Before I could mix up new dyestock I prepped a small lot of cloth to use up the leftovers from last year. They were stored optimally in a small cooler and I took them out for the first time yesterday so they've had a full day to come around to ambient temperature.
The method was a hasty "dunk it in here" parfait affair - I was anxious to get the squeeze bottles cleaned and ready for the new colors. There are all kinds of cottons here from an embossed upholstery woven to some squares of humble, unbleached muslin. I'll give this bunch until tomorrow morning....
I made a big mess and am not inclined to clean it up right away. It's hot, I'm tired and there's a lotta later in today still.
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Thursday, March 15, 2012
so far so good
After a few hours stewing in it's juices I rinsed this one in cold water to flush off the excess dyes and to not disturb the soywax in the process.
I actually left a few pins in the thing having missed a few corners here and there in my basting frenzy so I had to be a cautious and gentle washer woman. A firehose would have been useful. Keep in mind this is four by six feet and three and four layers thick in places.
The balmy Georgia spring day has turned ugly on us. Thunder is rolling and the sky has turned all dark and broody.
Most of the wax is out of this one now and I am really pleased with the potential of the process so far. It's dark here, soaking wet and I've hung it over the rolling rack in the rain.
There will be some discharging and painting in a few places that are still needing to be pulled together design-wise. Correcting value deficiencies this way is more fun than it should be.
post-lunch/pre-nap
yes, I remembered my bartender's apron and gloves.
The entire piece is crammed into a two gallon steel tub along with about a quart of dye and a gallon of special sauce. I'll do the reveal later today or tomorrow.
not a crime scene clean up unless the big piece turns out really sucky. this will be the first table mopper of the season, formerly a pristine 24" square vintage damask table napkin. I wonder what the mistress of the household would have thought!
waiting
It's hot enough outside ...the dyes are out of the refrigerator and this piece is well and thoroughly waxed . I let the soywax get very hot and in most places it's penetrated through to the plastic tablecloth underneath.
When we get back from lunch, I'll don the gloves (don't forget) and apron and mix up the monkey blood I have in mind for overdyeing this...pictures later.
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
basting sails
All of a sudden, it's shorts weather, and once chores and running around were out of the way, I took a chunk of this day off to do some more basting.
Some people may thing it a terrible waste of time but my basting stitches are like Attilla's march and so I'm perfectly happy snipping and ripping if something needs relocation. I don't even bother sinking a knot at the end of a thread; a back stitch or two will suffice. Pins are such a pain.
I'm going to work on both these large pieces at the same time and have plans to do some some soy wax resist and direct dye painting on both pieces before I make any decision about if, and how, any permanent stitching, machine or hand, happens.
larger issues
there's just no telling where larger spaces and room to work will take a person.
several of the tablecloths in that lot are what I would call "service weight". Although they have a beautiful pattern loomed through, there is almost no diagonal give which made me think it would be a good base to build on ..but it's so starkly white.
The empty space has as much presence at the shapes I've basted on....there are more.
(6'x6')
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
blizzard
There's a snowstorm in my studio! I lucked into an enormous lot of damask tablecloths on ebay last week. I am going to have to haul this and the rest to the laundromat for a harsh thrash before any dyefest can begin..there's starch, fabric softener and other loving touches that will get in the way of a good dye result.
This is day 1 of a short stay-cation for Jim and I. This morning we are both doing chores but I am hoping to persuade him to a late lunch and a movie since the rain has put a cramp in his plans for the day.
I spent the morning filling the envelopes that have come rolling in with scraps and snips from baskets all over the place.
I feel like a crack dealer, giving away the "first taste" of hand dyed vintage cloth for free...and then, they'll be baaaack for more! Off to the post office.
Richland WA, Huntington Beach CA, Berea
Ky, Mascotte FL, Calimesa CA, Canfield OH, Wiscassett ME, and
Crescent City CA – heads up! Your packages are on the way!
I'm also fooling with Colin's little Canon Elph since he has misplaced (somewhere in the hell of his possessions) my little Fuji. It's got too many options.
