
Tweek!
1It’s time for my weekly TWEEK! twitter round-up.
If you’d rather follow me in real time on Twitter, find me @vsgreaves or use the Twitter icon just above the menu on the right hand side.
I’ve become quite a Banksy fan during his visit to Brooklyn this past month. It’s hard to believe that it’s come to a close — but it’s been great fun seeing the excitement that he’s created, the way he’s inspired conversations on art in that community (and online) — and let’s face it, “everyone loves a rebel Harry.”
TWEET: “Coney Island’s Banksy Robot, Busy Weekend in Brooklyn [UPDATE 2]” http://hyperallergic.com/90612/coney-islands-banksy-robot-busy-weekend-in-brooklyn/
TWEET: “Banksy’s New Work Reflects on Banality of Evil, Benefits Charity [UPDATE 2]” http://hyperallergic.com/90789/banksys-new-work-reflects-on-banality-of-evil-benefits-charity/
TWEET: “Banksy Creates a Bronx Zoo, Invader Invades NYC, Awesome Banksy GIFs” http://hyperallergic.com/90992/bankys-creates-a-graffiti-zoo-invader-invades-nyc-awesome-banksy-gifs/
Can you believe that someone hid 1,500 works of art in their walls in Munich? And that the father of the current owner did this under the auspices of the Nazis?
TWEET: “1,500 Works of Nazi-Looted Art Discovered in Munich” http://hyperallergic.com/91724/1500-works-of-nazi-looted-art-discovered-in-munich/
TWEET: “Don’t Give It Away for Free!” Response to NYT article “Slaves of the Internet Unite!” http://feedly.com/k/172R8en
This is just plain interesting — taking famous portrait paintings and staging them with real actors for photography:
http://justsomething.co/22-famous-paintings-revisited-as-photographs/
We like to think that large corporations don’t steal ideas from independent artists, but unfortunately it happens more than we care to realize:
TWEET: Urban Outfitters steals from independent artist — not cool! http://tinyurl.com/3f85v5j
I find it fascinating that an artist goes into public spaces and creates in promptu thread sketches with her sewing machine. Even better, she’s done it in a Chinese factory where they make shoes by hand.
TWEET: Traveling Textile Performance Artist: http://tinyurl.com/n8snpcd
Sometimes I come across an artist whose work just has to be shared:
TWEET: Intricately Detailed Murals of Animals Living in Harmony – My Modern Metropolis http://www.mymodernmet.com/profiles/blogs/adonna-khare-illustrations via @mymodernmet
TWEET: Why creative people sometimes make no sense: http://tinyurl.com/mzfewyu
One of my sources for finding great articles to share is the RSS reader Feedly. It’s currently down on Saturday, the night I like to catch up on what is going on in the art world.
TWEET: Feedly is down. It’s Saturday night. What do I do now? #Feedly #signofareader
Knowing Feedly was down and watching all of the angry tweets arising out of the chaos, I went in search of why and found this explanation.
TWEET: The tyranny of Google+ continues! Now #Feedly requires it to log in… but they’re already backing down. http://blog.feedly.com/2013/11/07/google-authentication/

Houston Festival part 2
0After the Winner’s Circle, you can be certain that I hardly slept. I went to the hotel bar (perfect spot for a party of one), had some soup, and then went back to my room to try to sleep.
TWEET: Victoria Findlay Wolfe took this just before I walked on stage last night. #quiltfestival
I wish I had a pic of me on the stage. There was a photographer there but I have no idea who he was working for. Anyway, I’m very grateful to Victoria for taking this.
The next day I had a leisurely morning and basically waited for lunch time.
TWEET: Luncheon!
I was so pleased that my new friend Karen sent me a message asking if I wanted to join her for lunch. We met at the door and sat at a table with several of the winners from Japan. They didn’t speak very good English but they were incredibly kind and friendly.
TWEET: Takido Fusako on the left game me a hand sewn flower that is beautiful!
The woman on the left, Takido Fusako (her piece Crest of Tulip won a Judge’s Choice award), gave me a hand sewn pin (which looked awesome on my black jacket). The woman on the right, Sachiko Chiba, gave me an autographed print of her beautiful quilt My Hope that won 3rd place in Hand Quilting.
