Posts tagged portrait

What To Do When You’re Not in Houston at Festival
3The International Quilt Festival is going on this week in Houston. I was lucky to have two quilts juried into their World of Beauty exhibit this year, Adelpho and Unconditional. Unfortunately, I will not get to see them hanging. My quilts travel more than I do. When my husband retires and the children are grown and gone, I hope to go to more shows.
I also had two quilts recently in the East Cobb Quilt Guild: Georgia Celebrates Quilts biannual show here in Atlanta, Sweet Dreams and Shoshanna. Shoshanna won Judge’s Recognition and 2nd Place in the Original Design category.
(Interesting side note — I took my friend that modeled Shoshanna to the show so that she could see it hanging. After the show, I had several quilters tell me that they had seen the woman at the show that looked like the quilt, and I of course assumed that they were talking about my model. Then I received several emails from a woman that had gone to the show earlier in the day and looks a lot like the quilt and hence the model. This is the first time I’ve had this happen. Unfortunately, the visitor to the show really wanted to meet the model, but I couldn’t violate my friend’s privacy.)
As this has been a banner year for me to be in shows (which makes up for only being in one show last year), I am also honored to have two quilts in the Art Quilts XIV: Significant Stitching show at the Chandler Center for the Arts in Chandler, AZ starting in November. Sweet Dreams will travel as will Chameleon.
Enough about me. I haven’t posted in a month and although family obligations keep trying to derail me, I have actually made some progress on a new piece. I’ve been taking a lot of pictures and I’m getting ready to quilt it, but since I’m procrastinating, I thought that I would show you the development of the face. (Keep in mind that all of the pictures except the last two were taken of the piece on a high table — and I’m a short woman — so there is some distortion in the features.)
This is all about layering values. I always (well I do now anyway) start with the lightest value in the face. In one quilt, I used the 2nd value first — and had show through which drove me nuts — so unless the piece of fabric is fairly small, I put down the values from lightest to darkest (which, by the way, is the opposite of how Deidre Scherer does her faces, but she free-hand cuts everything).
The 2nd value for the face is a bold choice — I admit it. I was pushing the limits of what I thought I could get away with. It is a paisley with tan, stone, and orange in it. There are even some hints at white. I had actually bought this for another quilt & didn’t use it — but the subject in this one is more carefree so I thought I might be able to pull it off.
The next value is a tan and blue stripe — but it is more tan than blue so I knew it would work for shading. I worked so hard to make the stripes vertical — and when I was done I wished that I had placed them on an angle. Maybe next time.
The next value is a little harder to see in this picture — but it is a tan with a small blue floral print. Again — it works for shading.
The next value — I’m really pushing what I can find in values — is a small stone and black paisley print — very busy. The stone is too light but I figured that the density of the black will overcome this flaw.
The last value for the face was found in my brown drawer of fabrics. It is a dark taupe with black and helps to outline the eye and the eyebrows.
Here you see that I have not added the eyebrows — I got distracted & started working on the eyes. I originally chose a gray blue for the pupils which you will see later I had to change.
Here are both eyes with the eyebrows.
The crowning touch is of course the mouth. It has a red border which signifies the inner edge of the mouth — and the mouth itself with the teeth are constructed from values of white — and by that I mean from white to gray using prints with varying densities of pattern to vary the value. (I do admit that I straightened the teeth of the model. My mom, an oil painter that has done a few portraits, agrees with me that most models like their features to be represented as better than they truly are — regardless of what the mirror tells them.)
At this point, I start on the hair. This is the first value of brown.
This is the 2nd value — not coming together yet.
The 3rd value is where most of her hair starts to come together.
This shows the 4th value of hair.
This is the final applique before I start adding the background. I have added some black in the hair — and the eyes need to be changed. The color isn’t strong enough — and they need more work.
Here I have changed the eyes to a stronger color — a green/blue which is actually the back of the fabric used in the background on the left side of the picture. I had a really hard time with a background for this piece. You want it to support but not detract from the piece — or call too much attention to itself. Again, the fabric I used for the T-shirt is a bold choice, but I wanted something playful to represent the youth of the model. I drove all over town (aren’t I lucky to finally live in a place that has a bunch of fabric stores?) and couldn’t find anything for the background other than the T-shirt fabric. I ended up pulling 2 fabrics — one from my green drawer and one from my blue drawer — which just goes to show that you should never limit yourself by how you or someone else has classified the fabric.
Happy Dance
3For non-quilters, doing the happy dance seems like an odd sounding activity — it just means that we are trying to share our happiness after succeeding in an endeavor, usually entry into a juried quilt show. In my case, I am sharing the love today because I want to share the good news that arrived in the mail this afternoon.
Both of my entries, Adelpho and Unconditional, have been accepted into the International Quilt Association’s World of Beauty exhibition to be held in Houston, TX in October. It is a high honor to have been juried into this show as it is one of the largest international quilt shows — and I am in excellent company.
I am glad that I persisted in entering this show. It took many years of wiping my pride aside after receiving rejections. I have had 3 other quilts there. Nothing last year — but I wasn’t surprised. I just entered one quilt and it wasn’t very good. I made it during my pre-move period and the stress showed in my work. But 2 the year before — and 1 the year before that.
I think my work has changed a lot since the first quilt. I’m still doing portraits, but it’s not monochromatic anymore, and there is more detail in the features. Working in a series has been wonderful and I’ve learned a lot. I never thought that I would work in a series, but there are so many lessons in each piece that progress and show in the next piece.

At the End
8Here 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:
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.

