Are you wondering where I've been? I had a family emergency that called me out of town for a few days (all is fine now) and I've been busy and I also didn't have anything to post.
A couple of posts ago I showed you a piece that I had made for a FANE show at the Mahopac Museum in April. I liked it but I wasn't sure if it was right for this show it and I had another one in mind. So I finished my second try and showed both to my quilt group yesterday to see which they liked best. They overwhelmingly gave my second one the thumbs up and here it is.
The guidelines for this show are thus: It has to be inspired by lines in poetry or a song, it has to be made of more than one component, it must fit within a 14" square and it will be mounted on an 18" white artist's canvas.
I started out with four of my snow-dyed fabrics and stenciled them with Shiva paint sticks using some commercial stencils I had picked up that showed clocks, numbers and what I thought looked liked gears. I had purchased some antique watch faces a few years ago and they all screamed to be put together. I outlined all the elements with free-motion quilting and made each piece into a little faced quilt then tacked them together with tiny stitches. The clock faces were put on using a single seed bead through the center hole.
My poem is To Time by Lord Byron and the lines I chose are:
Time! on whose arbitrary wing
The varying hours flag or fly
My first piece, a little underwater triptych, will be donated to the silent auction at my quilt guild's quilt show in May. I think it is a good choice for that.
Saturday, March 2, 2013
Monday, February 18, 2013
The Second Time Around
I blogged about this gorgeous Amaryllis a few weeks ago and this is the second bloom, even more spectacular than the first. For starters it is a whopping 41 inches high, too tall for the coffee table, so it's residing on the floor.
This bloom has five flowers all around, where the first one had four. I bought this rather cheaply at the grocery store. I certainly got my money's worth.
Sunday, February 17, 2013
New Piece
One of the art quilt groups to which I belong, FANE, hangs a show at the Mahopac Library every year. They are always small pieces that can be mounted on white artist canvases, all the same size. This year we are to make a piece that has more than one component and is inspired by a line of poetry or song. The components have to fit inside a 14" parameter and will be mounted on 18" square white canvases.
It took me quite awhile to do with all that hand work, but I'm not sure if I love it or if it is too pedestrian. I worked on another piece all weekend, much simpler and perhaps more sophisticated. I have a bit more to do before it's finished, so I don't want to show it yet.
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Valentine's Day, again
Everyone got a beautiful long stemmed rose to take home.
We awoke this morning to more snow, nothing like the huge blizzard of last weekend, but just enough to make it look pretty. My son gave me this twirly garden ornament for Christmas a few years ago. When it turns in the wind, it has the optical illusionof that blue glass ball going up and down the spiral. I really like the way it looks covered in snow, which will be gone as soon as the sun comes out.
I never did write about the big blizzard. Here in Danbury we only got 20.5 inches. I know that is a lot, but it pales in comparison to some towns that got 30" or 40". We were all cleaned out in two days, but other cities and towns were still not all dug out by Friday. Those kids will be going to school until July considering all the snow days they have had.
I spent last weekend in the house because of the snow and a nasty head cold I had picked up somewhere. I thought it was all gone, but now it has come back with a vengeance, or maybe it's a new one altogether. So once again I am hunkered down, hoping to get some good studio time between all the nose blowing. Yuck!
Thursday, February 14, 2013
March for Change
It was a brilliant winter day, temps in the forties and a clear sunny sky. This is a picture of the capitol building with the volunteers selling t-shirts and giving away green hats to wear. We got there quite early, expecting a longer drive from Danbury (it only took an hour) and we found a parking garage near by. There were not many people there then, but the crowd swelled to over 5,500.
We were asked to wear as much green as possible. I do have a lot of green in my wardrobe, but not a green coat, so I had to do with green gloves and scarf. We were also encouraged to make signs to carry. I made this one and printed my slogan in green, so I don't know why it photographed red. It was very distinctive and garnered it's share of attention and I noticed it being photographed several times. I thought it was a good choice for Valentine's Day. Most other signs were green and white. My friend, Ginny, was my travel companion.
We were toward the front of the crowd and I turned around in three directions to take pictures, but it doesn't give any idea of how large the crowd was. You can read some of the other signs.
I was so glad that I went. It was an inspirational day with many speakers, including the governor, Christine Baransky, parents of murdered children, victims of gun violence, several elected officials, and some beautiful music. It lasted about 90 minutes.
When I got home there was a message on my AM that I found so offensive from some radical group wanting to impeach Obama for several reasons including the fact that he is stomping on their second amendment rights. I was so furious that I called back the phone number listed in Washington, DC. I really wanted to give someone a piece of my mind, but all I got was another recording asking me if I wanted to donate to the cause. Yeah, right! But I could press 3 to be taken off their calling list. You can be sure that I did that.