TWEET: Flower that Takido Fusako gave me. #quiltfestival
On the stage, all of the top winners ate lunch and then spoke about their piece. The first speaker was Best of Show winner Melissa Sobotka.
TWEET: Melissa Sobotka winner of best of show Chihuly’s Gondola. It’s truly stunning.
TWEET: Melissa — “pay attention to the judge or blow them off” — love it!
She had shown this quilt at another venue and one of the judges told her that there was a problem with the binding. Melissa’s point is that you either take their opinion or don’t worry about it. She did ultimately choose to take off the binding and re-apply another one before sending it off to Houston for judging.
TWEET: Vicki Anderson owes 18 sewing machines! Her speech on Getting Published.
TWEET: #judimadsen mentioned in her speech – on how to make a beautifully quilted quilt.
I’m Facebook friends with Judi and I follow her beautiful machine quilting so I was excited that Vicki showed her work and gave it its proper praise.
After the luncheon, there were a couple — just a couple — of vendor tables outside. I loved these fabric cakes. It reminded me of the felted teacup I made a few years ago.
TWEET: Too cute!
TWEET: I bought this year’ spin & they gave me freebies for 2004, 2007, & 2012. The one on the top left is this year’s pin.
It was strange walking back to my room, seeing quilters that are famous quilters.
TWEET: I feel like such a stalker. I know their names, I follow them on FB but I can’t bring myself to introduce myself.
I went back to my room and took pics of the Convention Center from there. It is such a large building, I couldn’t even get half of it in a frame.
With time to spare before Preview Night at 5pm, I spent some time in the gym. This is the view from the west tower of the Hilton.
TWEET: Technology is so cool. Delta emailed me a check-in, they txt’d a link to my boarding pass, & I saved it in Passbook for tomorrow.
This is my first time to be completely dependent on my smart phone to check in. I’ll never print another boarding pass.
I had planned on putting everything in one post from this one day in Houston — but this post is growing by the minute. I think I’m going to split the rest of it into another post. So look for a part 3 in a couple of days.

Houston Festival part 1
2TWEET: While I’m in Houston, I’m sending my tweets to my personal FB & my FB Page. I apologize for double tweets but want everyone to see the pics!
This is how I started my exciting 48 hour adventure to the Houston Quilt Festival. I wanted to share it with as many as my friends as possible. I was so excited and nervous about going, I accomplished practically nothing in the last couple of weeks leading up to the show other than packing my suitcase.
I went alone. I haven’t traveled alone since I was much younger and I looked at it as a grand adventure.
TWEET: Checked into Hilton Americas — isn’t the Chihuly glass chandelier amazing?
It’s impossible to mistake a Chihuly. There are two of them like this at Hilton Americas. I was lucky to find a room in the Hilton — it’s connected by a walkway to the Convention Center — something greatly appreciated by me when it poured rain on Wednesday and Thursday.
TWEET: Walked down bad streets to find this amazing place — District 7 Grill.
But this Tuesday, the skies were clear. I checked into the Hilton. I was starving — it was so late — but I was determined to be more original than eating in the hotel. I turned on my iPhone & looked for a restaurant nearby with at least a 90% approval rating. The closest one was District 7 Grill. I crossed the street to the convention center and made a left — which unhappily took me in the wrong direction. I ended up walking completely around the convention center — which is huge and covers probably 4 or more city blocks. I had to be careful about the streets I walked down and stick to ones with cars on them. I eventually found this haven of wonderful food. I had someone tell me it was in China Town. It was certainly a place that the locals go.
TWEET: Did I mention — no calorie counting on this trip?
I know it’s cliche’ to have a picture of my plate — but I couldn’t help it. It was 2:30 my time & I hadn’t eaten since 6am. This is a grilled veggie pizza on naan bread with feta cheese & pecans. I ate the entire thing. No regrets.
TWEET: An hour until I get ready. Decided I can’t eat dinner before I go — too nervous. Next tweet — Winners Circle.
I ate so late though that I wasn’t hungry later. Mix that with the excitement of getting ready for the Winners Circle — and the most I could get down was a banana. At least I was able to find some fruit downstairs in the lobby.