I recently started wearing a watch again because I am constantly (but silently) bitching out my customers for not knowing what date or time it is.
It's a good thing I have a few days off.
If one more fool replies "ten minutes ago" when I ask what DATE and TIME an incident occurred, I might hunt them down in whatever timezone they are in and slap them silly.
And go ahead and give me another phone number without the area code, you huckleberry, and see what happens...THERE'S A WIDE WORLD OUT THERE!! I feel better now...
Sunday, March 11, 2012
the saturday mail
The replies have started coming in from the runner-ups in the giveaway and I never imagined that people would send me THINGS! besides all the fabulous postage. Wonderful, wordless salmon songs by Jon Parmentier and a wonderful handmade sachet filled with Maine Christmas tree balsam that just transported me and, yeah verily, led me astray to strong drink. (YO HO, I hear the pirates sing).
When I was growing up my parents found the resources to haul all of us up to Cape Cod each summer for a week. The cheeky Hyannisport address might impress some but we stayed in a cold water, knotty pine cabin. I did wave at the Presidential yacht as it motored by one day on it's way back to Hyannis next door.
We slept in wooden bunks that were just the size of a small man's coffin and I loved every minute we were there. One of my prized possessions was a little calico cat that was stuffed with balsam needles. To this day, the scent of seacoast pines does me way better than Calgon.
I couldn't sleep last night; fretful with small mother-worries, so I went downstairs and poured myself four fingers of some Pacific coast grape's blood and drank it down like medicine all the while trying hard to taste the wonderment promised on the artsy label when all I could find was red kerosene.
So I lay awake in the dark, mildly drunk, with my Ipod in my ears and the little balsam sachet balanced over my wakeful third eye, until about 4am.
Now the house is redolent with sausage and peppers and noisy with men working on machines and I'm getting sleepy and must nap because I have to work at 3:45. Kefaya! Tonight I will start picking scraps for those envelopes.
When I was growing up my parents found the resources to haul all of us up to Cape Cod each summer for a week. The cheeky Hyannisport address might impress some but we stayed in a cold water, knotty pine cabin. I did wave at the Presidential yacht as it motored by one day on it's way back to Hyannis next door.
We slept in wooden bunks that were just the size of a small man's coffin and I loved every minute we were there. One of my prized possessions was a little calico cat that was stuffed with balsam needles. To this day, the scent of seacoast pines does me way better than Calgon.
I couldn't sleep last night; fretful with small mother-worries, so I went downstairs and poured myself four fingers of some Pacific coast grape's blood and drank it down like medicine all the while trying hard to taste the wonderment promised on the artsy label when all I could find was red kerosene.
So I lay awake in the dark, mildly drunk, with my Ipod in my ears and the little balsam sachet balanced over my wakeful third eye, until about 4am.
Now the house is redolent with sausage and peppers and noisy with men working on machines and I'm getting sleepy and must nap because I have to work at 3:45. Kefaya! Tonight I will start picking scraps for those envelopes.
true(er) colors
Yeah, I'm as shocked as you are at the discrepancy between this one and the one I posted the other day. That was shot flat on the bedroom floor with only the feeble light from the overhead fixture.
This up on the design wall in the studio with just overcast morning light - closer to the harsh truth and revealing my usual shortcomings..lack of value changes and/or balance. But I'm not going to flush the baby down the terlet just yet.The mother cloth underneath it all is especially disappointing.
I was looking at Shell Vapors again and paid attention to where my eye was going and when I happy with what I was seeing and where I gave it a pass and moved on, six square inches at a time.
There are maybe enough YESs here to go ahead and work over the NOs one by one. Haste makes scraps, although a lot of you are happy about that, aren't you.... :)
Friday, March 09, 2012
on the design floor
I hate to say it out loud but it looks like I evicted this cold from my head finally. All advice was welcome and some actually used...like sleep, tea, and more sleep.
