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My sewing room is finished! And I have a queen sized top to prove it!

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P.S. - It's on its side, cuz my garden wall isn't tall enough for it and my design wall (skippy dance) isn't big enough for it. :)
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Long time no see! :)

I have recovered well from my first surgery, so have been slowly but surely been back at the work of putting my sewing room back together.


I'm in the home stretch now, and hope to actually get some work done before my next surgery.  In the meantime, the wall of thread has gone up, and so has my very first design wall.  New lighting is next, the tables will be put together, the last of the furniture painting will be completed - and then it'll be done!

Stay tuned...

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Gee, 4 days in and 2012 has already become WAY more interesting in ways I didn't expect.

First of all, I haven't spent any of my 2 week vacation in my sewing room because the renovation sputtered nearly completely to a stop.  Here's where we are right now:


The laminate floor is down, the walls are painted (two coats of primer, one coat of paint), four of my Ikea dressers are painted (two coats of primer one coat of paint) and they're filled with scraps, one colour per drawer. Also take note of my new T.V. - a Christmas present from BSP! :) Seems like good progress.. but note to your left - those sets of drawers aren't even primed yet. So are not FILLED yet, neither are my books all on their shelves...

But wait, there's more!




Four (actually six) of these bins are filled with yardage - but there are ten more to be done.



This little corner for my paints and assorted surface design stuff looks great - except that most of those bins are empty - and their contents are still in boxes.

To add insult to injury, I've been quite ill. On December 23, I went to see my doc because a cyst I had on my shoulder for ten years became infected.  I was given some antibiotics and an appointment to have the cyst removed (tomorrow).  In the meantime, I developed an abcess on my gum, and a sinus infection - so I am literally filled with infection - leaving me headachy - nauseated, and exhausted.

And AFTER Christmas I had an ultrasound and two appointments with my gynecologist, who informed me that the remaining bits I have since my partial hysterectomy 3 years ago have prolapsed (quite painful, btw!) and you guessed it - one of my ovaries has an infected cyst on it!!! So in February, it's all going to come out. MORE surgery, hurray!

The result of all that is that I've been lying around in bed, running fevers, feeling crappy and moaning for ten days (poor BSP!) - with NOTHING going on in my sewing room.




However, Maggie-May has been faithfully keeping me company - here she is lying in my lap (where she'd been for about two hours) just before I started this post. So the news isn't ALL bad. ;)

So I'll see you post cyst surgery - and in the meantime, sew, quilt, or paint a line or two for me, will you?

Cheers,

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Well, it's that time already - I can't believe how quickly this year went! 

But January first means two things for me - that it's my third blog-aversary (and 360th post!), and I've been quilting for 3.5 years.  

I said at the end of last year's "year in review" post So expect to see more textile art pieces this year - maybe a lot more - and more quilts along the lines of Of The Moment, Zen Gardens, Passage and Once, I Was A Child. And that's pretty much what happened. 

As the year progressed, it felt like I didn't produce very much, but it turned out, I produced a lot more - especially in the "quilt" category than I thought I did.  I made ten quilts in 12 months!  They were:

"Fractured" cotton velvet/satin, a quilt about the nature of our fractured lives. 

"In The Pink" my very first quilt made with my hand-dyed fabric, but otherwise with no special meaning.



An un-named quilt - a gift for a friend's baby - made to her taste and specifications, not to mine!


"Spring" the result of a "play" session - not designed or planned, but thoughtlessly put together. I don't intend to ever make quilts of this kind again! (i.e. - thoughtlessly planned)


"Stepping Stones" my mise en abyme  quilt, made from the scraps of my first quilt, which was made from the textile scraps of thirty-five years of sewing.  A simple quilt, but one of my favourites this year.


"Test Pattern"  - inspired by a T.V. test pattern; this was another quilt I really liked, though it didn't inspire much excitement in anyone else.  Oh well, not every quilt can be a winner. :)


And hey, speaking of, this quilt was a straggler left from 2008 that I finally finished quilting this year.  I was glad to finally finish it, but wow, I didn't like it! None of you did either, as there wasn't a SINGLE comment on that post. If you can't say anything nice ...  ;)

So, what a relief to make something like "Phases"! Back to my familiar stomping grounds of linen and silk,  a limited palette, and a contemporary feel.  The moon goes through phases as do I, apparently!

"Off To Oz".  This quilt and "Fractured" were the two quilts of mine that got a LOT of attention this year - about equal amounts, I think, although they couldn't be more different. This particular quilt was a real departure for me.  A fun one - but I'm curious to see whether I have something else that's similar inside me. 

The tenth quilt was one I sent to Japan post-tsunami, and don't have pictures of.

And then the art.  

The art makes me laugh as I look at what I produced over the year - it reminds me of the schizophrenic oeuvre I produced in 2008/2009 when I was trying out every kind of quilt in every kind of style, trying to figure out what worked for me, what I liked, "How the heck do I MAKE the quilts I see in my head?"

"Happy wife, happy life" - one of my "inspired by Charley Harper"  pieces.

Having done that already, I at least knew what this year would look like as I tried out new-to-me techniques, in an attempt to find the best medium to express what I want to say.

