Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Rooted Abstraction

I'm still having fun working with paper collage, and my latest experiments have been to incorporate photos into the abstract collages.  I took photos of these gnarled tree roots on a recent trip to Michigan's Mackinac Island.































Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Cigar Band Abstracts


My cousin Marius likes to smoke cigars.  As soon as I discovered how colourful and textured and neatly-designed cigar labels are (they're actually called cigar 'bands'), my cousin and his friends started saving them for me.  I finally incorporated them into some abstract work.  It's mixed-media, including tissue paper, mulberry papers, scrapbooking papers and some upcycled papers, and acrylic paint.  I used a satin varnish to finish them, so they're glossy and so don't photograph as well as I'd like because of the glare.










Friday, July 5, 2013

Mayfly raggy quilt

I don't make bed quilts very often (one every 3-4 years, it seems!).  I made one last week, though, as a retirement gift for my dear friend and former professor and mentor, Lynda Corkum.  Lynda initiated me into the world of bugs (when I'm not quilting, I work as a biologist, and study aquatic insects and other invertebrates).  The project I worked on, under Lynda's supervision many years ago, involved mayflies (or what are commonly known around Southern Ontario as Fish flies, or June bugs).  So my quilt for her had to have some on it.  I thread sketched them on, using the bobbin thread on the right side of the fabric, following paper sketches in free-motion quilting (I'm not sure what the name of this particular technique is).  Here are the results:



 






This mayfly raggy quilt was my second large bed quilt (I've made a number of baby quilts over the years, though).  My first ever, back in 2006, was made out of scraps of silk and satin, pieced and without any frills (this was before I knew how to free-motion quilt).





Saturday, June 29, 2013

PhotoScapes Class

I taught a class last weekend, on my Photo Scapes technique, at a local quilt shop, Quilting Confections. 

For this class, students provide a digital photo of their own, and I enhance and print it on fabric (treated and backed with paper for feeding through an inkjet printer) to use with this technique.

It's always interesting to see what other people do with the instructions I provide, how they see their photos developing, what background fabrics they choose, what other bits of fabric and fiber they add to it.  Here are some of the results from this last class, with kind permission from their creators:

 




One of my students entered her finished piece in the local Harrow Fair this summer.  It won 2nd prize and has been tagged to go to the Ontario Association of Agricultural Societies Convention in Toronto in February.  Way to go, Sue!


Thursday, May 30, 2013

Kindle cover

I think I may start making e-reader (tablet, etc) covers.  Here's one I made for my own Kindle.  I've been sitting on this beautiful piece of marbled fabric for years, just staring at it hanging on the wall, not wanting to cut into it, not knowing what would be the perfect use for it.  The time has come to put it to good use - and with the Kindle cover, I find I stare at it even more.





Monday, May 27, 2013

Paper Collage

My latest obsession, paper collage.  I've been using paper bits in my work for a few years now, but only gluing them in place and then stitching on top to keep everything together, and finishing by stitching (to a card,  bookmark, etc).  What I'm doing now is actually gluing the paper (and fabric bits too, still) straight to canvas, including around the edges, and then varnishing to seal the whole thing in.  I love the look!





Sunday, September 25, 2011

Photo Landscape Quilts

Over the last 4-5 years of  experimenting with various art quilting methods and techniques, I've developed a technique of my own that has proven to be quite popular (if sales in shops and galleries are anything to go by). 

Briefly described, my photo landscapes start out as digital photos printed onto inkjet printing fabric.  I center (fuse) the photo onto a fabric background, and extend elements from the photo onto the background fabric, then stitch the whole thing to make it all blend in.  This technques lends itself well to most landscape photos, so I've done a fair bit of custom orders using other people's photos as well.

A lot of my work sells in pictoresque and touristy areas of the East Coast of Canada.  While living in the area a few years ago, I gathered a collection of photos of local scenery, which I've worked into my East Coast series of photo landscapes.  Here's just a few:

 























Here in Windsor, where I now live, I became inspired by a series of trees (mostly maples) one spring day walking around my neighbourhood.  This resulted in my Olde Riverside tree series:





And, on a trip to Bayfield, Ontario, I was inspired by a mulberry tree, which made it's way into another series of tree quilts: