Posts Tagged ‘FFFC’

Two More Little Quilts….

Monday, September 13th, 2010

I finally finished another Fast Friday Fabric Challenge! This time I ended up with two pieces instead of one…. even if it was by mistake :)

Black and Gold Blooms

This  is the quilt I meant to make… “Black and Gold Blooms” is 8.5″ wide by 12.5″ high, and is available for purchase in my Art Quilt Studio on Artfire, (just click  on the name of the piece to go directly to the listing). I wanted to use one of the sunprints I did during my latest sunprinting sessions. (This post shows some of the fabrics I printed, and this post shows more of the process of creating the sunprints.)

This month’s Challenge was to incorporate metal into our quilt in some way. I have had a roll of the gold metallic ribbon for quite a while, and decided to use it for a bow “holding” the bouquet of flowers in the sunprint. I had also collected a set of metal letter charms that I thought would work nicely, too. I used a sheer fabric in gold with metallic accents for the section beside the sunprint.

Black and Gold Blooms Detail 1

Here is a detail shot showing the butterfly made from Angelina fibers with details stitched with gold metallic and black threads. The centers of the Nicotiana flowers are parts of snap jewelry clasps that I had collected at some point in the past.

Black and Gold Blooms Detail 2

This detail shows the bow made from the metallic ribbon, and hand stitched into place.  The hearts and vine design was free motion quilted into the lower black panel, and the veins of the leaves and flower details are also stitched with the same gold metallic thread. The letters BLOOM are hand stitched onto the gold side section.

As I mentioned, I made two pieces instead of just one…. The mistake I made….. I grabbed the wrong sunprint to use. I had two prints cut to nearly the same size, and had the one I wanted to use pinned on my design wall with the other pieces ready to use. For some reason, I grabbed the other piece I had cut that was just lying on the ironing board.

Black and Gold Dream

This is the piece that got made by “mistake”….“Black and Gold Dream” is 7.25″wide by 12″ high, and is also available for purchase in my Studio on Artfire.

I really wanted to use the heavier ribbon with the less delicate sunprint. For some reason, I didn’t realize I had the wrong one in the piece until I was quilting with the gold thread and something didn’t feel right…. I happened to look at the design wall, and there was the sunprint with the Nicotiana flowers that I wanted to use…. I almost just finished this piece and let things be, but the other sunprint was telling me it wanted to be used, so I did them both. The sunprint in this piece is of lacy Queen Ann’s Lace foliage and Pansy flowers. I found a thinner, more delicate gold ribbon to use for the bow on this, and used the word DREAM along the side.

Black and Gold Dream Detail

This detail photo shows a couple of the flowers and the gold butterfly beads flitting above the flowers. I used small confetti butterflies in the sunprint, and thought the two teeny-tiny, and one small butterfly beads fit well.

Both pieces are similar, with the same fabrics used for the side and lower panels, but they each have their own personalities.  Sometimes “mistakes” end up turning out pretty well!

TWO Quilts Finished!

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

OK, I am excited, and they are both small, but just finishing anything this year is an accomplishment!

Stormy Sky Finished

I finally got time to finish the quilting on this one… Made for last month’s Fast Friday Fabric Challenge.  I had all but the sky quilted, but was unsure how to continue, so I uploaded it to the FFFC Blog anyway for some ideas. We then left for GA, and I finally got back to it. I used clear thread, and did have to do a bit of touching up of the needle marks in the sky. It finished at 10″x10″ with the black suede yarn binding.

Stormy Sky quilting holes

When I finished stitching, the holes from the needle really showed up a lot…. Not good! (the above photo shows them fairly well, it also shows more shine than the piece really has) So I pulled out my thinned gel gloss medium, water soluble wax pastels, and a stiff small brush….. I tried to match the color of the medium to the area of the sky I was working on, and it worked nicely. I did have to add a new back over it to cover the mess I created there with the color running through the holes, but I like the effect much better now.  The only thing that jumps out at me now is the “A” in the sky… not sure what I was doing when I zigged instead of keeping things rounded…

Stormy Sky Finished Detail

Here is a closer look… I also am not sure how I ended up with the tree top leaning so much, but I could say “the wind was blowing”, even though it wasn’t at the time I took the inspiration photo. Maybe it only bothers me….