When I got up this morning I had a vision of moving around shapes and colors. Since the design wall is presently unavailable I'm working on the bedroom floor. This is very tentative (and large) and I'm not going to stampede it. pins only for the moment. I spent a good hour just looking at Shell Vapors last evening and want more of what that one evokes only stronger.
and some of us just lay around vogue-ing
Thursday, March 08, 2012
naptime
We are exhausted.
I've been fighting with a cold since Saturday (that remedy failed me) and it was a good thing I did not have to work yesterday. After filming the drawing I spent the rest of the day feeling like Jabba the Hutt looks. Today, a little better but needing a nap now. Solar flares, full moon and a perfect spring day....zzzzzzzzzzzzz.zzzzzzzzzzzz....
I went to the grocery store yesterday and stood in front of the cold remedies like a drooling dolt for five minutes unable to settle on any boxed promises and then walked out empty handed. Today, a snootfull of VicksVaporub and hot tea per my sister. Earl Grey with a dash of lime & grenadine.
I've been fighting with a cold since Saturday (that remedy failed me) and it was a good thing I did not have to work yesterday. After filming the drawing I spent the rest of the day feeling like Jabba the Hutt looks. Today, a little better but needing a nap now. Solar flares, full moon and a perfect spring day....zzzzzzzzzzzzz.zzzzzzzzzzzz....
I went to the grocery store yesterday and stood in front of the cold remedies like a drooling dolt for five minutes unable to settle on any boxed promises and then walked out empty handed. Today, a snootfull of VicksVaporub and hot tea per my sister. Earl Grey with a dash of lime & grenadine.
Wednesday, March 07, 2012
Tuesday, March 06, 2012
Monday, March 05, 2012
shopkeeping
I spent the morning digging about in the studio, checking over inventory and putting up some new offering of hand dyes over in the shop. Even though winter's chill is back in Georgia, dye days will be on me before I know it -
the tree frogs said so.
I'm finally sharing some of the proceeds from last seasons adventures in going crazy with color.
I know that natural dyeing is all the trend and the delicacy and subtlety of the work is beautiful, but for me, I crave intensity in every direction so I flagrantly overdose my cloth with Procion MX..(.the good folks at ProChem bless me each night, I'm sure) and there will be more adventures with soywax as both resist and carrier. There will be discharging and overdyeing and painting..things that have not yet occurred to me, stuff I dream about and wake to try the next day as the mood moves me.
the tree frogs said so.
I'm finally sharing some of the proceeds from last seasons adventures in going crazy with color.
I know that natural dyeing is all the trend and the delicacy and subtlety of the work is beautiful, but for me, I crave intensity in every direction so I flagrantly overdose my cloth with Procion MX..(.the good folks at ProChem bless me each night, I'm sure) and there will be more adventures with soywax as both resist and carrier. There will be discharging and overdyeing and painting..things that have not yet occurred to me, stuff I dream about and wake to try the next day as the mood moves me.
Sunday, March 04, 2012
the cure for the common head cold
..is a few rounds Alka Seltzer for colds over 12 hours of doing not much of anything. Sleep if you can and follow up with a generous portion of General Tso's chicken to incinerate any remaining germs and sterilize the sinus tracts. Feeling much better, thanks.
Today - a little mending, a mountain of laundry folding and a lot of Mad Men and Killing.
I was lucky enough to get on board with the pilot of the Killing last year and keeping up with it became quite obsessive.
The storyline may sprawl and wander, the locale would make most folks list "contemplating suicide" as a hobby but the characters and the acting are compelling. Hope the new season will continue to deliver. Catch up if you can.
This was my first exposure to Mad Men. The premise was repellent to me back when it first aired and, although the two episode I watched today had their saving graces, I don't think I'll become a fan unless someone promises me that Draper will drop out and get real.