TWEET: The infamous Paula Nadelstern carpet.
Many quilters know the story of Paula Nadelstern, a quilter famous for her kaleidoscopes, showing up one year, looking down, and seeing her designs on the rug leading from the hotel to the convention center in the walkway. She successfully sued them for copyright infringement.
TWEET: I’ve seen Charlotte Warr Andersen & Jamie Fingal in the halls — rock stars in the quilt world.
I kept passing people that I know — but I don’t know. It was very surreal. Although non-quilters won’t necessarily know these people, I’ve seen their work & followed them for years — some of them I’ve even spoken with on Facebook. And yet I couldn’t bring myself to say something to them. I suppose a part of me thinks that famous people should be allowed their privacy.
TWEET: I’m here!
I finally found the correct ballroom. There are signs every 100 feet for a ballroom down the length of the convention center — none of them marked anything other than “ballroom”.
This is Karey Bresenhan speaking at the beginning. She is the the nexus of the entire International Market and Festival. She is the founder and without her, none of us would be there.
TWEET: Ran into my friend Denny Webster & her friend Marilyn Wall! I took pic with my camera so I’ll blog those later in the week.
I was standing by myself in line waiting to go in to the ballroom when I spotted my friend Denny Webster! She used to live here in Atlanta but moved a few months ago to North Carolina. She was there with Marilyn Wall who I was delighted to meet.
TWEET: I’m in my red Vera Wang — I’m overdressed.
I did feel overdressed — although later I was glad that I had chosen it. There was a full range of dress code — from jeans to full kimonos.
TWEET: I’m really close to Sharon Schamber — too strange!
She was sitting in the front row. I’ve followed her work for years. I follow her techniques for my bindings. I have my pressing board built like hers. Thank goodness for YouTube — I’ve never met her in person though. She’s petite like me.
TWEET: Bonnie McCaffrey is videoing at the front & Luana Rubin is sitting next to her.
Again, two people who I find interesting and follow. Bonnie was videoing the ceremony from the 2nd row and Luana was seated next to her.
TWEET: My heart just stopped! Did you hear it? 1st place in Art-People.
That was a moment to remember. They called 3rd place — so I thought — oh good! 2nd place! And then they called 2nd place — and I knew. I whispered “I think my heart just stopped.” I certainly stopped breathing.
I wish I had a picture of me on stage. I managed to get this picture from Victoria Findlay Wolfe.
TWEET: Fairfield Mastery Contemporary Artistry to Noriko Nozawa — gorgeous!
I took this pic the next day but it came out better than the ones I took the previous night. I found this quilt (Photographer Darling) worth studying. The background is quilted with a grid of black thread on white (mostly) — the postcards are black thread-work on white — and the image of the photographer is cross stitch! I did wonder how she managed to keep this piece flat — given the change in thread layers across the piece, it had to be challenging.
TWEET: Babylock master award for innovative artistry — Jane Sassaman!
This is also a pic from the next day (Illinois Album). It has a black border that is difficult to see because of the black hanging background. The design is phenomenal, but what struck me as surprising is that the white background is not a typical cotton fabric — it’s an embroidered white, probably not cotton. She also used a lot of embroidery stitches from her machine. These are not details that affect the overall design but they are interesting details for close inspection.
TWEET: Superior Award for Thread Artistry — Masanobu Miyama! (He’s a man!)
The majority of quilters are women so I’m always struck by a man that’s a quilter. He was the only man in the top winners. This piece (Wind) is very small. He painted the fabric with Tsukineko dyes, fused all the pieces down, and then heavily thread painted it. His wife was there and also had a piece in the show. They were from Japan. (30% or so of the winners were from Japan.)
TWEET: Pfaff Award for machine artistry — Shirley Gisi!
I didn’t get a great picture of this — but you can see it on the IQA Winners page here. It’s an abstract piece that effectively uses gradation fabrics to create 3D effects. Very clever.
TWEET: eQuilter award for WOB — Christine Alexiou — love this one!
This piece is called Septum Peccata Mortalia (Seven Deadly Sins). It opens like a book and has several pages.
That night, I was sitting next to Karen Ponischil (who won an Honorable Mention) and Christine on the other side. We shared our joy of the evening together and ended up meeting the next day to spend time together. My experience in Houston wouldn’t have been the same without them.