Orange Echinacea on the Rocks Finished

This is the second piece I finished…. It has been in the works for much longer. This is 12″x12″ in size with the fuzzy yarn binding. I had the lower right rocky section beaded, then stopped. As shown in the preceding post, I finally got it back out while on our GA trip. I am really glad I put in my “travel bead studio” last minute…. I almost went away with no hand project at all to work on…. That’s how bad things have been quilt wise….

Orange Echinacea on the Rocks detail

Here is a detail shot showing some of the tiny shells, bug beads, and gemstone chips I added. I also added beads to the flower center for more texture. “Orange Echinacea on the Rocks” is available in my Andrus Gardens Quilts Studio on Artfire.

Now I even have a few more pins beaded since my last post!

First New Art Quilt of 2010

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

I finally got the creative juices flowing a bit yesterday, and finished the first FFFC (Fast Friday Fabric Challenge)  quilt I have attempted in a very long time. New challenges are posted on the 4th Friday of each month, with the idea of finishing a small art quilt by the following Saturday. I originally thought that this piece would be done before the next challenge was posted, but while double checking the rules for Challenge 40, I found that the next challenge had already been posted- yesterday was the  4th Friday of January- where has the month gone?

Cocoa Mix Box

For Challenge #40, we were to pay attention to product packaging  and how the colors used affect your perception and buying decisions of the products, and then use the colors from a selected package in a quilt. The piece was to be a still life, and be mostly plants or flowers. I drink hot chocolate every morning, and used one of the boxes for my color palette. I immediately thought of my favorite cobalt blue glass bottles, and wanted to include a couple in my composition.

Blue Bottles on Cotton

Photos of Blue Bottles Printed on Cotton Fabric

I am not great re-creating glass in fabric, so I decided to take photos of the glass and a spool of thread, and printed them onto fusible backed cotton fabric.

Cobalt Blue Glass Bottles

Group of Cobalt Blue Glass Bottles and Eye Wash Cup

Here is one of  the photos I used to arrange on the page to print onto the fabric. I placed them on, and backed them white card stock to take the photo. I love the gold design on the perfume bottle- my favorite.

Layout one.

Ist Layout Idea

This was the first version of the layout. I hadn’t remembered that plants or flowers were to be a big part of the composition. The original thought was to use the thread spools and some chunks of chocolate around the bottles… Not too hard to change direction a bit…. the short bottle could be a vase,  and I had thought of adding a white flower on the table anyway.

Quilt layout 2

Second Layout Without Thread

OK, to keep with mostly plant theme, chocolate and thread spools are out, bottles and eye wash cup still in. I found some great silk leaves in the perfect shade of coppery brown found on the cocoa box to back the white silk flowers. I added a stem into the open top bottle, ready for flowers. The chocolate colored fabric I had picked out was used for the stems and small leaves needed.

Art Quilt in Progress

More Progress

Here is what it looks like after flowers have been added, and stitching has been done. Most of the flower petals were stitched only down there centers, leaving them 3-dimensional.

Art Quilt Blue Bottles and Flowers

Blue Bottles and Flowers

Here is the “finished” piece…. The more I look at it, I think I need to figure out a way to make the white lace show up better. The bottles look a bit dull to me, and I may add a bit of gloss medium over them….. The flower centers could use some beads.  I guess I will have to hang it on the design wall for a while to see what happens.

Update- 1-27-10-  Well, after looking at it for a few days, I decided to add some beads in the flowers. Below is the most recent photo.

Art Quilt Blue Bottles and Flowers by Sue Andrus, Andrus Gardens

Newest Version of Blue Bottles with Beads Added

Art Quilt Blue Bottles and Flowers by Sue Andrus, Detail, Andrus Gardens

Detail shot of Blue Bottles and Flowers

This last photo shows more detail.  I even added a little gold butterfly resting at the base of the lower right flower.

