Monday, December 27, 2010

Happy New Year and New Work for Jonesboro!

Subscribe with Bloglines
First - Happy Holidays everyone! I hope you all had a warm and wonderful time with family and/or friends. We did both and are so thankful for the fact that we get to see all of the kids and parents, and that we enjoy it.

I am way behind in both keeping up the blog and getting these pieces made for the show in Jonesboro. I should have 10 pieces done by March 1st, so I can let them know sizes, numbers, etc. I am excited to report that today I have 2 pieces very well on their way and several sketches that I can't wait to get to.

As I move along this new path, I find I am really enjoying playing with fabric and metals, and making something arty and unusual and hopefully, beautiful, that others will enjoy. I know not all others will, but I hope some will. I like the Chinese-style coins on the right and the hammered and colored copper wire. I haven't yet decided how to attach the wire, or what I want the final effect to be.

Well, here is a HUGE detail photo of the top of the piece. Orange torn, hand-dyed fabric (dyed for me by my friend, Laura McGrath - http://periwinkle-quilts.blogspot.com/), copper sheeting that I annealed with a blow torch and hammered for texture, and a curly-cue of bronze mesh. Combining fabric with metals is a lot of fun and offers such a variety of textures and techniques.This is a very preliminary stage. Nothing is attached except the background, which is sandwiched with batting and black backing. But I am still thrilled with how much I have accomplished in 2 days. I don't believe I've been able to do this much in months and months.
I'd like to know your thoughts, ideas, suggestions, etc. about this piece, but please hurry! I have a lot more to do, both on this and upcoming work. And I am off work all this week, so I intend to be creating in leaps and bounds!

AND - have you considered your word for 2011?  I hope mine will be two-fold - Search and Discover. I intend to search out more techniques for working with metal on fabric and discover more about myself and  my fascination with both metal and fabric.
I hope you will think about what you'd like 2011 to be? Rather than making resolutions that will be broken within a week and make us feel guilty again, why not establish a word in your mind that will inspire you? I'd love for you to share them  - either on your blogs or here, on mine.

Thanks for looking and have a Happy New Year!

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Sketchbook Challenge

Subscribe with Bloglines
I have just joined Lyric Kinard's Sketchbook Challenge for next year. I have several sketchbooks in a variety of sizes. Perhaps this challenge will help me fill them up faster. And improve my sketching skills along the way.

We have just finished putting up the outside Christmas decorations. For the first time in my life, I get to have outdoor lights! I was going to put them up, but when I climbed up the little ladder on the porch, things got a little tilty. Fortunately, Steve came to the rescue and put them up aftet I put all the little clips on the keep them on the roof. What a guy. We put the tree up this morning and got the lights on (multi this year). We had to stop and do the outside because it's supposed to rain cats and dogs tomorrow. So we I can finish the inside tomorrow. Steve raked the entire yard and is a bit whipped, so I won't push him today. He has to get the stuff down from the attic. And he does help decorate the tree.

As far as art - not much going on. I did get the background for a new copper piece stitched together, but the copper paddles I was using fell kind of flat against this piece of dull green fabric. I'll have to use some other colors. Since I learned how to make alcohol inks this week, I think I'll go make some and paint some copper paddles darker. Great idea! No photos right now, sorry.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

New Studio!

Subscribe with Bloglines
Well - the time has come and now I can share some photos of my new studio! I am so thrilled. Steve was so generous in taking out the twin beds. In his words, it really did sort of look like "a yard sale" with all of the stuff piled on the beds and everywhere else I could find to stash it. He has been an absolute gem in wanting to do this right. His eye for detail is spot-on and I am so grateful. It was also quite nostalgic for him to turn this completely over to me. We removed all semblance of the boys living there. He did have a couple of moments, but he was still all for it.

After my good friend, Lynne Lanning (Quilting Quest Quilt Shop!!) was kind enough to take the beds over to my mom's in her pickup truck to store, I cleared the room. Sorry I didn't take "before" pictures, but it was total chaos.

Last weekend we drove to Charlotte to IKEA to get the shelving. What I had seen online wasn't nearly big enough when I saw it in person. We did find something even better and it's terrific.

Here are the 2 shelving units we purchased. They can actually be used vertically or horizontally. I chose to use them horizontally, as I felt like they gave me more usable storage space.