TWEET: Founder’s Award – Karen Seivert & a 2nd one to Margo Hardie!
I was confused here. Karen Seivert won a Founder’s Honorable Mention. Then Margo Hardie and Janet Stone both won Founder’s Awards.
TWEET: Another one to Janet Stone!
TWEET: Best Of Show — $10,000 award — wait for it ………
TWEET: Best of Show — Melissa Sobotka — stunning!!!
I don’t know that she could have found a better dress to stand beside her piece.
TWEET: Will get a better pic soon!
This, of course, is my better pic. It looks like a painting — or a photograph. It is raw edge with commercially bought batiks. I was stunned that raw edge has gained such acceptance. I hazard to guess that this is the 1st raw edge that has won Best of Show in Houston. And when I saw raw edge — I mean that there is no appliqué stitch — only tight quilting. I saw this on many pieces at Houston — raw edge but tight quilting or thread painting. It’s making me wonder if I should continue to spend so many hours covering my edges with appliqué stitches.
TWEET: I stood by my quilt for an hour — wow!! Everyone was so nice!!
I’m so glad that my new friend Karen insisted on taking my pic as I didn’t get one with me later the next day when Lincoln had it’s blue ribbon next to it.
And the money shot. This is also Karen — I don’t know what I would have done without her.
TWEET: I took a bunch of pics that I’ll post on my blog when I get home.
And so I’ve incorporated them here — both my tweeted pictures and the ones on my phone.
And finally — I couldn’t ignore the coolest shoes in the room. These were Philappa Naylor’s boots. She won first place for Scarlett’s Crimson in the Wearable Art category. She does beautiful quilts usually around a medallion so I was surprised to see her in the Wearable Art category — but I understand that it can be thrilling to step outside your comfort zone. Even better to do it and succeed at such a high level.
I had a blast. Although I didn’t get to stay very long, it was incredibly fun.
Part 2 will come tomorrow and I’ll show pics from my second day in Houston.
Tweek!
0Most of my week was spent twittering my adventures in Houston — and I didn’t spend a lot of time finding articles to share. I do have a few of them though that I’ll share here. I’ll save my Houston timeline for a separate blog post.
Remember, if you want to follow my Twittering — which isn’t usually as prolific as it was this week — you can either click on the Twitter icon in the upper right just above the menu or search for @vsgreaves.
“Banksy’s New Piece Is Waiting at a Strip Club for Love” : my fascination with Banksy continues #banksy http://feedly.com/k/18YHY6s This is a really cool piece — a man with a hat leaning against the wall. It was painted on a rolling garage door though so I suspect that the owners will take it down soon.
“Banksy’s Growing NYPD Problem [UPDATE 2]” : Get #Banksy !! http://feedly.com/k/1cZ4XPB New York has strict laws against tagging — and they’re hot on Banksy’s trail trying to bring him to justice. (There’s a part of me that gets a thrill from defying authority — go Banksy!)
“If You Spray It, They Will Come …” #banksy #whatisart http://hyperallergic.com/89910/if-you-spray-it-they-will-come/ …
Slaves of the Internet, Unite! http://nyti.ms/H9hPau This is about how artists — writers, musicians, painters — all of us creatives — are often asked to produce work for free.
Great article on negotiating the art world: http://tinyurl.com/mz3eqqn
That’s it for this week! I didn’t have a lot of time to read — but I suspect I’ll make up for it in the coming days. Next week’s Tweek! promises to be extra long.

Tweek!
0This has been a strange week. The girls were out of school for Fall Break Monday & Tuesday — we ate out downtown, went shopping, saw movies — and the rest of the week I’ve been working at what is becoming my day job. I’m also getting nervous about going to Houston next week. My mom is coming to take care of the girls, but Thursday is Halloween and I need to be home for that (I’m still needed!). I’m going on a whirlwind of 48 hours to one of the coolest places — to a quilter anyway — on the planet.
I’d love to say that I’ve been super creative this week — but it just isn’t true. I’ve hit a lull since I’ve finished Golden Moment. What I probably need to do is work on some small pieces until I can hit that spark again.
