Archive for August, 2008

Play With Chalk and Paint

Saturday, August 23rd, 2008

This post is a bit later than planned, but the past few days have been a  bit busier. Note to self— Don't even pull one weed without gloves if you have a history of breaking out in itchy blisters. I found many perennials buried in the weeds at work, and decided to give some Hibiscus plants a break, pulling just a few weeds out from their pots and surrounding area. I then didn't think to wash my hands after doing it, and now I am paying the price– fat, red, itchy fingers– It's not the first time, so I should know better. Ice packs are wonderful things!

Now to the fun part…. I played with my chalk pastels a few days ago. The weather hasn't cooperated with sunprinting, so I decided to use the breezy, humid weather for other paint play. I learned about using chalk pastels with acrylic and textile paints from my workshop with Elizabeth Busch this summer. The chalk stays put when used with the paint, when the paint dries the chalk  doesn't rub off. I got some great effects, and got myself a larger selection of pastels to play with. Irises are one flower I have used in my quilting a lot, but they don't do well for sunprinting. They are great subjects for the chalk!!

I am better at just "slopping paint on fabric, then letting nature help me do the details. Amazingly, I just started to draw the Irises onto the just painted fabric and this is what I got! I love the lines of the grassy foliage, and started there, then "scribbled" the flower shapes and kept adding bits of color over, and am happy with this first attempt. The one thing I need to remember is that since I am working on wet, painted fabric, that the pastel colors look much darker as I am applying them. The darker purple I originally tried, looked too black so I used the lighter shades. The middle group nearly blend in with my background, but that is how you find what works and what doesn't– lots of play!


 Another thing I did that I don't normally do, is to stack 2 pieces of fabric on top of each other to see what I would end up with on the bottom piece. For this I used a more open weave fabric than I usually use. The photo here shows the 2 pieces together.

A lot of the chalk did go through to the second piece. The green for the leaves shows the most, and the lightest colored flowers in the middle are very faint. I will have to try again with the tighter weave fabric I usually use. I don't know if as much will go through.

Here is another set of "twins". I tried for a landscape look, here. I think I really like the under piece better than the top one. It is interesting how the greens transferred through.

 
 Here is another landscape type piece. I was trying to get the look of a pond with grasses growing around it. I used sea salt on the green area for a different texture.

 

And last for this post is the pastel rainbow. I combined the paint, pastel, and sea salt for this one. After finished, I wished I had tried the stacking idea on this one- I'll have to remember to try it some other time.

It felt good to be back to my more cheerful colors to work with, instead of the "rocks and mud" colors I have been using so much of this summer.

One good thing about the rocky stuff is that the journal quilt I entered into the Houston show was accepted!!

For something I wasn't even thinking of trying to enter, it just happened and ended up being one the jurors wanted. Now everyone will have to wait until late October for the unveiling of the whole piece. The sneak peek is here. You'll have to scroll to the end of the post.

Now back to a fresh batch of sunprints!! I actually got some done yesterday. I just need to finish heat setting them. I will show some in another post.

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Color Play- Updating Some UFO’s

Monday, August 18th, 2008

Being challenge leader for the Color Play challenge for the Janome6500 Yahoo group, I have decided to pull out some old UFO's to see what will happen. In the earlier post, I showed photos of some of what I found. I began to play with 3 of them, and here is what has happened so far.

Here are the photos of my first subjects. The little "blahhh" hangings are small pieces I used to make and sell at craft shows. These two didn't get finished for some reason. The one with the butterflies didn't even have the quilting finished, and some of the blue markings are still there.

The star and paisley wall hanging top was another of a series of hangings I sold regularly. This one never got finished probably because I had moved on to other things or that style of hanging wasn't selling as well. I know that I would not use that paisley fabric in anything I do now.

There is nothing I can do to hurt any of these, so there is no pressure to end up with a "masterpiece". Great pieces to try things I would not have otherwise tried.

 
I usually paint on plain white fabrics, so this is a bit different for me.

For this little piece, I thought it mainly needed more color. I began with my colored pencils and colored in the flowers like a kid with a coloring book.


 
   After coloring with the pencils, I added a layer of diluted Super Sparkle textile paint over it to add some glimmer and to keep the color in place. I then added touches of yellow and white chalk pastels to add more interest onto the wet paint.

 

I also added different shades of green pastel to the leaves. This piece definitely looks different from it's beginning, but it still needs something- more quilting…

  This is the result after the quilting with clear thread in the background. I still am deciding as to whether I will add a hint of color behind the flowers or not, but this one is done for now. I will probably trim the edges neatly, and add my usual couched yarn binding. The pillowcase finish on the edges here are a bit ruffled.