Back in the real day, I was the teenaged babysitter observing on the fringes of many of the lives portrayed in this series. The hypocrisy and desperation of the characters was like bad BO they all stewed in under their suits and shirtwaist dresses. Society and advertising were still struggling mightily to steer young women into bunny costumes and/or the indentured servitude of marriage with all of it's buying power. I won't start in on my rant about the United States of Advertising. I refused to buy into it back then and still opt out at every opportunity.
Thursday, March 01, 2012
spring excitement
I keep picking this one up and looking for what should come next but not finding anything. Let's stick a fork in it then and get it mounted!
I pity the rest of the country suffering under the misery of bad weather - all the windows and doors in my house are open and warm breezes are sighing through. I feel like I'm in the crow's nest of a tall ship.
The sky is deep blue with bruised edges where the bad weather will be coming from once the sun goes down. We'll be ducking and covering under thunderstorms tonight.
The new dye colors are on their way via UPS and the US mail will be bringing a special treat for the whole family - tickets for the first baseball game of the season at the Braves minor league park nearby.
They've come up with a great promotional exhibition - "The Braves All Stars vs. the Future Stars" or as they are know here, the Baby Braves. It should be a great night!
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
giveaway! celebrate spring
Let's give some stuff away!
To kick off the coming dye season at the Lawrenceville Frankenstein Dyeworx, I'm giving away a Cusspot stuffed with scraps I can't even remember ( but I know they came from my favorites jar) and this 22" square vintage damask dinner napkin which had the happy fortune of being chose as a guinea pig for testing those new soywax crayons that I cooked up over the weekend. They really were a pain in the tail when it came to the washout. This piece had to be boiled to get the wax out!
I won't ask you to leave a comment since it seems to be a pesky venture even without verification turned on. Everyone can play...worldwide. All you have to do is send an email to: deborah@lacativa.com .Next week on Wednesday, March 7 we'll have a drawing for one winner! One entry per customer and I will confirm each email received with "celebrate" in the subject line! Good luck!
To kick off the coming dye season at the Lawrenceville Frankenstein Dyeworx, I'm giving away a Cusspot stuffed with scraps I can't even remember ( but I know they came from my favorites jar) and this 22" square vintage damask dinner napkin which had the happy fortune of being chose as a guinea pig for testing those new soywax crayons that I cooked up over the weekend. They really were a pain in the tail when it came to the washout. This piece had to be boiled to get the wax out!
I won't ask you to leave a comment since it seems to be a pesky venture even without verification turned on. Everyone can play...worldwide. All you have to do is send an email to: deborah@lacativa.com .Next week on Wednesday, March 7 we'll have a drawing for one winner! One entry per customer and I will confirm each email received with "celebrate" in the subject line! Good luck!
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Trick or Tool
writing |
I have been idly dreaming about having
a small, vintage manual typewriter, as if that would help. I don't
even know if I can still type on a manual machine and if I started
using one would it wind up crippling me and what about that day job?
I still spend eight hours a day on the computer and get paid for it.
No matter how I lust after the sleek, shiny black vintage machines
for sale all over the web, I'm not going to get one until I actually
put my fingers on the keyboard and whack away for awhile; see how
it feels.
Although I had an ancient manual typewriter as a kid, I never learned to touch type until the late eighties on a computer keyboard. The whole notion is probably a pipe dream fueled by watching a couple of episodes of Band of Brothers last weekend. There were several scenes of a soldier pecking away at portable typewriter, so incongruous yet so ubiquitous during World War II.
I spent a lot of time over the weekend
looking for an archive of the music that used to be on my Ipod. Last
week I accidentally gave the poor little thing a lobotomy and thought
that restoring it would be a click or two away. Hah! That restoration
took the better part of the weekend but mission accomplished. I'm
finding that sleeping with earbuds in and the volume turned way, way
down on the playlist sinisterly entitled “sleepingpod” is has a
canceling effect on my increasingly aggravating tinnitus. Some
interesting dream trains have left the station as well.