Steve really wanted me to have a good place to work. He was concerned that I be comfortable and have good views all around me. Now I can see out the window on my left (no photo - duh), my stash shelves on the right, the doorway & hallway so I can tell when he's coming in without startling me (!) -



So now I have no reason not finish enough pieces for the show in April in Jonesboro, Arkansas. uh oh. ! ;)






I didn't have a design wall up yet and Steve had decided he wanted mine to be mounted on the wall and be framed. wow. I would probably be the only fiber artist I knew with a framed design wall. He thought about it some more and decided that a nice sized cork board would work (and relieve him of having to figure out how to frame the design board! lol!). I covered the cork part with flannel and Steve stapled it in place. It's not that large, but I work fairly small, so it's perfect for me. You can see a bit of the design board in this photo -



Thanks to Laurie and Ian (our kids) for their terrific taste in lighting fixtures. We went to Lowe's to look for one like they had, but they didn't have one exactly like it. We found this one, instead, and it works perfectly. I can change the arm direction and point the little spot lights wherever I need them. I love this fixture.




I promise to get better photos when it is all complete.

We intend to add a little more storage in a couple of weeks. I need a place to put my thread out in reachable distance from my sewing/work table. And there might be a bit of rearranging, but not much. Thank you to my incredibly supportive husband. I am a lucky woman!

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Featured Artist!!??

Subscribe with Bloglines
I have to share the good news I received last week. A lot of people have heard this, but I can't help but be thrilled, so I'm repeating it here. I received a wonderful email from Nancy Chrisman, representing the Women's Advisory Council for St. Bernard's Development Foundation, Inc. in Jonesboro, Arkansasa (a non-profit organization supporting the mission of St. Bernards Regional Medical Center), inviting me to be their featured artist for their exhibit in April 2011!!! The net proceeds from the show are donated to The Flo & Phil Jones Hospice House in Jonesboro. The Council raises money from a silent auction, from vendors' booths and from sponsors.

Fabulous! Nancy said they could easily have space for 20-30 pieces of my work, since I work fairly small (not larger than 36" any direction). My dilemma is that I only have 10 pieces at this time that could be featured and sold (they appreciate a 20% donation from the sales). Holy Toledo! I have until March 1st, 2011, so I'm not too concerned. I'm sure I can get at least 10 made by then. If I work at it!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I have been moving in a completely different direction with my art lately. I am an ardent admirer of Mary Hettmansperger and have taken the leap to using copper with my fabric. It is so much fun! I have a Fat Boy Bernzomatic propane torch for annealing copper sheeting! Woohoo! Is that ever a blast! Can't you just see me with a blow torch!!?? I hammer copper wire and have some beautiful color-coated wire. I play with copper foil and I got some Mica to have fun with, too. So - here are some not-so-great photos (sorry - copper is very difficult to photograph well).

This is the first piece I made. I used some tiny cloisonne' beads (on the right) that I just love, as well as the two in the center of the copper that I made with fabric. The copper piece has been annealed (torched!!!) and hammered for texture. The copper paddles have been hammered and then tied onto the copper sheet with very fine blue-coated copper wire. The pinkish-beige backing is actually paper ribbon and I hand-stitched this onto the multi-brown background. The small blue dot on the tiny copper piece is a French knot of embroidery floss.


This piece I call "Verdigris I". It is not my favorite piece. I stitched a piece of cheesecloth that I dyed over a piece of green and blue fabric that I also dyed. Copper leaves and shapes are annealed and hammered for texture. Most pieces are held onto the backing with teeny tiny brads. One rectangular piece with a bent copper bead is tied on with the fine red wire and the paddles are stitched down with thread. The square in the upper right corner is copper foil. What appears to be a painting is some thread that I had stitched together with water soluble stabilizer. A piece of mica is on top of that to hold it in place. Fun techniques - not crazy about the outcome.


"Verdigris II" is a little better. This has 3 layers of cloth on a foam core base. The top layer of fabric is one I had previously rusted and thought it would work well. Again - lots of fun techniques here. Pounded wire into shapes, used leftover strips of copper sheeting to make the curly-cues, and more mica and copper foil with tiny brackets.