Next is the butterfly piece. I didn't even finish the quilting to outline the butterflies, so started with a quick drawn line with blue pencil, then quilted with the clear thread.

The quilting lines will give me an outline to color in.

Here is what I ended up with after coloring and painting this one. As you can see, I got a little carried away with the sparkle paint on the border. I quilted my favorite vine-leaf design in the border, then filled in the leaves with the watered down sparkle paint. At this point, this piece looks a bit too busy and gaudy. I will be adding more with colored pencils or pastels to tone down the border. I may also add some more definition to the designs in the wings of the butterflies. This is the perfect way to find out things that DON"T work!

I decided to try over painting the paisley fabric on this piece. I no longer like that particular fabric, so I started by painting over it with diluted Lumiere gold paint. It gave the fabric a bit of an aged look, but was not enough to cover well. I had wet the fabric first, and with thinned paint coverage was not good. I then pulled out my new set of chalk pastels and found a color that would compliment the center star blocks. I scribbled over the paint, and ended up with a more distressed look.

The center of the piece now looked too bright, so it got the same gold metallic paint with a bit of the pastel over the paint on the white areas. I liked what was happening with the star squares, so just left them with paint only. This photo shows some lines of the pastel color on the white fabric. I brushed over them with my paint brush to blend the colors better.

The next morning all was dry (biggest problem for me doing this, is waiting for things to dry- I had to work inside due to the weather- not too patient a person). As you can see, after the paint and pastel dried, the chalk shows more than it did when wet. This photo also shows the other big problem with this piece- there is a lot of wrinkling in the white areas due to my stretching the borders as I stitched them on. I plan to do a lot of close quilting in these areas to "suck up" the excess fabric. I will do minimal quilting on the borders and just a bit more on the stars. This piece, like the other 2 may be mounted to fabric covered canvases for display. I'll see what develops as I continue to work with these.

Well, back to the studio for some stitching. Updates will follow……

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Inspirations and Projects Old and New

Friday, August 15th, 2008

I'm getting a bit  better with this blogging, just over a week since last post. Since then, I'm a year older, attended a weekend long family reunion, spent time with grandkids plus one, and attended my quilt guild's annual picnic at Round Top Park- a park between home and the NYS border.

This was the first year I have attended that I was able to get photos of the spectacular views of the surrounding mountains. Each of the past years, the weather didn't cooperate for photos- rain, thick haze, etc. Last year, I couldn't see beyond the trees in the foreground- the valley was completely blanketed in white. The view from here shows the Susquehanna river on the right. This photo was taken about 4PM when I arrived at the park. The Susquehanna river is to the right, and you can see parts of Sayre and Athens,  PA, in the distance you can see New York State.

Here is a similar shot taken just before I left the park at about 7PM. The lighting is different and the mountains in the distance are much hazier looking.

  This photo shows a wider view, the high school that my boys attended is just left of the lower center. I love the way the sky looked when I took these last photos. I have been playing around with my chalk pastels more since my workshop with Elizabeth Busch at QBL. I am working on a series of pieces depicting the mountain views from my deck and fields at home, and where ever I am travelling. I have been working with the pastels on bleached 7 oz duck, then I will add paints over the pastels. A bit backwards from what  we did in class with pastel over wet paint. I need to work on getting the perspective right to show the great distances I can see to show. I will post photos of what I'm doing with that in a later post.


Here are some photos of a few UFO's I dug out. I am hosting a "Playing With Color"  challenge through Sept. on a Yahoo challenge group. Members are being challenged to pull out all those art supplies laying around the house such as paints, crayons, colored pencils, pastels and more, to see what they can do to change the look of fabrics. I am challenging myself to take some old UFO pieces and change or add to them by painting, stamping, drawing, or more to see if they can become something better.

Here are a few pieces of fabric I pulled out to play with one day. I am also playing with printed fabrics instead of just  the white I usually paint. I had just gotten my supplies outside to work when my son arrived with our grandson and his cousin (4&5 years old). As soon as they saw I was going to play with paint and fabric, they wanted to join in, so I set them up with their own pieces and some paints and stamps. They had a great time… I got nothing of my own done. By the time I got the kids started, the wind started blowing and I got tired of chasing things, so packed it all back in the house. I had taped things down for the kids, so they kept on playing while I put things away.