In the middle of that file search I
came across a long lost short story that I started back in the early
'90s. To my surprise it still had legs, crookedy and wobbling, but
legs. What started out as a harmless and common fantasy tale rolled
quickly into Twilight Zone/Stephen King territory, no surprise to
anyone who knows me. This file was created and saved in an ancient
program called Lotus Word Pro (I still have the floppy discs
somewhere) and had been clumsily converted to a more universal file
type. There were many errors in that conversion; formatting was lost
and a myriad of crazed hieroglyphs were randomly inserted in the
text. It was also obvious that there was no spell checker in the
house and/or the writer was somehow impaired.
Dropping this file into OpenOffice and
starting to edit it just for typos and formatting was good for most
of yesterday morning. What with the side trips and diversions that
are all too available when working on a laptop with a great internet
connection, the morning evaporated with little to show for it and
now, Tuesday morning is well on it's way to history too. All this
brought me back to thinking about what it would be like to use an old
typewriter with just enough interference between the brain and the
paper to check my pace and keep my thoughts in order, without the
distractions.
My first typewriter was a behemoth from
the thirties or forties that my mother dragged home from a yard sale.
I really can't recall the make, something common like Remington or
Underwood, but due to it's advanced age, ribbons for it were
impossible to find. I bought fresh, replacement ribbons for
whatever brand I could get cheap and then wind them by hand onto the
large metal spools of my machine – messy but effective. It had
trapdoors on the side for access to the ribbons and at some point, I
allowed my pet rat to hide out inside the machine. We
won't talk about the day that I idly tapped a key and snipped off the
tip of his tail.
I typed my homework for fun which
probably bothered my teachers. I don't know what they were expecting
when they came across my typed papers in a stack of hand scrawled
assignments but I rarely delivered if my grades were any measure of
success. When I figured out that a C or B would keep me out of jail
or the doghouse with my parents, that was good enough for me. Grading
should be kept secret from kids as long as possible.
I also wrote letters, specifically,
begging letters to all the missions to the United Nations for every
flyspeck country that belonged to the UN and a few that didn't. I'm
sure my name got on some government lists when I was eight or nine.
What I was begging for was canceled postage stamps from their home
countries and, man, where they happy to oblige. I think I must have
created at least a handful of jobs for people working at carefully
tearing off the colorful, beautiful stamps from letters sent from all
over the world. I didn't really even have a collection – I had a
hoard! I started out with the best intentions, like all those
skipping down the road to hell, but the response to my letters was so
overwhelming that I quickly became blasé about the stack of fat,
brown envelopes that would be waiting for me when I got home from
school. After a quick perusal for anything new or different,
everything got tossed in the desk drawer but I kept pounding out
letters and spending my allowance on postage.
Once I got tired of getting duplicates
of stamps that I already had too many of, I turned to typing papers
for classmates who would dictate to me over the phone or give me
chicken scratch notes on legal pads. Bigger brains than mine who
didn't have access to a typewriter abounded. Then again there
were the papers that I corrected and finally, rewrote, until a couple
of teachers twigged and recognized my style scattered throughout the
three fifth grade history and English classes. My career as a
copywriter/editor was squashed by a short meeting with the principal
where I promised to stop giving it away and promised myself to
charge more and work more carefully.
All these years later and I'm still
giving it away and someplace in a second hand store or, more likely,
a landfill, there is a hulking, golden typewriter with the mummified
remains of a rat's tail tip deep in it's bowels.
Monday, February 27, 2012
digging and finding
Spontaneous Construction 42"x43" |
It started with having to restore and update the music on my aging Ipod. The backups have been lost and so I was, one disc at a time, restoring the cuts I crave these days. I found several unlabelled subliminal recordings that sounded suspiciously like whale gut rumblings and I fell asleep with the thing on, earbuds plugged into my head! Who know what cracks in my brain have been reordered or re-routed and with what information?
It was interesting that more than half of what was, is no more and not missed. Then again I found myself one-clicking one song after the next at Amazon from a long wish list of CDs, new and old.