A Winner!!!!

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Just before I turned off the computer last night, I did my last email check, and found that a piece that has been hanging in an exhibit won the most votes from visitors!!! The Community Arts of Elmira, NY acquired the Langdon-Pratt Mansion on Lake Street- a beautiful historic building, that they have been restoring. It has a gallery space as well as space for workshops and more.  Their website has more info about the building and exhibits.

The exhibit my piece was part of is the monthly People's Choice Exhibit. Each month there is a different theme, and artists display works that fit the theme. The public then votes for their favorites. There are works in many different media, from paper cutting to watercolors, oils, photography and more.

The piece that I had on display is "My Dream House"

 
This is a 12"x12" art quilt mounted on a 16×20" artist canvas, that was a piece I made for a Fast Friday Fabric Challenge a year ago. I used a photo of an old falling down house on the road I live on, as the inspiration. For this I imagined the house as a little English cottage surrounded by lush flower beds. The Work in Progress Post for this piece is here. 

The email also reminded me that I need to get myself organized to get my display of items ready for the holiday show and sale- Cezanne IV- that takes place from Nov. 15 through Dec. 24 at the mansion, where we each set up a display of our works for sale. The result is a boutique-like setting for customers to shop for original gifts. Artists also participate in forums where the public can learn more about how we work in our various mediums. 

Now I better get to work organizing my display!!

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More Ice and Snow in the Studio

Thursday, January 10th, 2008

Well, hibernating in my studio has resulted in not one, but 2 quilts. The first one was shown almost done in the previous post. I decided to add more beading, and here is the finished quilt for the latest FFFC Fire or Ice Challenge.


In the previous post, I mentioned that I thought I needed to cut down the amount of shine in the upper right middle area. I picked out some of the mylar with a pin, and added a bit more on the lower edge of that area. I then added some more silver quilting, and lots more beading. I may have gone overboard with beads, but I was going for the look of a snowstorm, where you see some of the flakes close-up, and as far as you can see, there are snowflakes, and when it is really cold everything shimmers.

This is a closeup of the lower right corner.  When seeing this in person, the sunprints of the stars, and patterning from the salt looks like more snowflakes, giving it more depth as you look at it, that is somewhat lost in the photos.

Somehow, while doing more to this piece, I decided to make another one.

I began by playing with dryer sheets this time. I had painted a bunch of them with pearlescent and sparkle paints.  I then cut out more snowflakes from the dryer sheets. I didn't add Wonder Under to them first, like I did with the organza for the first one.

I had 2 different types of dryer sheets. They each shredded differently, with one leaving a very hairy look.

This photo shows the white ice fabric that I cut up. These scissors from Fiskars are super for detail cutting. They are very sharp, and easy on the hands for detail cutting. I also used the same blue fabric I used in the first piece.

This photo shows how I laid the shredded dryer sheet along the edge of the blue fabric, on top of the batting and backing. It also shows a couple of the snowflakes I cut from the dryer sheets. When placing these, I found that when I ironed over things with a pressing sheet, the dryer sheets sort of stuck in place on the blue fabric.

Some of the dryer sheet ripped with out enough shredding for the look I wanted. It had too straight an edge, so I needed to do some additional shredding.

I did this by by teasing some of the fibers out, using a pin, until I had more fluffy, feathery fibers showing.

This photo shows the piece after I added cut ice fabric over the shredded dryer sheets. This gives more depth to the ice formation I was trying to show. The ice fabric was backed with Wonder Under, but the dryer sheets were held on just from ironing over them. I had to be real careful I didn't lose anything before stitching it all down with the quilting.


The snowflake closeup photo shows the stitching with the silver metallic thread I used for the quilting. I did the same swirl and snowflake quilting I did on the first piece, adding little snowflakes and more glitz.

