Thursday, June 23, 2011
Module 4 Chapter 9 Section A Exercise 3 again
Something odd has been happening with these photos so I have re-posted them in the hope that this time they will enlarge for a closer look.
Module 4 Chapter 9 Section B
Exercise 1
The shape I chose to use is taken from the petals of the flower photos used earlier in this module - I cut out templates in graduated sizes. Image 1 - looking at just the shape by arranging the templates.
Arranging cut out shapes on contrasting backgrounds - images 12 and 13, both A5 size. Image 12 has turned into a bird, image 13 could do with more contrast to show the shapes more clearly.
Combining cut outs with negative shapes on different backgrounds - images 14 and 15.
Image 15 also show some arrangements on copies of the tonal paper.
The shape I chose to use is taken from the petals of the flower photos used earlier in this module - I cut out templates in graduated sizes. Image 1 - looking at just the shape by arranging the templates.
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| Image 11 |
| Image 12 |
| Image 13 |
| Image 14 |
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| Image 15 |
Module 4 Chapter 9 Section A - part 2
I was going to put this section all in one post but last night I was having trouble uploading and arranging photos so I have split it up. So carrying on from the last post -
These are the two arrangments on backgrounds that I decided to keep. Image 6 slightly art deco/skyscraper shapes against swirling colour and image 7 which is a much brighter green than it looks here.
Just reversing the strip (bottom left corner) was too harsh so I experimented with using parts and moving them part way along. I found the dark end was too dominant and heavy, and the arrangements that work best are ones where it is lightened, especially when some of the scraps of violet shapes are included. Image 10 is my favourite, it has drama with the upward movement and colours but a satisfying symmetry. I could see this as a very large, lightweight hanging.
These are the two arrangments on backgrounds that I decided to keep. Image 6 slightly art deco/skyscraper shapes against swirling colour and image 7 which is a much brighter green than it looks here.
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| Image 6 |
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| Image 7 |
Exercise 3
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| Image 8 |
Using the green in the centre I gradually added white at one end and black at the other, then cut a couple of thin strips from the edges and played with rearranging them and adding scraps from the earlier exercises (I have left this photo full size so you can enlarge by clicking on it).
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| Image 9 |
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| Image 10 |
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Module 4 chapter 9 Section A - part 1
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| Image 1 |
For these exercises, I worked with two colours of acrylic paint - quincridone violet and pthalo green. Image 1 shows the range of colours from mixing the two and image 2 is a combination of photos showing various ways I tried of combining colours.
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| Image 2 |
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| Image 3 |
Exercise 2
I used the same paints to make some backgrounds on A4 sheets, using sponges to mix the colours freely on the paper in contrast to the rectilinear blocks of colour from exercise 1. I played with lots of combinations of the torn papers on backgrounds, shown in image 4, and then selected two to keep.
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| Image 4 |
Monday, June 06, 2011
Chelsea Flower Show
My DH had a big birthday this year, and one of his presents was a trip to Chelsea Flower Show and since it's no fun on your own, I got to go too.
Some of the inspiring gardens..
These boxes provide habitats for insects etc
I took this photo to get the name of the flowers but I love the display too
I've never had much interest in floristry but these displays were stunning.



This tree was built from sections of driftwood and filled with cut flowers and recyled items.
Can you see the teabags in this picture?
And the bottles in this one?
Some of the inspiring gardens..
These boxes provide habitats for insects etc
I took this photo to get the name of the flowers but I love the display too
I've never had much interest in floristry but these displays were stunning.
This tree was built from sections of driftwood and filled with cut flowers and recyled items.
Can you see the teabags in this picture?
And the bottles in this one?
Friday, June 03, 2011
Fabric Samples
Quick update - I now have samples of the fabric designs I uploaded to Spoonflower. The massed flower heads have come out a little more orange than I anticipated and looking closely, I can see where the repeat could do with finetuning but is is rather fun.
Friday, May 20, 2011
Drawing v Photography
I love the internet! I accidentally hit the Stumble! button on my browser when I was trying to go back one page, and it took me to this wonderful blog post about an artist called Ben Heine who combines drawings with photographs in a creative and amusing way.
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Origami
A little diversion - relax and enjoy this delightful video of origami unfolding in water.
Flottille (detail) from Etienne Cliquet on Vimeo.
