether it is thanking your neighbor for shoveling your driveway or an organization you'd like to thank for doing something wonderful.

NC Kids Adoption and Foster Care Network is the organization I want to thank, even though it's also my employer. We are the Resource Exchange for the NC DSS where all social workers register their foster children who are legally free for adoption. Our Family Service Reps answer questions to families about the North Carolina children and the NC process of becoming foster or adoptive families. I personally write the profiles of the children and scan their photos. This is all put into our Photo Adoption Listing Service (PALS), on http://www.adoptnckids.org/, http://www.adoptuskids.org/, and http://www.adoption.com/. When a familiy interested in adopting sees a child they feel a connection with, they call us (1-877-625-4371) and our FSR's work with them. We successfully assisted in 30 adoptions in the last year and are thrilled to have made a difference. So here's to NC Kids!
I found a photograph on Flickr that I flipped over and wanted to try to adapt to fabric. I contacted the photographer through her blog and she emailed me with permission to use the photo. So now I had to figure out how to create ocean foam on a wet sandy beach. I posted to the Quilt Digest and received numerous suggestions from using Angelina fibers to melting celophane, to using cheesecloth, Solvey water soluble stabilizer, and threadpainting. I gathered the information all together and visualized how it might work out.

I had 5 yards of Vilene, which is a heavier water soluble stabilizer than Solvey (used a lot by needle felters), and used it doubled, as suggested by Heidi Lund. Heidi's suggestions most closely correlated with what was in the back of my mind. She said to use the water soluble stuff doubled, and to use different threads and metallic thread. She said that if I didn't rinse ALL of the stabilizer out, it might be easier to shape and retain the shape. Well - she was right. Here is the first part of that process:


I hooped this in an 8" wooden hoop to prevent too much draw up. I used a gold/brown towel on the background so it would show up better, but the lacey foam is pretty delicate. I used a white shiney polyester thread first, then highlighted it with Sulky's Sliver Metallic. Here is a closeup - if it helps:

This is just a practice piece and the first step, so the final one won't be so round. I will add color and some other things for a surprise. Hint: those holes were intentional and will be filled! We'll see how it goes after this weekend.
Speaking of this weekend, I hope to drive to the Rocky Mount Arts Center to view the exhibit and see my "North Carolina Forests Under Fire" quilt. The VCR in our bedroom died over the past weekend and we've trying to decide what to do. New TV- wait - he's been pacing about it all week. So - maybe I'll get to see the show this week and maybe not. And maybe I can post a photo next week of the show.