Then I started in on the bedroom closet and and came across this piece which was hatched out at my first ever class at Arrowmont with Elizabeth Barton. I was very new to dyeing and we were tasked with dyeing two gradations and these colors must have been assigned to me (although I can't imagine it) because red and green would be the last on my list of choices. A proper image is in order. At some point in my life I took the time and infinite patience to hand quilt this making it up as I went, as was the machine pieced construction. If you have the opportunity to take one of Elizabeth's classes, jump at it.
I also unearthed a fragment of a story that, although unfinished, is worth a second look and some harsh reworking. Who was it said "kill your darlings" ?
Saturday, February 25, 2012
mystery PITA crayons
I've just finished messing up my kitchen cooking up this batch of soywax+dyepowder crayons but I'm afraid they are going to be a big pain in the ass to work with. No wonder these pounds of soywax crumbs were so cheap at Binders. Although the package said 'melts at 150 degrees' it was a lot hotter than that and the wax is much harder, more brittle than the stuff I'm used to from Prochem whose website is unable to take credit card orders right now.
Lord only knows if and how I will be getting this stuff out of the cloth when the time comes. I may have to set up the cannibal pot on the lawn instead of just rinsing the stuff out in the sink with Dawn and hot hot water. Time will tell. The nifty mold comes gratis when you buy a dozen votives at Yankee Candle, it had a nice lid too but I cut it off as it was getting in the way.
Lord only knows if and how I will be getting this stuff out of the cloth when the time comes. I may have to set up the cannibal pot on the lawn instead of just rinsing the stuff out in the sink with Dawn and hot hot water. Time will tell. The nifty mold comes gratis when you buy a dozen votives at Yankee Candle, it had a nice lid too but I cut it off as it was getting in the way.
historical
Yesterday I got a lovely email from an artist in New Zealand asking permission to teach a class based on the technique I used in this piece which was published some years back.
I never thought of stitching layers of torn strips as any exclusive technique of mine (and I said so) but it was a very civilized gesture. I hope the students enjoy the class.
The first time I used this technique was on a piece that was about a yard long and only ten or so inches wide. I remember working on it while waiting in the car as my youngest son was taking his road test...ages ago. There was a lot of trepidation stitched into that one. Wonder where it is?
Friday, February 24, 2012
eye candy friday
Happy Friday!
Here's a site you should bookmark...but does it float
I was led to all of the following from there.
Gunta Stölzl
Art Hansen
Vangel Naumovski
Here's a site you should bookmark...but does it float
I was led to all of the following from there.
Gunta Stölzl
Art Hansen
Vangel Naumovski
Thursday, February 23, 2012
WIP
Closing in on finished here, I've enjoyed working on this one with the simplest of techniques for me, hand applique.
No trixie embroidery, no layering the threads, no crazed french knots - just a double strand of Sulky 12wt cotton in colors matching the fabric.
Almost all the the fabrics are hand dyed damasks which has tendency to creep away and fight the needle at every turn. The trick to needle turning this stuff is pins, pins and more pins and then stitches that are maybe an eighth inch apart. Sounds obsessive but the damask needles like butter. I'd like to take this technique to a larger field for the next project.
Spring will be on us before you know and I'm daydreaming about the first dye fest of the year.
I have so much wonderful raw material at hand.
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
flings fly
In anticipation of spring this fling will be flying today.
It's been hanging around the studio since it was made and every time I unearth the thing it makes me grin so now it's going to make my mother and her friends at the nursing home smile and have a cackle.
Monday, February 20, 2012
groundwork
Just stitching on a passage thinking about the story.
I walked alone to school from day one. Across Main under the stern gaze of a crossing guard, down along the dark side of Maple, past the front doors of the firehouse and the local newspaper and down a footpath through a dark wood.
There was a little wooden bridge over a brook and there were certainly trolls under that bridge but they could never catch me, I was running so fast. You had to hold your breath in the woods or they would be waiting when your feet hit the first board.
At the end of the path the woods unclenched onto the baseball field behind the school. It was full of cold sun with the block buildings squatting on the other side daring me come, full tilt.
