Showing posts with label Hand and Machine Embroidery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hand and Machine Embroidery. Show all posts

Friday, October 6, 2017

More falling leaves!

I couldn't let it go at simple leaf shapes-- the table decoration project simply took a different turn when it ended, and the leaves assumed a life of their own.  The leaves were like stepping stones, each leading to the next.

These are some of the last ones.  The fabrics are recycled clothing pieces and a few old fabrics that have been around since my son was living at home (!).  The main vein of the last leaf is a hand-wrapped cord.  I make these loosely-wrapped and colorful cords while watching the British Mysteries.  In two nights of mysteries, it's amazing what can be achieved!




ENJOY THE AUTUMN!!!

Monday, May 15, 2017

Stitch Sampling

This article from TextileArtist.org is a nice read if you have ever wondered about the value of sampling stitches or techniques before you start a project.

Sampling can be addictive.  It's all about the "What ifs" that keep popping up as you try one thing, then make some small alteration to the process or color or thread weight and try it again.  Even better is when you let one idea link to another and another . . .

The reward of all this curiosity spread across small pieces of fabric is that the samples are making your own encyclopedia of stitch and technique ideas as they begin to fill a box or a bin.  Notebooks with cloth pages (the holes are made with buttonholes) hold mine.  I've even used Pellon as a page, which keeps the pages from folding over in the thick binders.

If you searched the dark corners of your own studio space, how many samples could you collect?  Enough to fill your own ring-binder notebook?  Maybe two notebooks?  My favorite ones are where I start out a little loose and not so nice, but as the stitching continues, I can see the improvement I make.  Seeing where you came from is often a great teacher.  And mistakes might be the best teacher of all, because we learn more from mistakes than doing things perfectly the first time.

Don't forget other fabric techniques-- Felting experiments can lead to a new direction in wet or dry felting.  Fabric manipulation gives texture, whether perfectly or imperfectly worked.  What about painted Lutradur or Bond-A-Web, heat-manipulated surfaces . . .

Take a moment to read the article about sampling as a creative process.  It might be the impetus you need to start your next project!

Monday, June 6, 2016

Number Game(s)

Layering, appliqué, hand and machine stitch, hand-dyed fabrics . . 



Below, tiny scraps of hand-dyed linen are cobbled together by some system known only to the numbers.


Sunday, January 24, 2016

Inspired by - Carol Ann Waugh

From a book I borrowed called Stupendous Stitching, by Carol Ann Waugh, I was inspired to use machine and hand stitch together to make this Zentangle piece.  It was a bit of fun, since I have not really completely explored the decorative stitch patterns on the Sapphire the way I have the older Viking.  Keeping the pallet limited to golds and turquoise helped, so the only choices were the texture of the thread on the hand stitched segments.

Thanks to Sherry for encouraging the Freestylers to use our stitches in "tangling" ways, reminiscent of a zentangle.  And thank you, Jill, for loaning me the book!