Archive for December, 2014

Fiberarts for a Cause

Monday, December 15th, 2014

Fiberart for a Cause fundraiser

I am both honored and excited to be an invited artist for FiberArts for a Cause, a one-day online fundraiser benefitting the American Cancer Society on February 4, 2015. You can read all the details here.

Virginia Spiegel has raised nearly a quarter of a million dollars for the ACS through various FiberArts for a Cause over the years. How impressive is that?!

I’ve designed matted 8″ x 10″ collages for galleries for a few years. I will give the winner of my work a choice of color-way to choose from. Here are some examples:

Mini collage B-45

mini collage G-43

mini collage T-37

So go ahead and jot February 4, 2026 on your paper or digital calendar as a great day to help an honorable cause while acquiring some spectacular fiber art.

 

tah-dah!

Sunday, December 7th, 2014

ode to handcraft heritage

Finally I found time to photograph the latest addition to the Defining Moments collaborative series. This is titled Handcraft Heritage and celebrates the long line of women, from whom I descended, who did handwork. I also incorporated my own handwork, a handwoven silk scarf I wove for my mother and some Nuno felting.

It was rather liberating to include the felt, particularly as heart on what I believe was my father’s christening dress. I designed this felt in a class which turned out to be pretty much a disaster for me, as I could not follow well the lack of direction I was given! Yet I loved this piece of cloth anyway, with it’s wonkiness and ribbons ruining throughout. It gave me great joy to incorporate it in this piece.

Also included are remnants of my mother’s hand-pieced, hand-quilted log cabin belt, my grandmother’s cross stitch from the percale pillowcases she stitched for her grandchildren every Christmas; as well as her crocheted doilies, for the furniture. There are sections of great Aunt Lucy’s handwoven shawl, with metallic threads.

Great Aunt Lucy was really the weaver in the family. She was prolific, and followed directions well, unlike some people we could mention. My weaving was fun, colorful and quirky. I disliked and never fully adapted to pattern reading. I just liked this color and that texture, threw them together, wove some cloth, finishing with seldom enough to make a complete garment; which eventually led me into patchwork and the rest as they say is history.

detail, nuno felting

detail, nuno felting

My initial plan was to make one big piece with various components of handwork. It took new sets of eyes in my studio to see this piece was complete with just these parts. I am not certain at this point if there will be another or whether I will just incorporate the remaining components into other works as variety.

The other thing I am unsure about at this point is what order this piece will be in the series. It is the 4th out of 25 to be completed, but because it incorporates my own handwork I am thinking it might appear farther down the road. So for now, it bears no number.

mom's hand-pieced log cabin

mom’s hand-pieced log cabin

The next one is sandwiched and ready to stitch, so time to start planning #5…or is it six?! The ideas are ripe. I just need to put the wheels in motion.

going backwards…

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2014

My daughter, when once asked if she would date an old boyfriend said…life is too short to go backwards! This is really kind of how I feel with my art. Once I finish something I hate to go back and rework it; although I have been known to paint over something about which I was not wild. That said, today I have been taking care of business in the studio, adding straps to bags, doing postcards for the gallery etc…you know the small stuff that pays the rent. And I found old news which I had laminated to organza, then put in a drawer while zealously cleaning the studio.

grandparents marriage announcement

After I finished piece #2 in the collaborative series I found in a box a newspaper clipping from the 1920’s announcing my grandparents’ marriage. My grandmother saved all sorts of clippings including those about 2nd and 3rd cousins who led notorious lives in other countries; plus her own penned for the regional newspaper society columnist about the social events she and my grandfather partook in. It definitely was another era.

Today I pulled out the finished piece and stitched the announcement onto the work. It definitely adds credibility!

Meanwhile I have finished the hand-stitched piece I started at Tahoe and need to photograph it. I am uncertain where to place it in the series as it contains some of my contemporary work as well heirloom work. And another is pinned & ready to machine-stitch.

Twenty five pieces in three years you say? And this is December of year one you say? And I didn’t start till June you say? And I am close to completion on the 5th piece you say? I got this!

Stay tuned…