Here are a few photos of my work at the 12 Strands exhibit at the Textile Center gallery:
(Additional work in last three photos by Marjorie Fedyszyn, Kimber Olson, Melissa Nellis, and Kathie Simon Frank.)
Here are a few photos of my work at the 12 Strands exhibit at the Textile Center gallery:
(Additional work in last three photos by Marjorie Fedyszyn, Kimber Olson, Melissa Nellis, and Kathie Simon Frank.)
I shared the beginning of this project here. It started as a long-sleeve shirt, but when I looked at the photo I had taken earlier without the sleeves, that kind of grew on me. It helped a lot to pin the pieces onto Purnah, so I could add darts in the right places.
My favorite bit is the hidden snap at the keyhole neckline:
Seams for this one are on the outside, felled to one side and stitched twice:
I wore this to the opening on Friday night (with a plain black maxi skirt), minus a half a dozen of the applique pieces on the front since I wasn't quite done yet. I was frustrated at being in the same position again (almost done). Will I never learn? I think it's time to embrace that part of my nature....
I decided to add a bird to my skirt:
And I thought she needed a friend:
Then the back looked a little lonely without any birds, so I added one more down at the hem:
The paint is a combination of several colors of Lumiere. Honestly, Jacquard paints are not my favorites, but the flow of the Lumiere is nicer than the solids. There's also a little Setacolor mixed in (which is my favorite).
Here is what the skirt says, from the poem The Summer Day by Mary Oliver:
I don't know exactly what a prayer is.
I do know how to pay attention, how to fall down
into the grass, how to kneel down in the grass,
how to be idle and blessed, how to stroll through the fields,
which is what I have been doing all day.
The next line of the poem is "Tell me, what else should I have done?" and when I started the skirt, I'd planned to screenprint that line on it, smaller, and in several places. It seemed fitting for my, "I should be doing more to help my community!" attitude. Then in the middle of working on the skirt, something came up around our house that I am stilll trying to get my head around (and which I'll write about more completely later) -- and which also explains my sporadic blog posts lately. Now the poem has a different meaning for me, and I am focusing instead on the word blessed, which I have embroidered over to create a little subtle texture:
I like that it's easy to miss that embellishment on the word blessed, unless you're really paying attention.
I've been working on a new skirt, from fabric I printed at Spoonflower. The background is printed from a sheet of scrapbook paper: I scanned a small piece of an ordinary looking blue/green paper and enlarged it to fit the entire yard of fabric. It's amazing to me how that ordinary paper became so pixelated when it was enlarged. A happy accident!
I wasn't as thrilled with how my lettering also looked pixelated, so I used a finepoint Tee Juice marker to add a second layer to the writing.
I added another layer of color by stenciling these leaves asymmetrically on the skirt. (That also helped bridge the gap where the side seam falls.)
And then it still wasn't quite right...so after letting it sit in a bag out of sight for a few weeks, I started stitching around the stencils and adding a few beads here and there:
This part is extremely labor-intensive, so it may be awhile before I share the finished skirt. I'm hoping to have it done in time for my upcoming group show at the Textile Center: either to wear or to exhibit!
I've gotten a little farther on the sundress I first wrote about in this post. (The top is two layers of jersey, with beading and reverse applique.)
Pinning it onto Purnah, I've realized I'll need to make a few adjustments before I sew the final seams. I don't know if that's because I made the dress from knit, and the original pattern calls for woven, or if my body just requires more darts, but it definitely gaps a bit here and there when I pin it together.
The bodice is done except for the little tiny beads that I'm adding all around the neckline, a combination of Japanese Toho seed beads, bugle beads, and Czech glass beads:
It took most of an episode of Glee to get that little patch of beads stitched on. Here's hoping I can get the rest of it stitched before summer!
Remember this project? I had it printed at Spoonflower:
The color was a bit washed out, so I overdyed it in a mix of robin's egg and turquoise:
Then I stitched around each phrase, embellishing the empty blocks with free motion embroidery:
The words on this piece are from a poem by Phillip Larkin; I studied Larkin's book The Whitsun Weddings in college, had written this poem out with a fountain pen, and found it tucked in a book in the attic (bleached, faded, and all) at the time I was considering what words I wanted to use on my project. Read "Love Songs in Age" here.
P.S. My winter newsletter will have to wait till next week!
You may remember seeing the start of this project on this post. The embellishment is my own design made into a stencil, painted onto old black t-shirts from Goodwill (three, in the end), and hand-stitched. The tank pattern is modified from Alabama Studio Style. (And how excited am I for the third book in that series to be released later this month? I preordered it months ago.)
A new hand-stitched piece I'm working on. This one is regular applique, with individual pieces stitched to the surface (rather than reverse applique, with parts cut away, which is what I often do).
The above photos are the back of a long sleeve shirt; the front has a keyhole opening at the neckline:
I learned early that when you're sewing with 100% cotton jersey, it's best to start out on the snug side. Even washing & drying by machine doesn't do much for the recovery of the knit. Wish I had figured that out before I made the skirt!
Winter break is always a movie marathon around here -- which means plenty of stitching time for me. Here's the start of a sundress:
I made a stencil for this one, then layered two pieces of the fabric together.
I stitched through both layers, using button thread & matte pewter bugle beads. The running stitch indicates where the dart will be, so I know where to skip the beading.
I cut out the center of the leaves on the top layer, and stitched the dart in place.
I have the two pieces of the bodice back nearly done, then its on to the front of the bodice. I'm planning to leave the skirt plain...but you just never know.
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