Monday, May 16, 2011
Module 4 Chapter 8
For this chapter, I have made a few samples of slips created from digital images. I decided to use two methods - printing onto printer-ready fabrics and using Ario transfer paper.
I started with one of my flower drawings from an earlier chapter and tried combining lots of copies, coming up with the image in photo 1.
I printed this onto cotton - it came out in lovely clear colours but didn't seem to lend itself to being cut up for slips. I liked it so much as a piece of fabric that I reworked the image into a pattern repeat, uploaded it to Spoonflower for printing and ordered a sample. It will be a couple of weeks before it arrives but I am hoping it will be a cheerful summer print.
Photo 2 Here I used single copies of the flower printed onto silk which gives much more faded colours. I found that the act of cutting them out gave a hard edge that I thought spoilt the drawing so I tried to overcome this. On the left, I have free machined over the slip colouring in the flower and going over the edge. On the right, I used an embellisher to attach and distress the flowers. The background for both samples are some embellisher samples from my collection. I chose these to suggest flowers on a trellis or stake, continuing the theme from some of the chapter 5 samples.
Photo 3 For the next two samples, I used as backgrounds some monoprints I made last summer (featured in this blog post). 2p coin in the corner for scale.
Some of the flower head images from earlier work printed onto transfer paper and ironed onto scraps of printed fabric which were then stitched onto a printed silk background - I thought the pattern reminiscent of a winding path and trellis. I added a few painted details to the flowers after transferring.
Photo 4
For this one, I thought it would be fun to combine the 'flowers on a trellis' theme with my course theme of 'machinery and industrial landscape.' I printed small copies of one of my pylon photos from module 1 and transferred them onto more monoprinted scraps. The stitching they are trapped in is layers of a digitised version of the same photo - something I had played with a while ago but not used. Photo 5 is a close up to show the stitching more clearly.
Photo 6 Back to flowers - this time using unaltered photos. The flower head is double-sided - on the outside rose petals and inside the unidentified flower I used in chapter 3. I transferred the images onto some stiff fabric that can be manipulated when wet and retains it shape, then bonded them together and moulded the shape over a fingertip. Underneath is the same image transferred onto a drinks can - it came out indistinctly but I liked the grungy effect enough to keep it. I mounted the two pieces onto some mulberry bark and a dressmaking remnant backed with pelmet vilene, and stitched them down with french knots.
Photo 7 is a sideways on shot to show the outside of the flower.
I started with one of my flower drawings from an earlier chapter and tried combining lots of copies, coming up with the image in photo 1.
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| Photo 1 |
| Photo 2 |
Photo 2 Here I used single copies of the flower printed onto silk which gives much more faded colours. I found that the act of cutting them out gave a hard edge that I thought spoilt the drawing so I tried to overcome this. On the left, I have free machined over the slip colouring in the flower and going over the edge. On the right, I used an embellisher to attach and distress the flowers. The background for both samples are some embellisher samples from my collection. I chose these to suggest flowers on a trellis or stake, continuing the theme from some of the chapter 5 samples.
Photo 3 For the next two samples, I used as backgrounds some monoprints I made last summer (featured in this blog post). 2p coin in the corner for scale.
| Photo 3 |
Photo 4
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| Photo 4 |
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| Photo 5 |
| Photo 6 |
Labels:
flowers,
module 4,
module 4 chapter 8,
pylons,
slips
Tuesday, May 03, 2011
Did you miss me?
Isn't it always the way - when you have something to blog about, you are too busy to sit at the computer. Sorry to be silent for so long but it's been a bit hectic making costumes for the dance school my daughters go to (never turn down paid work I always say, especially if it involves sewing). Since I last posted, I have made three of these...

And five of these (ignore the bits of paper)...
Designed and made this ...
Then piled into a car to compete in the All Irelands and International in Ennis (the girls, not me) and take a holiday while we were there. Saw lots of these...
And walked on this...
And just had to take a photo of this house (and if you recognise it, you are as sad bad as me!)
And what with Easter, the Royal Wedding (lovely - I must be going soft in my old age, I never watched any of the other ones) and DH turning 60, it has been non-stop celebrating since we came home. Normal service will be resumed shortly!
Finishing Chapter 6
Finally, the rest of chapter 6, samples mounted on paper with a 2p coin for scale.