This last one Steve named "Reeds". We think it looks like sunrise at the beach or on a marsh, and the various colored and hammered copper wires are the reeds. When the light hits the colored wire, it is really beautiful. I'm quite thrilled with this one. Steve says it's not leaving the house. Guess he likes it! 8>)

I haven't decided whether to use some of these in the Jonesboro show or not. Steve thinks I should, to show part of the "journey" I'm on with my art. I'll have to think about it. In the meantime, I need to get back into the studio and get some work done, so there can be a show!!
Thanks for looking and feel free to comment.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

A New Blog Year

Subscribe with Bloglines
So - it's been a year since I last blogged. Steve and I went to New England a year ago and I took so many photos that I was overwhelmed with them all, and when it came time to choose some for the blog, I abandoned it.

So now - Steve and I have just returned from a quick weekend holiday at the Outer Banks (OBX for those who don't know). I had never been that far up the NC coast and it had been about 40 years since Steve had. I'm not sure what I expected, but it wasn't a Myrtle Beach type of jammed up 3 story cottages and no view of ocean no matter where you drove. I felt somewhat like someone from another country coming to visit Texas and finding out there aren't really cowboys and Indians riding the wild west. I guess I expected there to be a lot more openness.

So - my main reason for going was to see the wild ponies up at Corova Beach - where the OBX road ends and you have to drive on the beach. It's important to check your tide tables before attempting this, which we did. Now, my 2009 Honda CRV has all-wheel drive, which is always good. Not quite great for driving on sand, but okay. It was the ground clearance that was the problem. Like a snow plow - it tried to push the sand, but wasn't strong enough.

So - here are the lovely ruts in the sand and here is Steve trying to shovel the snow out from under the engine.




He wasn't able to do that, but a nice gentleman from Utah stopped and pulled us a short way out so we could get back to the road.



Unfortunately, the nice gentleman didn't pull us out quite far enough, so Steve got the shovel out again. He still wasn't able to dig us out. And then another nice gentleman with a much larger pickup truck came to our aid and actually did pull us out far enough. Who says size doesn't matter? hah! In ground clearance, it certainly does!



We gave up on the ponies and decided to drive south to check out the other 2 lighthouses. We'd seen the Currituck light and it was pretty cool. But everyone takes pictures of light houses and I had a new camera, so I took this photo, instead.



We were disappointed in the Bodie Island Light - it is currently covered in metal scaffolding. You could see it through the scaffolding, but who wants a photo of metal scaffolding?

I was talking with Keri as we continued our drive south to the Cape Hatteras Light. Suddenly, on the sound side (right) of the road, we saw what appeared to be several large half-moon-shaped kites.



I quickly hung up from Keri & Steve pulled the car over. There were about a dozen sail boarders taking advantage of the 30+ mph winds. It was so exciting to watch them speed across the water and then fly up into the air! One guy was definitely a hot dogger and waved at us while I took his photo - too bad I didn't catch it! 8>) But these are some of the fun ones I did get.




Those guys really move and often look like they are about to run up onto the beach, but manage to turn on a dime and keep moving like the wind! Definitely a sport for the extremely fit!



The Hatteras light was nice and I took the standard tourist photos, which I won't bore you with, and we went back to our room (which did not have an ocean view!). We had some time before dinner, so we decided to take a walk on the nearby pier. The waves were incredible, thanks to Igor. "No Swimming" signs everywhere.



But the signs didn't deter this young daredevil - it took him forever to fight the waves and current to get out far enough to make it worthwhile, but he finally did.



When we got back to the motel after a fabulous steamed clambake at the Black Pelican (a MUST-DO!), Steve went out to have fun feeding the gulls, although it looked like they really meant business!






We'd had more than enough sun, sand (stinging our faces, arms & legs with the wicked wind) and waves and, not having been able to see the wild ponies, decided to cut it short by a day so we could relax where we really enjoy it best -




And when Steve had filled the bird feeder, our resident wildlife were glad we were home, too. (there is actually more than one bird - but he was the only one willing to pose!)



So - back to work tomorrow. Blogger has definitely changed during the past year, so I apologize for the erratic photos and I fully intend to get more up to speed with it, but bear with me. I promise to post about my art and show some photos of the new copper stuff next time. Thanks for reading and enjoying my very short vacation with me! I hope you read again soon!