Take A Winter Walk With Me

Early in the year - on January 7, I tried this. I was doing "fugitive media' before I even knew what it was - as I had painted this little piece with acrylic paints before quilting it. I loved this piece but resisted it - it was too different from what I had done before, too far from my comfort zone.



Back Seat Driver

I went back to what was comfortable to me - only this time trying it with needle felting - but it didn't feel right to me any more. I knew that I needed to get out of that comfort zone or I was never going to get where I needed to go.



Failure To Thrive

In March, I decided to try a different version of the painting - I only showed it to you recently as I initially disliked it so much I didn't want to show it to you - but I like it better now, although I still see the room for improvement!


By The Sea

More needlefelting, combined with hand-painted fabric, this time with a lighter hand - and I liked the results better  - but it still didn't feel quite like "me'.


"Newlyweds" another inspired by Charley Harper piece.

By the time I was done this piece, I knew this wasn't for me either.



So I tried a different method of needle felting and hand painted fabric.  I LOVED it - needle felting all those fabrics together, and then finding the face within; but that was the problem. It all just kind of came together - randomly painted fabrics, and finding the face - what were the chances that would happen again?



We Are Mermaids Too

So, I gave it another shot.  Needlefelted some of my hand-painted fabric together and then tried to "find" something in it.  I didn't in the way I did with "Wood Witch", but I found a nice background for a mermaid scene.


Taking Flight

I tried some more abstract sketches as well - the art I'm drawn to as a rule is non-representational - I like the intellectual exercise and the emotional power I feel in abstract art - I don't like it when the story is already there, waiting for me to "read" it  - but it turns out I'm not really any good at non-representational art.  Perhaps as I learn and grow I'll be able to do so - or perhaps, I'm already doing it in my quilts, rather than my art.

           
Arboreal Oasis

I also tried going back to repair prior mistakes - with some success - although I'm not sure I like the "corrected" version any better, I learned a lot about something I called "ghost quilting" and it's something I'll put to use in future work.



Transracial Adoption

Around this time, I was asked to be a contributor to a technique driven blog  in which a number of fiber artists tried out different techniques for the edification of themselves and others called And Then We Set It On Fire.  It was to fill in for a couple of months, and since I was a follower and a tryer anyway - I decided to give it a go.

The first technique we were to try was fugitive media -  techniques in which you apply things ordinarily applied to paper (water colour, pastels, acrylic paint, etc.) to fabric.  Without knowing it, I'd already dabbled in it and I took to it like a duck to water, producing Transracial Adoption above, and

Erosion

With "Erosion" I knew I was really onto something - I loved everything about the technique and the method, and was sure I'd found my medium. (And "surprise!" it looked VERY much like the piece I produced the first of the year.)


In the meantime, I finished the last of my Charley Harper inspired series with Cardinal, and

continued to try new techniques with And Then We Set It On Fire, like the one I taught - transfer paints and disperse dyes.

 

And the unusual materials challenge through another group, in which I made quilts out of anything BUT fabric.

Towards the end of the year I re-visted some old favourites - shaving foam painting and needle felting to produce November.

So, at the end of it all, what did I learn?

My main learning is "how" I'm going to make the art I want to make.  Fugitive media and painting on fabric is what I'm going to continue to explore in my personal work - my main goal for 2012 is to get better at it.  And the quilting continues as it should.  Fractured, Phases, Stepping Stones, even Test Pattern are all the direction I intend to continue in - I have plans for lots of quilts in the future - they're even designed already, if only I could find the time to actually make them!


My biggest accomplishments this year were being featured on or at "big" websites and at Generation Q Magazine and for 2012 I hope to do more of the same, and I intend to start showing, throwing my hat into the ring for some of the juried festivals. 

In addition, I've been asked to become a permanent member of And Then We Set It On Fire so I'll continue to make sketches (or journal quilts) in different techniques throughout the year as I participate in the blog.  

So that's my plan!

Thanks for being with me throughout the year - and I look forward to talking and sharing with you in the year ahead!

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"I am seeking, I am striving. I am in it with all my heart."

                                                                       Van Gogh 
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I'm off for about a week - see you soon!

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(or holiday celebration of your choice)




In case you haven`t figured it out  already - this will be a non-quilting related post . :)  A teensy how-to follows though, for these and a few other little Christmas decorations I made for my office.

All of my materials are from the dollar store, which means that I`ve spent no more than $2 on any one item. 

 The simplest of course, was the vase of flowers.  The flowers were purchased by individual stem at $1.00 each, the vase was $2 and the sand and vase filler were simply layered in like a parfait.  Easey peasey!


In the first pic, there is a vase of the same size beside the one with the flowers. In it is a little tree in some vase filler. The tree started out like this:




and then I used a utility scissor to cut the plastic pot it was inl; and then cut the bottom of the pot out so that the tree would have a little stand. 



Although the tree was still quite small, it was too tall for my vase, so I used a wire cutter to trim the tree stump, which I then put back in its stand for stability. 



Mes voila!




I used the same simple process for this shorter, rounder vase; as well as come clippings from the Christmas pics in the first materials shot and made this little pretty:




Since these are so quick and easy to make (less than an hour for all three), if you like them, you can whip a couple up for your coffee or sofa table, or even a centerpiece for your kitchen table and still have plenty of time to finish whatever else needs to be done between now and Saturday.

See you Wednesday!
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