I'm sorry if I offended anyone with this post, but I really feel so strongly about this. Something has to change!
Happy Valentine's Day!
Friday, February 8, 2013
One more thing....
...for the Woman's Club Arts and Crafts competition. Just a simple bead cluster pendant on a leather cord.
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Green Smoothie
1 6 oz. can unsweetened pineapple juice or apple juice
1/2 avocado cut in chunks
1 unpeeled apple, cored and cut in chunks
2 cups raw baby spinach
Put all in blender and puree until smooth. If too thick, add a little water.
Makes 2 servings
I have also made it with a very ripe banana instead of the avocado and that was very sweet and delicious, too. You only taste the fruit. You can also throw in some seedless green grapes or a pear.
Bon appetit!
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
And the Winner Is......
Many thanks to all who stopped by and wished me Happy Birthday. I was especially pleased to get comments from those who had never done it before. Maybe now that you know how easy it is, you'll do it again.
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Happy Birthday
to me. Tomorrow, February 4, is my birthday when I will be 49 59 69 oh, never mind. Old! If you leave me a comment you will be in the drawing for one of these three fabric postcards from my embossed velvet series, your choice
This one is made of my favorite Dupioni silks with an embossed velvet heart (made by me) and fancy machine stitching. You can use it as a special Valentine, if you like. It can be put right in the mail, as is, with a first class stamp or you can mail it in the clear plastic sleeve I will provide and put a stamp on that or you can keep it for yourself.
Or this one made on commercial batik with an embossed velvet ginkgo leaf and pearl nuggets. This one probably wouldn't be good for you to mail because of the pearls. I would mail it to you in a bubble wrap envelope.
I know that a lot of readers come to my blog regularly (I know because they tell me) yet never leave a comment. You know who you are. Now's your time to step up to the plate. It really is so easy to do. At the bottom of each blog entry is a little gray word that says "comments". Click on that and it will take you to another page. There you will be able to read any other comments that have been left. Also on that page will be a box that says,"enter your comment" Write in the box whatever you have to say. When it asks for your identity, click on Blogger, if you have a Blogger account, and your name will show up. If you do not have an account click on "anonymous" but be sure to sign your name in the comment box so that I know who you are. Then click the "publish your comment" button and you're done!
I will draw a name and announce the winner on Tuesday.
Saturday, February 2, 2013
Heart Strings
When I was a very little girl there was a popular movie called "Meet Me In St. Louis" about the World's Fair that was held there. One of the popular songs from it was The Trolley Song, sung by the female lead, Judy Garland.
Part of the lyrics are:
Clang, clang clang went the trolley
Ding, ding, ding went the bell.
Zing, zing, zing went my heat strings
For the moment I saw him I fell.
If you go here you can read all the lyrics, but be sure to play the video of Judy singing the song.
Anyway I remember asking my mother what "heart strings" were. I don't remember her answer, after all I was a very little girl, but here many years later are my heart strings.
The art quilt group of my guild, Northern Star Quilter's Guild, has a challenge every year that hangs at the guild's annual show. This year we are doing a deck of cards. We are to make a 12" x 16" piece that will go on a white backing that will contain the number and suit of the card. I chose the Nine of Hearts, knowing just what I wanted to do and thinking that I could whip this up in no time.
It started out well enough. I pieced together a lot of Dupioni silk strips and adapted my favorite teardrop quilting shape to hearts and quilted madly away. So far, so good.
I knew that I wanted to have cut out heart shapes with thread lines sewn across. I know that you can sew "on air" if you use a walking foot, but I wanted to do some definite designs on each one and I knew it would be easier if I put a piece of Solvy behind each one. I had done this before. (See green ginkgo leaves below.) I was all out of the usual plastic-like Solvy that I had used before, but I had paper Solvy that was supposed to rinse away with water. I tried it on a sample and it worked just fine, so I proceeded to make each heart. When I was all through I submerged the piece in water and all the paper seemed to melt away. but when it was dry you could see bits of paper clinging to the thread. So I submerged it again, leaving it in the water a longer time and spraying each heart with the sprayer in my faucet. Dried it and .........same thing. Once more in the sink, this time with a little dish detergent and a gentle rub with a toothbrush. Same results! Rats!!!
That was enough! I went over the thread with paint and it was a little better. These will be displayed against white, so hopefully , those little white crumbs won't show.
We were also supposed to have a found object somewhere on the quilt. This was cut from one of those
On this one I scribbled all over the Solvy. Don't know why my satin stitch looks so bad. I really can do better. Again, see green ginkgoes below. Maybe I'll go over this one again.
This one was sewn in air using the walking foot and no Solvy
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