This photo shows the finished quilt. I quilted around the edges of the ice fabric, and quilted a fern-like pattern over the frayed dryer sheet, letting the stitching overlap into the blue fabric like the fingers of icy frost on a window. I bound the edges with a white wool yarn with some iridescent fibers in it. I couched the yarn on with the silver thread used for the quilting. I decided to leave this one without beading. It is 11"x14" in size.

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Fall Painting and Quilts

Monday, November 5th, 2007

Now that the weather is feeling more fall-like, I have been staying indoors, and trying to get something accomplished. I finally have had a few days in a row where I have felt able to do more than surf the web.

I'm sure no one else has ever ended up with an ugly fabric when dyeing it :)   Here is a piece I ran across that I decided to see if I could do something with. It is a dingy blue-green. I spent a day last week playing with paint in my greenhouse again. I had to do a bit of tidying before I could paint, but I was able to get in a bit of "play time".

Here is the greenhouse ready for play. The plants did quite well this summer in the pond. I do miss being able to see the back yard, now that the plastic is on the wall again for the winter. The right photo is a piece of the ugly fabric wet, and on a paint board, ready for paint.

Left is a piece painted with Super Sparkle and blue, right is painted with orange, yellow, and a bit of green and blue, along with some metallic copper. I love the shimmer that the metallics and Super Sparkle give to the fabric. These will probably be able to be used much easier now they've had their "face lifts".


I have been collecting used dryer sheets for a while, and finally decided to paint a few. This photo shows a few of them on a paint board. (I think I need to do some board cleaning- they are getting a bit of a pant build-up on them) The upper left piece is a shimmery organza painted blue. I used metallic and Super Sparkle paints on the dryer sheets, and tryed to do an assortment of colors.


Here is a group of dryer sheets that have been heat set, and pressed flat. Wonder Under release paper or parchment paper is needed on both sides while using the iron to be sure they don't melt. You can see how sheer they are. I really like how they turned out. I have been thinking of using the orange ones for fall leaves. Now more ideas can start forming in my cluttered my brain.

This is a small quilt I made for the Stay at Home Challenge on the Quiltart list for those of us not able to go to Quilt Festival in Houston. We were to make small pieces 9"x12" in size or less for the The "Priority: Alzheimer's Quilts" project
These quilts will be auctioned off, with the proceeds going to Alzheimer's research.

At first I had no idea what I was going to do, but then I began to think how I have been feeling lately, and some ideas began to form. I have been dealing with some bad fibro flares lately, and some days I can't remember friend's names, or find the words I want to say. It feels like my brain has chunks missing. That gave me the idea of making quilts with pieces missing to represent the memory loss from Alzheimers that so many people have to deal with. I feel lucky that my memory losses are temporary, and can't imagine knowing it would never get better.


Missing Pieces and Butterflies is made of pieces of my painted fabrics, a couple partial sunprints, and commercial fabrics. It is satin stitch seamed with some of the pieces missing, leaving holes. The Echinacea flowers are photos printed onto cotton fabric, cut out and appliqued, with a couple petals missing from one flower. The butterflies were added to show there is hope. I backed the holes of this quilt with a painted dryer sheet in blues and greens.

The detail shot shows some of the quilting detail, and the flowers.

Missing Pieces and Faded Flowers is made in the same way as the above piece. In addition to the faded and partial sunprints, I have included some ink-jet transfers of flowers that ended up very faded looking. The center transfer is of pink strawberry flowers, and there is a faded rose in the lower center green section. Leaves and vines are quilted along with a butterfly. I painted inside the qulting lines with Super Sparkle paint for the hearts and butterfly. The holes in this one have a shimmery organza backing them.

This detail shot shows the transfer of the strawberry flowers over crazy patch fabric. This also shows the quilting better.

I will be sending these two out this week, and in a month or so, they should be put up for auction or sold some other way with the full profit going to Alzheimer's research.

 

Here is a real prize that I found this summer. I had been looking for over a year for "silk" oak leaves that looked close to the real thing. I finally found this bush of them, and now it has been stripped of it's leaves for quilts.


