Sunday, December 23, 2018

Well occupied

Much of what I'm doing these days is gift-related and therefore un-showable. But I did do a little bit of decorating by making a new handtowel for the guest bath ...


and then indulged in some pure and simple stitch therapy with the remaining scraps ...


I have no plan for this, but it was fun.

Likewise, Don's decorating has no purpose beyond the sheer pleasure of gazing ...


with something to see wherever you look, whether up ...


or down ...


My assigned duties are decking the mirror with bells ...


the dry sink with crèches (two sets worth) ...  


and then we trim the tree together by turns ...


Now all we need do is await the arrival of kids and grandkids to make it all the more worthwhile.

Monday, December 10, 2018

Still pinching myself

We were supposed to go to the opening on Friday night ...


but since the forecast called for 5" of rain we chickened out. So Don and I went today instead ...  


And while you can't necessarily tell from my expression (I'm not fond of having my picture taken) ...


I was really happy to be there, to witness my first-ever piece accepted into an art exhibit ...


The exhibit label text was spare, but there were more details in the artist statements and bios ...


And just in case it doesn't zoom in sufficiently, I wanted to be sure this got seen ...


I'll post more later ...


hopefully with links to some of the artists. It really was quite a wonderful show, with over 80 works created by artists across Texas plus another dozen or so from out of state.

I was honored to be counted among them.

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Haptic

The colors aren't true ...


but that's not surprising as it's a gray day, which almost always makes for challenging photography. And really, that's not the point because this piece is intended to be felt as much as seen.

It began with this image of the labyrinth at Adobe and Pines in Taos ...


which I never actually walked. Regretting, that lapse, I thought making a stitched version would be a good thing. Then I could "walk" the labyrinth over and over.

But as you can see, the photo was taken at an angle, so when I pricked the path with a needle (behind which you can see a much truer picture of the madder cloth) ...


I realized the stitches would be too close together at the back of the path. So I tried drawing a crow's eye view of the path freehand ...


Good enough. I drew it again on cloth, letting my water erasable marker "walk" the path.

And then "walked" it yet again in tiny backstitches, worked in #8 perle cotton. But when I washed out the marker, a shadow remained ...


It was the logwood linen backing discharging into the madder ...


particularly along the seam...


and I'm absolutely okay with that. In fact, I may continue to wet and dry the piece in hopes of encouraging more discharge, after first detaching it from the Metta  stitching ...


And here I pause to give belated thanks to Connie Akers, my down-the-street neighbor with whom I recently reconnected. It was Connie who gifted me with the madder and logwood dyed pieces of linen. She is one of a trio of natural dyers who work under the name Eco & Indigo Fiber Arts ...



They are currently working some wonderful magic and videotaping their results, which you can see for yourself if you have Facebook

P.S. Trial copies of Moon Myth are headed my way from Shutterfly and Blurb ... fingers crossed that one or both are worthy.