Sunday, February 19, 2012
traipsing
JR and I were loose on the streets of ATL yesterday on our bi-monthly mission of self indulgence. Nobody went to infirmary and nobody went to jail - mission accomplished!
First stop - IKEA! who is only too happy to feed people free breakfast so they will have the stamina to shop till they drop well after lunchtime. There was a real bedding frenzy going on..I got mine. I have not been so inspired to nest refurbishment since Takashimaya was in NYC where I would spend my grocery money on a regular basis buying must haves like transparent turquoise and fuchsia plastic boxes, carved chopsticks in silk cases and acid green eye liner. Who needed to eat? Begging in the streets for Taka-money often crossed my mind.
On then to a quick visit to Phoenix and Dragon for a spiritual uplift and to take a few measurements (more about that later) ..then we went applying for part time jobs (just kidding folks)
Late lunch found us feasting at El Aztecas on Roswell Rd which had moved across the street and upscaled quite a bit since the last time we ate there. Fabulous food and the waiter was most understanding about the no carb thing and made off with the dessert menu before I could read beyond Strawberry Cinnamon ice cream.
Later we found out that "ESTATE SALE" doesn't necessarily mean there's any kind of estate involved. Just a lot of crap that was in the place when someone shuffled off and left it. They did leave this behind, to my delight!
First stop - IKEA! who is only too happy to feed people free breakfast so they will have the stamina to shop till they drop well after lunchtime. There was a real bedding frenzy going on..I got mine. I have not been so inspired to nest refurbishment since Takashimaya was in NYC where I would spend my grocery money on a regular basis buying must haves like transparent turquoise and fuchsia plastic boxes, carved chopsticks in silk cases and acid green eye liner. Who needed to eat? Begging in the streets for Taka-money often crossed my mind.
On then to a quick visit to Phoenix and Dragon for a spiritual uplift and to take a few measurements (more about that later) ..then we went applying for part time jobs (just kidding folks)
Late lunch found us feasting at El Aztecas on Roswell Rd which had moved across the street and upscaled quite a bit since the last time we ate there. Fabulous food and the waiter was most understanding about the no carb thing and made off with the dessert menu before I could read beyond Strawberry Cinnamon ice cream.
Later we found out that "ESTATE SALE" doesn't necessarily mean there's any kind of estate involved. Just a lot of crap that was in the place when someone shuffled off and left it. They did leave this behind, to my delight!
Saturday, February 18, 2012
inscription or tattoo
Friday, February 17, 2012
Thursday, February 16, 2012
a low level buzz of anticipation
"Just when I thought I was out, they pulled me back in".
The fabrics and stitching that is.
Out of boredom and frustration, I started thinking spring yesterday with needle and thread. I'm trying to find my way around a serious blank spot in my line of inner sight by making an end run with familiar techniques and materials.
I'll tell you what is hard...writing is hard. Talk about making something from nothing. Sustaining the attention for your own story, the one you are making up as you go, is like walking into a room full of large fans whilst holding a bunch of helium balloons on very thin, greasy strings.
On the news front, I am talking with the owner of a local bookstore that also has a large meeting/classroom that doubles as an art gallery. They have never had fiber art there. So far, it looks like a one woman show in April at a great location that gets a good bit of traffic that didn't come just for the eye candy. More when the details are hammered out.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
hangover
Urgh.
Bless my darling Goodman for making sure my Valentine's day was celebrated properly, with cannolis from the Italian Pie. They come dressed with fresh whipped cream and an extra drizzle of a sweet, creamy sauce flavored with anisette.
This morning I am suffering from a carbo hangover and should spend the morning working out at the pool but will settle for extra fluids and some housework.
Monday, February 13, 2012
roadmaps and hinderances
I've gotten lot of advice from people I know and respect (and a boatload of total strangers) who have taken a whack at writing.
Everyone had a short reading list for me so I hit the "used" section of Amazon and completed my shopping list for a mere song or two.