This is my weekly Twitter summary — for those that are interested. You can follow me on Twitter by hitting the Twitter icon in the top right just above the menu — or search for @vsgreaves. I typically post articles about being an artist, photography, marketing art, Apple, specific artists (I’m enjoying following Banksy in NY right now) — and NEXT week I’m going to post a TON about the International Quilt Festival in Houston.
Cool video about photographer that pulls strangers together: http://tinyurl.com/mjm668h — I really loved this video. The photographer pulls complete strangers together and poses them in intimate ways that make them look like family. It’s so compelling that the models themselves end up feeling bonded to the other models.
I’m the Accidental Owner of a Banksy http://zite.to/19Xzz3e — This person had a building they owned marked by the famous street artist Banksy. Later in the week, I read that they had set up an overhang and were charging admission.
What we can learn about social media from Dr. Seuss: http://bit.ly/V7cPIv — clever poem. And who doesn’t love Dr. Seuss?
Nobody should buy an iPad 2 for $399 http://zite.to/1793Tri — Apple debuted their new line-up this week — and they didn’t drop the price of the iPad2.
Review: OS X Mavericks http://zite.to/19Za2m5 — free OS upgrade, smoother ride — Along with the new product line, Apple dropped the next OSX upgrade — for free. I downloaded it but I’m a little nervous about the upgrade. Might do it tomorrow.
“Banksy Pops Up in the South Bronx, Catching Up with Weekend Banksys [UPDATE 2]” http://hyperallergic.com/89491/banksy-tags-the-south-bronx-catching-up-with-weekend-banksys/
Making Commission Work by Carol Naylor http://tinyurl.com/lahn5m2
Are You (as an artist) Too Frugal? – http://s.shr.lc/17bpqzp — Alyson Stanfield offers more great advice.
What’s Scott Adams’ secret to success? ‘Goals are for losers’ http://on.wsj.com/GVOnV1 — I was really moved by the comments in this article — it’s such a different way of looking at things. I know that when I fall down, I get back up & keep going. “. . . that’s exactly where you want to be: steeped to your eyebrows in failure. It’s a good place to be because failure is where success likes to hide in plain sight.”

Tweek!
0So I was thinking about what I could call my weekly Twitter round-up and I thought I’d try out TWEEK! It’s a little melodramatic for me — but it’s the end of the week and a little excitement might be just the thing to bring things back into perspective.
For those that want to follow me on Twitter — hit the Twitter link on the right above the menu or search for @vsgreaves.
Big this week — Banksy, street artist visiting New York, creates buzz — and Cody Foster rips off independent artist causing outrage on the internet.
Creative Kleptomania: Steal Like An Artist: http://youtu.be/oww7oB9rjgw
“The Power of One Human of New York” — long but great insight into HONY photographer http://feedly.com/k/1cpYAV8
Alleged Copyright Theft Goes Viral – http://www.artsyshark.com/2013/10/17/alleged-copyright-theft-goes-viral/
“Banksy Goes Japonaiserie in Brooklyn [UPDATE 3]” — I confess to being a growing Banksy fan http://hyperallergic.com/88947/banksy-goes-japonaiserie-in-brooklyn/
Banksy Secretly Sells Original Signed Art for $60 on Streets http://bit.ly/19BHYqZ
Tell Your Story, Sell More Art: http://tinyurl.com/l5f8nzu
West Elm pulls all Cody Foster products: http://tinyurl.com/n6lfmrz

Completed Golden Moment
0The golden retriever piece (Golden Moment) was finally dry today. When I put it in water to take out the water soluble glue I use to temporarily attach the binding — and to prepare it for blocking — some of the red in the harness crocked onto the lighter areas of fur. I’ve sadly had this happen before. Red dye is never predictable. I had the same thing happen on Beach Guardians. (I had to paint over that spot.) It’s probably the same fabric — when Beach Guardians comes back home, I’ll track that fabric down and throw it away. One of my first quilts was a very large red and white quilt — and it bled like crazy. I almost cried when I pulled it out of the water. I sprayed it liberally with Shout & threw some Oxi-Clean in — & then re-ran it through another cycle. That particular piece — Childhood — still shows some red on the back on the toile where it shouldn’t be. It happens.
