Showing posts with label layering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label layering. Show all posts

Saturday, 18 September 2010

Lacey Arches

I'm having fun playing with different materials and techniques just to see what happens.
I free machine stitched onto transparent soluble stabiliser, trapping some bits of old silk scarf.
After dissolving the backing I sandwiched the 'lace' between two layers of sheer polyester and machine stitched the flower design over that.
 A seam ripper was a great tool for cutting through the polyester layer and tearing the lace apart, as scissors created too neat an edge.
The result was a bit flat and insipid, so the next stage was to add some hand stitching to all three layers:
Mmmm... More needed...a splash of colour, maybe some burning...

Thursday, 16 September 2010

Regular Pattern vs Random Marks

We experimented with different printing methods in the last class with Janet. One of my more effective efforts was the potato print above, using ordinary printing ink onto an onion-skin-dyed hanky. But... It hasn't inspired me to add any stitching.
I used another piece of onion-dyed calico to clean the potato block between colours and mop up any mess with the result that it inspired lots of machine stitching: 
I added a couple of squares of potato printed linen on the bottom right to add texture, used a piece of old blouse for stability and really enjoyed letting my machine wander at will. I then applied it to the old table cloth, with a further layer of very fine tea-dyed hanky, fusing it all down kantha style. I like the contrast between the rough feel of the machine stitching and the softer, more flowing hand stitching.
I had another go at printing in a regular pattern with better stitching success:
Shop bought stamp on the last remnant of an old linen skirt, free-machine stitched. I still prefer the more chaotic effect though...

Saturday, 24 July 2010

Wrapping

Earlier this year I found myself without wrapping paper for a friend's birthday. Being in the middle of studying for exams at the time, and needing a creative break, I gave myself 3 hours to make a basic wrapping cloth.
We decided to turn it into a friendship cloth, each of us adding bits over time. Debra recently returned it with washers sewn on to secure the ties...
...and this beautifully stitched quote on the back.
Much more enriching than disposable wrapping paper!

Friday, 23 July 2010

Burning Down

Janet suggested burning a house as well as the archway for a better effect. Now the arch needs to be burnt more...
I like how it looks on the table cloth -

 - not sure I'm ready to burn into that yet!

Thursday, 22 July 2010

Pulling it Together

Had an inspirational day at the Journey workshop this week. Janet helped us think about how to use our samples as a route to a finished piece. She gently encouraged me not to get too attached to what I have done so far, but to incorporate the techniques from the pieces I like into a new design.
Due to Janet's vast store of ideas, I've changed direction slightly and have now got 2 paths to follow: a sort of family-story-cloth starting with some gifted linen...
...which will be gradually added to over time.
I've made a start by dipping it in coffee and sewing an archway...
...and may put this in the middle
 - stitched by my daughter -
cut out but kept ragged edged.

The second idea stays with the 'Garden of Forking Paths' but involves making a series of holey stacking bowls or vessels that can be turned and swapped around. So the challenge now is to make something that has a drapey feel while being stiff enough to hold its shape...

Tuesday, 13 July 2010

Layered Printing

Lots of monoprints on top of each other. Pleased with this - so far...

Arches

Mmmm... Bit too much definition on the roof of this house, pleased with the steps and door though. Need to stitch the arch now.
I've been exploring the theme of archways. I like the nurturing curve they have, encouraging me to go through and explore beyond my immediate space. Unlike circles, arches do not confine me, but gently lead me further on. Without a door, they provide a glimpse to their other side, imagination filling in the gaps so that before I go through it there is a sense of another reality lying beyond, something different to my current world.
Arches feature in much of John Piper's work. His style appeals to me because his buildings are often blurred and indistinct, but the arches are highlighted, a moment of clarity but also movement, giving the sense of there being something beyond the canvas.
The word arch came from the Latin arcus meaning arch or bow. 'Arc' has the same root and was used in Middle English to mean the passing of the sun from east to west, forming the 'days arc'.* This led me back to the idea of arches as a symbol of movement and development. There is a proscribed frame of time and space, but within that the day is full of possibility.
John Piper's painting of St George Church in Ivychurch, was the starting point for my decaying archway. Finding these photographs of the inside of the church reminded me that the arch is used in buildings because of its strength. Go through it in search of another world, but build on top of it and around it and you will make a solid, immutable structure that will last over a thousand years...

* Chambers Dictionary of Etymology, 2000

Friday, 9 July 2010

Neighbours

I'm enjoying this process - working out just how much stitching is needed to enhance the houses without spoiling them. I like working outside the edges but need the occasional defining marks to provide 'a momentary stay against confusion'.*

*Robert Frost, The Figure a Poem Makes, 1939

Thursday, 8 July 2010

Looking, Looking, Looking

Inspired by the simplicity of Alfred Wallis, and going back to the colours and painted effects in my moodboard. Acrylic monoprint on calico, stitched onto layers of linen with a calico backing.
I like the physical layering of this as well as the layering of techniques - both add interest to the simplicity.
As Hussein Chalayan said on Grayson Perry's programme Creativity and Imagination: "the process gives it the layers".

Friday, 2 July 2010

Playing with Print

I wanted to represent the human figure in a way that wasn't too obvious. I printed two photographs of my silhouette onto linen (using a freezer paper backing through an inkjet printer), put a sheer linen over the top and stitched over one image. I think it can still just about be seen...
The original photo is on the top right of my moodboard

Thursday, 24 June 2010

Second Garden

I tried changing perspective by cutting the warp material on the bias and making the strips wider. I'm not really happy with this yet - a bit too chunky and possibly some more sheer layers needed to soften it down.

Tuesday, 22 June 2010

Woven Garden

The starting point for The Garden of Forking Paths.
I like the layered depth and complexity of the woven structure.
 I'm not sure if the finished piece will be flat or three dimensional. I've been thinking about making a bag within a bag where the paths lead to different windows through to the next world, something like this:

Sunday, 20 June 2010

Transfer Dying, Ripping and Stitching

Experimenting with transfer paints, dyes and crayons.
The colours come out very bright on poly-cotton and more muted on a net-curtain-like sheer, so I put four layers together with the poly cotton as the base, stitched freehand over the top and cut through to expose the colour beneath.
Allowing for the colour mismatch and wonkiness of my hasty design and execution, I like the bursting flower effect of this piece with the glimpse through to another world. Something to develop...

Thursday, 17 June 2010

Balancing Colour

Ongoing exercise in balancing colour with fabric and stitch.
Mostly linen with silk thread.

Monday, 14 June 2010

Cutting, Layering and Burning

The white linen was folded and cut like a paper snow flake. Threads were pulled out and layered between gold and grey sheers. The sandwich was then burned with a joss stick, to which the sheers responded beautifully.
I like the organic nature of the burnt holes, but the cut linen holes, particularly the horizontal ones are too stark and obvious.

Weaving and Stitching

This is my first experiment using different fabrics including silks, linen, upholstery and sheer, cut up, woven together and fixed with hand stitching onto a silk backing. I am pleased with the cross emerging as a symbol together with the colour red. The red circles were already stamped on the sheer fabric - I like the way they balance the composition.