This is the first quilt that I made using the leaves from above. I made this for this past Fast Friday Fabric Challenge. Each month we are given guidelines for a quilt to be made in a week. This month, we were to make a quilt using something as embellishment, to show movement. Now that fall is really here, the first thing I thought of was the Oak leaves I had, and the fall winds that blow the leaves around outdoors. I began with a piece of fabric sunprinted with oak leaves, cut apart and arranged, using a metallic gold-flecked ivory fabric as a background.

I couched a yarn with the colors in the fabric over the edges of the sunprinted fabric pieces. I used a variegated thread in fall colors for the free motion quilting around the sunprint leaves and to add the veins. There are also wobbly curved lines quilted in with clear thread. The quilt edges are bound with the yarn used around the sunprints. I then added the "silk" Oak leaves over the top, as if they were swirling in the wind. I only stitched the veins in the leaves, and let some of them drift off the edges. The photos show the quilt on a pre-stretched artist canvas. The quilt is 11"x14" in size, on a 16"x20" canvas. I am trying to decide just how to mount it. I don't know if I will leave the canvas white, or cover it with a colored fabric.

The lower photo shows a few more leaves laid on the canvas bordering the quilt. I am not sure if I will add the extra leaves or not.

If anyone has any ideas, feel free to add a comment.

Now off to work, getting ready for my next show.

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My Dream House

Monday, October 29th, 2007

I still feel like I am trying to crawl out of a hole, but I am slowly getting back to quilting more. I am only a month late with this quilt. I have done this for the FFFC group. Last month's challenge was to depict your home or dream home, or other architecture, along with showing perspective in a quilt. The idea is to have a piece done in a week. I really only worked on this less than a week, but it took a long time to get in the frame of mind needed to actually do it.

This shows the first steps I took in creating "My Dream House". I certainly was not going to do a quilt based on our trailer- not very inspirational. I used a house that is actually worse than the thing I live in as inspiration. The house in the photo is located on the road we live on. I drive by it quite often, and sometimes have wondered what it must have looked like many, many years ago. Being the flower nut I am, of course, the weeds in the photo were going to become beautiful flower beds. I used an enlargement of the photo to trace the main parts of the house, as shown above. I used a piece of my painted fabric for the sky.

I then cut out pieces for the house and roof, using the pattern I made. I decided to give it the look of an English cottage, and it also ended up a single story house instead of 2 stories as in the photo. The windows were made using slivers of "roof" fabric with a shimery organza for the glass. I used colored pencils for the shading of the shingles, and colored behind the windows with green and blue to give the feel of the sky or bushes reflecting on the "glass".

Here is the basic house. I placed the pencil drawing of the house under backing paper from Wonder Under, then fused the pieces to the backing paper for the general shape of the house. I could then peel it off the backing paper as a unit for fusing onto the batting.

Here is the house fused over the sky on the batting. I then began putting in bushes, trees, and a few flowers. I was trying to give the feel of standing at the end of the long walk, looking toward the house, with flowers blocking the view of the walk in some places. I cut flowers from fabrics that had flowers printed on them, and shapes from other fabrics. On the right is my favorite kind of scissors for cutting the tiny, fussy pieces. They are Fiskars brand, with straight handles and a spring, and are very sharp right up to the point. No cramped hands, or dents in fingers from regular scissors.

The next photo shows the skeletons of the trees after I added more branches, thread painting with variegated thread. I also quilted the siding and roof detail with clear thread. You can also see the flowers that were not fused, yet, next to the quilt, along with some of the "swiss cheesed" fabrics I cut flowers out of.

This is the nearly finished quilt. I have not trimmed the edges, or added a binding, which will probably be a yarn of some type. I may also add some beading to some flowers, and a few "shrubs" that look like they want a little something added. This was a bit different from last winter's houses. Stones and Walls Quilts.


Here is a detail shot, showing the front of the house. I would love to live in a cute looking house, totally surrounded by flower beds. I do have a lot of flower beds, now, but in my dreams, they are even better, with no weeds.

Now that we had our first killing frost last night, I guess it will be back to gardening with fabric until spring comes again.

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