Back to the hand-stitching, I didn't show you what I was up to after I finished "Strange Fruit: Stand Your Ground".
I began working with some of my rust-dyed pieces of fabric. I was trying to achieve a certain look with my rust-dyeing, so there were a lot of "failed" pieces in the bunch, but finally got this one.
Here you can see, "Incendiary: Marie-Joseph Angelique" on the right...
and "Written On the Body", also on the right...
A fun thing I found out about my Marie-Joseph Angelique piece is that my posts about her were compiled into one (by whom, I don't know), along with my photos, all properly attributed to me with link backs, and then that post was re-blogged and re-blogged and re-blogged - it was a rabbit hole! I stopped looking after finding 10 or 15 shares.
Although ordinarily, I wouldn't approve of someone doing so without my permission (and in future, please ask!) because it was always properly attributed - even to the 15th share - I didn't mind, and thought it was really cool. :)
So, back in 2011, I made this wall quilt, called "Fractured" (you really should click on that link and the links within to see the story of how it came to be, I'm always amused by it!) - and that wall quilt eventually was requested by the curator of the Union Art Gallery, who wanted t it be part of a show called "Throw: Great Lengths of Innovation in Modern Quilting " (that link goes to a review of the show.)
Anyway! If you remember all of that you may remember that this flower thingy above, was originally part of that wall quilt. I have four of them, actually, but decided to make one of them into a journal cover.
So, as I mentioned last week, the chosen charity work that Group of Eight does, is that we make journals for the residents in a womens' homeless shelter.
Although I am trying to make them pretty, I am also using them as a way to experiment on a small scale. And I have been very interested in seeing what else I can do with my hand-painted papers.
I began by tearing them up into small bits...
Do you know Deb Lacativa? If you don't, you should! She makes wonderfully intriguing pieces of art, sells amazing hand-dyed fabric which I've mentioned numerous times here as I use them in my pieces, and is a generous and warm-hearted person.

I'm writing today about her, because her Goodman has been taken ill, and though we are all confident he will get through this well and strong, their finances may not.
We can all help her by buying her work. Whether it's a splurge on an original piece of her art, some of her beautful hand-dyed fabric, or some (newly available) reprographs of her work, we can all help her a lot by helping ourselves according to our budget.
I bought three of her beautiful reprographs on Wednesday as a birthday present to myself and when I have them framed up I'll be sure to show them here.
You can do the same -one of her reprographs costs only as much as two cups of fancy coffee, and having gotten a cusspot or two, I can tell you that they are simply stuffed with fabric - that big pile beside her cusspot is exactly how much is one of those. And if you want larger swaths of fabric, she sells that too.
Those quilters have a community, let's show that fabric artists do too. And if you *are* a quilter, then you already know how that works. ;)
Have a great weekend!
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