May 26, 2009

Fending Off Insanity

For the past 3 weeks or so, I have not had a major project. I fnished my last portrait & vowed not to start anything else big. A couple of summers ago, I spent the time staring at a half finished portrait that beckoned to me from the studio — and then strangely, when the summer was over & I had time to spend on it, the muse was almost gone. I had practically finished it in my head and didn’t want to work on it any more. It is nice when you can work with the muse and ride it through a project — and hell when you missed the journey. I suppose I could just lay the work aside and start something new, but I learned from my mom that a professional artist works through blocks.

So I have been having a hard time. Last summer, I laid everything aside. This summer it has not been so easy. The first couple of weeks, I made small things. I made 5 cell phone pouches — I love mine. Made one for me, my mom, my 2 daughters, and my best friend.

Then I saw a great article in the magazine Altered Clothing. Someone had made a bustier using the Chanin style. Chanin is a native Alabamian, like me, and she has a bunch of women in Florence that hand-stitch things like Tshirts and pillows that she sells in New York boutiques. I liked the bustier, but I’m not really the type — I’m more of a T-shirt gal — and I’ve seen Chanin’s work online so I knew that it was just a matter of a few simple materials and some time.

I bought a black & a white shirt from Wal-Mart. I layered the white shirt under the black shirt & then basted them together at the neck & the bottom hem so that the white shirt would peek out. I decided to keep the design simple & traced circles & teardrops onto the front. I used up all of the white DMC floss that I had (years ago I used to cross-stitch) and then bought more — and stitched on the lines with a backstitch. Then I cut out the black just inside the stitch lines leaving the white to peek out from underneath.

I want to say that this is Nigerian applique — but I think that that isn’t technically correct because I don’t turn under the raw edges. Because it was knit jersey, I felt comfortable that it would be OK left alone. When I washed it, I turned the shirt inside out. It came out of the wash fine.

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Great shirt for little $. I think I’ll make a few of these to wear this summer.

And then yesterday, when I thought that my brain would explode, I pulled out my small drawing pad and a black Sharpie. I realized that I needed to drop the pencil — stop with the hesitation & erasing — and just go. I doodled about 4 pages worth — and it made me feel a lot better.

I think I’m going to start going through drawing tutorials on youtube in the mornings when my kids have swim practice. My muse seems stronger this summer, and bottling her up isn’t going to work — so I’m going to come up with things we can do poolside.

May 6, 2009

At the End

Here I am at the end. I have completed my last quilt and will not start a new one for months. It is a very strange feeling compounded by the fact that I still have 2 weeks before the kids are home for the summer and I have jury duty tomorrow.

I have posted her on my website HERE, but this is a small showing:

ginny

It’s working title is Adelpho (which means brother in Greek). I found Ginny at church when we moved, and I’ve always called her my doppelganger — although that seems to imply that one of us is evil, and I hope that isn’t the case. She does have my same name, however, which in my experience used to be fairly unusual, so I’ve felt a kinship with her since we met. Given her theological experience, it seemed fitting that the name for the piece be Greek. I may still change it.

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May 5, 2009

Mother’s Day Gift

I have been in the final stages of my last big project before I kick off for the summer. My kids are home in the summer and they spend endless hours by the pool, so I use that time to read and hardly have any studio time — so I try to finish my work before school ends. My last quilt is currently blocked — I think it is dry — and I’m going to go photograph it in a few minutes.

That leaves me with almost 3 weeks — not as much as you would think since there is a lot of extra stuff going on right now — to do small projects. One of those is a gift for my mom. I decided to make her a cell phone pouch that she can move from purse to purse — and I found a great pattern at Susan Brubaker Knapp’s site HERE.

The first one I made for myself. Selfish, I know, but it gives me the chance to try out the pattern & make mistakes on the first one. I could have used more artsy fabric, but really, I just want something that will slip in my black bag and not stand out — so I used a reverse black & white toile I had on hand. For mom’s, I used a pink eiffel tower toile that I used for a purse I made for her a couple of years ago. It isn’t her every day purse, but it will match & that appealed to me.

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I thought when I made them that I needed to extend the strap — from 4″ to 8″ — but really, once you add the caribeener clip, 8″ is too long — so after I took these pictures, I went back & adjusted the strap back down to 4″.

I mailed mom’s off this morning. I hope she likes it. I love mine.