   Here are a couple of old small hangings I used to make and sell. The center designs were free motion quilted with colored threads, and "framed" with other fabrics. These never quite got finished- the top edges didn't get closed after pillow case turning them. My plan for these is to add color to the flowers and butterflies with paint or pastels, and maybe even add to the borders with some stamping or something else. Not sure what will happen.


 
The photo on the left is a smiling 10 wk old, grandbaby Jenna. It's hard to catch the many faces a baby makes with a slow digital camera, but I got a few great ones.

The right photo is from my sister's gardens where we had our family reunion. I keep taking as many photos of flowers with the sky as I can find. We were lucky and got great weather for the reunion- cool for August, but not too cool, and the rain held off for night.

Here is another work in progress that I pulled out again. It has a photo of the old house along our road that is nearly falling down, and surrounded by scrubby bushes and weeds. I used the photo printed onto cotton to start with for this piece. I used the photo as the inspiration for "My Dream House", but turned the house into an English cottage for that one. The link takes you to the post about the process for the piece.

In this piece, I wanted to show what the house would look like surrounded by beautiful blooming gardens instead of weeds. I've often thought of this when passing by, so this is what I have so far. I'm still working on the large tree trunk to make it fit in better, and am adding some embroidered flowers to the bushes at the end of the house.

The final photo for this post is a little sneek peek of my journal quilt. I wasn't even going to try to do one this year, but this  just kind of happened. The green fabric is from my Elizabeth Busch class, and I have also used some of my "rocks and mud" fabric for some textured "rocky bits" like I played with in my Rosalie Dace class earlier this summer– truly a journal of what I've been doing since spring. I won't be able to show the whole thing until IQF in Houston, unless it is not accepted- my fingers are crossed…

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Home Again, and Back to Gardens and Paint

Monday, August 4th, 2008

I'm not sure where last week went, but I finally feel like a human being now. It took a whole week of napping and catching up on household chores, along with business matters that needed attention. I also got to spend some time with the grandkids with a few visits.


Well, while gone during my last trip away, the weeds did grow. No hail, but more rain and the growing conditions were right for flowers and weeds alike.

The first Photos show some of what my gardens still look like even after being home for a while. Too many gardens to get it all done. I just do a little each day, and  have discovered some good size patches of buried plants and flowers.

The great thing about taking photos is that I can shoot the flowers and ignore most of the weeds. I did leave the weedy Oxalis that was in bloom with these Impatiens flowers- some weeds can be pretty.


I was going to document the opening of this Datura flower, but got it in the bud stage, and forgot until after dark- fully open- so took this in the morning before it closed, dappled with dew.

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Here are a few more of my flowers taken with the blue sky as the background. The plumbago on the left are really a sky blue color, and just about blend in.

The queen Ann's Lace is great against the sky. It is the only photo I took by laying on my back under the plant. The rest were taken by holding the camera under the flowers, pointing to the sky, and clicking. Don't always get great shots that way, but that's the beauty of digital- only keep the good ones.

I did even get some painting done one great day last week- a few larger pieces of various shades of my favorite blue, pink, green combo. I even tried another full yard sunprint (on left), but it didn't work as well as the last one. I guess I didn't keep things wet enough, and then the wind picked up- not good for printing when things decide to leave the fabric before it is dry. I will find a use for it sometime. The smaller vertically striped piece is what it looks like- a piece of a blouse that I cut out, but never stitched together- now it's usable stash! There was another yard still drying on the paint table when this was taken- just more colors. And Yes, that is a piece of black in the weird shape- I'm working on a piece to be only black and white with grays. It is a chunk of an old linen-look table cloth- it was gray, now black.

As you can see in the above photo, the hail smashed planters are now blooming nicely. Very handy to the painting area- I always plant things to use for sunprints so they're easy to grab. The flowers print best when fresh, so having them grow right near is perfect. The Phlox in the nearby garden are perfect for using now, too.

My cherry tomatoes are finally ripening in the planter on my deck. I didn't put in much garden this year, just some yellow and orange watermelons, squash, cucumbers, and 2 other tomato plants. Too much time at the greenhouses at planting time.

This was my office for today, I am finally learning my new laptop. (I had to splurge on the color- coordinates great with my $2 tablecloth) It is great to be able to work on the deck. This place is "wired" thanks to my geek sons, so I can go almost anywhere. I may need to move one of the routers if I want to use the web from the backyard, but this is great. I had 3 lazy cats draped in various places, sleeping around me. I will have to work on those weeds in the flower beds that I can see from here, though.

I can't quite see all of this view from my deck, but most of it- this photo was taken during a walk through the fields above our trailer. There is a series of quilts in these views of the mountains somewhere.

Now, back to work…..

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