It's quite interesting that most of these books aren't a lot more expansive than the instruction booklet that comes (recipes included) with a new crockpot. Except for King and Lamott, who have fleshed out their instruction with very readable autobiographical stuff, everyone else seems to have taken their own advice and cut to the chase...less and less is more.
Since I've been writing for a while for my own entertainment I don't know how much or if I will take any of this sage wisdom to heart. One or two not shown here would be best mulched in a blender with fruit juice and taken as extra fiber...like eating shredded wheat dry.
The hardest part for me? Every frickin' thing is in Black & White! My eyes are parched for color.
Everyone had a short reading list for me so I hit the "used" section of Amazon and completed my shopping list for a mere song or two.
It's quite interesting that most of these books aren't a lot more expansive than the instruction booklet that comes (recipes included) with a new crockpot. Except for King and Lamott, who have fleshed out their instruction with very readable autobiographical stuff, everyone else seems to have taken their own advice and cut to the chase...less and less is more.
Since I've been writing for a while for my own entertainment I don't know how much or if I will take any of this sage wisdom to heart. One or two not shown here would be best mulched in a blender with fruit juice and taken as extra fiber...like eating shredded wheat dry.
The hardest part for me? Every frickin' thing is in Black & White! My eyes are parched for color.
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Brrrrrr!
After a very mild winter we are getting a serious polar swat. It was in the low twenties this morning and we are all bundled up with our fur on end and very grateful for clear blue skies with no freezing precip in the forecast.
There were actually a few flakes flying by as I drove into the city yesterday. I made a hasty exit off the freeway because the locals were terrible distracted by the flurry and I285 was quickly shaping up to be a demolition derby. They drive faster while peering up into the skies and talking excitedly on the cells. The long perspective looked like they were trying to drive between the scant flakes.
I've rolled one of the little heaters into the sunny studio, cleaned up a little and plan on putting the finishing touches to my friend Jan's quilt top today. Jan if you are reading this, I still need a verse for the band around the edge.
Friday, February 10, 2012
last stitches
"Grand Rêver"
I've put the last stitches in this one which has worked out to be 27"x29" . The edges are raw and I am still deciding if I want to mummify this one.
( turns out this is my 1400th post. Sheesh, what wind. I could have had that bloody novel in the can by now!)
learn to quilt!
Remember this recent acquisition?
The maker, Serena Potter, has started an informal and free online tutorial aimed at people who would like to learn traditional pieced quilting, people who might have no clue how to thread a needle. She doesn't quilt to win blue ribbons or make a quick buck - she does it because she loves the tradition, the process and the finished work. Her easy going and straightforward style is fun and she writes about a range of beginner's concerns that have never occurred to many who charge good money for quilting classes.
I know not many of my readers fit this description. Most of us have been at it so long we would be hard pressed to explain the most elemental details of sewing anything by hand. It would be easier for me to hem your skirt than tell or show you how, if either of us had the patience. I don't.
Serena, who is also the mother of two toddlers, has plenty.
She also has a wry sense of humor that is right up my alley and I have a long list of non-sewers to pass this link along to and I'll bet you do too. It jumps around a bit and the reader might have to scroll forward and back through the days to find a good starting place depending on one's skill set, but it's all worth it.
She worries that there are purists out there who will argue with some of her methods or practices.
I told her "Screw em!" I have held one of her quilts in my hands and if these methods and procedures are how she arrived at this result, then she knows what she's talking about.
Wednesday, February 08, 2012
from the ridiculous to the sublime
Have you ever bought a product you didn't need just because the packaging was so cool? There are three more flavors and I didn't buy any because I stood there for ten minutes not being able to decide which of the four to buy!
And we have Morna to thank for discovering the work of artist Huguette Caland. Don't miss a single jawdropping link! Takes my breath away too, Morna..thanks.
This is the kind of work that makes me get all quiet inside and just pay very close attention to all the feelings and responses going on. Attend!
"Rossinante Under Cover I" by Huguette Calnd 51x42”, acrylic and pen on canvas, 2011 |
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