Today I pulled out all of the pins on Golden Moment and photographed it. At first, I forgot to turn on my special lamps. When I was done, I remembered and re-did my shots with the lamps. All of the shots I took before I turned on the lamps were yellow — so all of them were trashed. So lucky I have those lamps (thank you Holly Knott).
I’m still a little uncertain about all of the space I left around the golden retriever. I bought a yard of fabric and fit it around her — and when I was done, it seemed wrong to cut off all of that extra fabric. I didn’t want her centered, and it feels to me as if the extra space on the left and top gives the viewer the feeling of being in the shoes of the person the golden is gazing at. That’s what I see when I look at it — I hope that I’ve successfully conveyed it.
I don’t know what my next project will be. I always spend some time wandering between projects. Today I went to JoAnn’s and bought muslin and velcro so that I could replace the cover on my ironing board. Years ago I made an ironing surface after watching Sharon Schamber’s video. I thought about taking a picture of the cover I was throwing away — but frankly it was embarrassing. Just know that my board is now clean and spotless.

Twitter Weekly
0I’ve had a Twitter account for a while (@vsgreaves) but I’ve only recently started using it. I read a lot & I’ve started sharing links to articles I find interesting — about art, architecture, photography, Apple, creativity, inspiring people.
I thought I would experiment with sharing the weekly article links here in the blog — for those that aren’t into Twitter & don’t want to miss out on what’s going on in this wide and wonderful world.
“SAPVoice: Why Artists Know More About Customer Experience Than You Do – Forbes” http://t.co/V7E8o4V3N9
“Fear Giving a Price Quote? The art of the Deal Memo – Maria Brophy | Maria Brophy” http://t.co/ygLkga9fZH
“How to Paint Like Vermeer, as Explained by a Techie” http://t.co/nayDcoeQ6j
On The Importance of Developing Your Creative Vision http://t.co/erQyAPVjD9
Reader Photos Roundup: October 6, 2013 http://t.co/VVHSPWPnNA
Commit to Imperfection – http://t.co/VbHZOuleXH
“A New York Apocalypse, Hidden in Plain Sight” http://t.co/vZAUycU3cM
Check it out! I donated to Rebeccas Run for Lymes&Cancer Treatment http://t.co/T8aHrnBaSz
Quilting hits the art world in NY: http://t.co/JvpxQkVZQk
#lukehaynes
“Women of Vision: The Female Photographers of National Geographic” http://t.co/QlW5w1ZUx9
7 Positives Only Introverts Would Understand http://t.co/eKvMsJCBam
Top 12 Hacks for Making Your Gadgets Better with Sugru http://t.co/XGLcSlezip

Happy Friday
0I just found out that Amelia Earhart has won 1st place in the open division, original design realistic pictorial wall category at the La Conner International Quilt & Fiber Arts Festival. Life has been full of blessings lately. I wish I could see the exhibit but it’s on the opposite coast from me. Hopefully some kind soul will take a pic and send me a copy.
It will hang in the extended exhibit through December at the La Conner Quilt & Textile Museum in La Conner, WA.

Going to Houston
1I have been working away here on my Golden Retriever. This is what she looked like before appliqué and quilting. I have since completed appliquing her and just finished pinning her this morning in preparation for quilting.
I bought several backgrounds before I settled on this batik. I didn’t want anything busy to distract from the Golden — so piecing a background was out. I also had decided to stick with analogous colors on the color wheel — so I knew yellow green was the correct color choice. The first piece I bought was a lime green that I thought would be perfect, but the minute I brought it into my studio, I knew it was wrong. I also bought a yellow green with some gray in it — which worked, but it didn’t make the Golden sing. It was just too flat. There was a batik at the store I had decided wouldn’t work because it had too much yellow in it — but at home, looking at my other choices, I knew it would work — and it does. Sometimes you have to move out of your own way.
I have also had some exciting news — I’ve been given the honor of being invited into the Winner’s Circle at the International Quilt Festival in Houston this year for my piece Lincoln. I’ve never even been to the show before — but I’ve made my reservations and I’m looking forward to meeting other artists I’ve only met on the internet and feeling honored to be in their presence. When I find out my prize at the end of October, I’ll be sure to share.