Countdown to Summer
0During the summer, I do not have time to produce much work, so I try to finish up all of my large projects before the end of May.
The stole that I gave to Jonathan was well received and helped to brighten our Easter service. It reminds me of a stained glass window, which is nice since we don’t have one in our current building.
(You can read more about this stole on my website HERE.)
The portrait that I am working on is ready to sandwich and prepare for quilting. I finished the applique work in time to put it on my design wall & show my mother who visited last week. I realized then that I could easily change her eyes — add some color and thus some realism. I did it this morning, very easily. (My mom is an oil painter and I always benefit from her critiques. I wished she lived closer.)

I Love Photoshop
2Photoshop is such a great design tool. I have the little Elements version — but it never ceases to amaze me. I don’t know what I would do without it. Julie Hirota showed me how to manipulate a piece of my work in Photoshop a couple of years ago — and I still use it a lot. It is always easier to visualize the piece before you cut everything out & then see your mistakes.
This morning I’ve been looking at my latest piece trying to decide what to use for the background — and if I should change the brown in the background of the hair. Stacy West suggested I use black for the background — and then I added some lines in a light blond/orange color for the quilting lines.
I think that the dark brown will work fine once I add the lighter color thread in the quilting stage. I tried to use a color closer to ash as a substitute — but then it kept fighting with the 3rd value range in the skin.
And I love the black. I haven’t decided if I’ll also use it for her shoulders or not.

First Things Last
2When I make a portrait, I typically add the background last & do something unrelated to the original picture. Unfortunately, with my latest piece, I have used so much of my energy on the face, now that it is done, I have hit a creative block. I do not know what to do for the shirt and background.
Here is what it looks like now with a few fabrics auditioned against it:
I know that blue, green, and purple are far enough away on the color wheel from yellow to give me some good contrast, but I also know that the choices have to be fairly dark to offset the hair and the neck. Nothing in my closet is jumping out at me though.
This is frustrating because spring break is almost upon me — so I won’t get any work done next week — and then I only have a short period of time to finish it completely before school is out for summer — and I don’t have any studio time.
I can either use one big piece for the background, something patterned (but not too much — I don’t want it to look like bad wallpaper), or I can use strips — giving a more abstract feel. What to do, what to do . . . . .

Another Sneak Peek
0This is what I have so far. The face is done — though I may still change the mouth — but I still have some work to do on the hair. I’m not sure about how the colors are working together — I may make some adjustments. But at this point, I’m going to finish it & then stand back from it & study it for a while. I knew that doing a blond would be challenging.

Always Up for a Challenge
1Using commercial fabrics has added an interesting complexity to my work that I didn’t expect. Sometimes, a fabric works great in the auditioning — and then bombs in the piece — because of the tightness & regularity of the pattern relative to the size of the pieces cut out for the face. I have been building a new face in the last few days — and have been playing with her mouth quite a bit this morning. I thought the in-process pictures would be interesting. (Keep in mind that all of these are taken on a flat table — so there is some camera distortion in these pics.) I always love to see the life grow under my fingers when I work.
This is the base laid out:
This is the face with a little more detail added:
Here I’ve added detail to the eye on the left:
And here I’ve completed the 2nd eye on the right:
This was one of the mouths that I did. I wasn’t happy with how it came out from the original pattern I drew, so I grabbed my Sharpie and scissors and started working away:
This is the mouth as it is now. I’m fairly happy with it — although I may change it when I make final adjustments:
Now I’m off to work on her hair. She is a blond — so this is a new challenge for me. I think I have it all in my stash though — amazing what you can find in that closet if you just search hard enough through the bins.

Disappearing Act
4I am guilty of a disappearing act. I have neglected writing on my blog because I have been working diligently on my latest piece, Shoshanna. I quilted it very closely, about 1/4 inch, and given its size and some problems with my machine (darn that Viking), it took me a long time to finish it. I do have a picture of it when the quilting was done:
It is incredibly wavy! I wasn’t worried — however, I knew that I would save myself a lot of headache if I added the binding after blocking it. It is always amazing to me how easily it flattens when wet.
Then when I went to add the binding, I decided to use the glue technique that I had seen Sharon Schamber use on her YouTube tutorial. Of course I forgot most of what I had seen and only used the glue to attach the binding to the back, but it is a HUGE timesaver and relief to my poor, noncallused fingers. Next time, I’ll try it all her way. When I was done, I did have to soak the quilt yet again to remove the glue (which is water soluble) — and block it AGAIN — but it is finally done — and I’m glad that I used this technique for the binding.
I have finished pictures on my website HERE.
By the way, I really struggled with a name for this piece. My work has changed from the style I had two years ago so I didn’t feel comfortable giving it the name Faces in Cloth with a number — that series has really developed into a body of work for me. I am also uncertain that using a person’s given name is wise — I wouldn’t want to provide too much access to a person’s personal life. The model’s husband suggested that I use the Hebrew intrepretation of her name — an idea which I really like and I think gives more insight into the feeling of the piece.
The other reason for my disappearing act is that I have many opinions about the economy — which perhaps spill over into politics — and I do not think this to be the right forum for that. I have friends — both conservative and liberal — and I find them all dear to me. This blog is not meant to be polarizing, and I do not personally like when I read the blog of an artist that allows her political views to take over. Artistry with political messages are fine — but I know that most read my blog for my art, not my political views. If I want to share those, I’ll start another blog — and then you can subscribe to that one separately or not. (I’m not to that point — yet.) Sometimes it’s important to know when to keep your mouth shut. IMHO