Top left - 3d slip cut from drinks cans that have been heated and coloured, stitched down with french knots. Top right - fine metal mesh free machined between 2 layers of fabric and manipulated into shape. Bottom left - these samples show distortion using heat and seemed to naturally fall into a posy. All six shapes were cut from the same piece of silk using the template on the right, so you can see how much they have changed shape. The 'petals' are silk backed with painted Tyvek (from a used envelope), free machined and zapped with a heat gun. The 'leaves' are silk backed with TextureMagic and stitched in curved lines then heated with a steam iron to shrink. While the Tyvek bubbles and curls, the TextureMagic shrinks but stays flat, causing the top layer to wrinkle. The close up below shows this a bit more clearly.
Top left - 3d slip cut from drinks cans that have been heated and coloured, stitched down with french knots. Top right - fine metal mesh free machined between 2 layers of fabric and manipulated into shape. Bottom left - these samples show distortion using heat and seemed to naturally fall into a posy. All six shapes were cut from the same piece of silk using the template on the right, so you can see how much they have changed shape. The 'petals' are silk backed with painted Tyvek (from a used envelope), free machined and zapped with a heat gun. The 'leaves' are silk backed with TextureMagic and stitched in curved lines then heated with a steam iron to shrink. While the Tyvek bubbles and curls, the TextureMagic shrinks but stays flat, causing the top layer to wrinkle. The close up below shows this a bit more clearly.
Friday, March 11, 2011
Module 4 Chapters 4 to 6 Part 2
For the next stage, I made two pieces of fabric from which to cut slips. These are both made from layers of assorted sheers backed on felt. I free-machined in looping petal shapes to reflect the shapes printed on my decorated papers from the previous chapter (images 13 and 14 in the Dec 5th post), and used the same two colour schemes.
The next two pictures show how I applied the slips cut from these surfaces to new backgrounds and also added some of the earlier ones. 10p coins are included to give the scale.
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| Photo 1 |
Photo 1
The background is a piece of dyed silk backed with felt stitiched with a digitised knotwork motif designed as a sample in module 2. I repeated the motif many times, letting it overlap and changing colours randomly, giving an overall trellis effect to complement the flowers. The slips have been attached as follows (numbers on the photo)
- Added another layer of sorbello stitches which carry on into the background.
- Placed the slip on the background and repeated the knotwork motif over and around it.
- These are two slips made on the embellisher using little snippets of thread on felt to reflect the softness of the pastels (image 12 in the Dec 5th post). These are dangling freely from loops of thread.
- A couched thread makes a more definite edge.
- Rows of herringbone stitches encroaching on the slip.
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| Photo 2 |
Photo 2
Background is dyed silk backed with felt and painted with Markal sticks, again using shapes from strapwork studies in module 2. In this case, the angles contrast with the rounded slips.
- Slip attached by couching another colour around the outline of the flower head.
- Slits cut in the silk and the slips attached at one end to the felt underneath.
- Attached using beads at the centre.
- Handstitched lines added to the design and carried over into the background.
- Held down by two large pearl-headed pins (like a butterfly).
- Not sure the photo shows this very well - I have used a stiff thread to attach groups of beads to points around the edge. The thread stands up in loops above the slip to echo the petal shapes stitched on it
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Whoops!
Bit of an error in the last post - I am at the exhibition on Saturday, not Sunday - 10 to 12 if you still want the cuppa!
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Embroiderers' Guild Exhibition
Embroidery Exhibition 25th – 27th February 2011, Stoke Lodge Adult Education Centre, Shirehampton Road, Bristol, BS9 1BN
I have entered Glimpsing the Storm and some of my collages for this exhibition which should be well worth a visit - there is always a wide variety of work from branch members. As it is our 30th anniversary (which is the pearl one), the branch is holding a competition for members on the theme of 30 something. We were given a few pearls and a piece of silk, and had to make a piece no larger than 30 x 30cm which used them. I racked my brains for ages trying to think of something - 30 stitches, 30 colours, 30 days hath September, 30 pieces of silver... While I was on a biblical theme I decided to look up psalm 30 and found this lovely line "weeping may tarry for the night , but joy comes with the morning". So here is my entry, a bright orange, joyful sunrise.
The background is painted silk with kantha style stitching to suggest the heat haze and text printed directly onto silk. The sun is lots of handstitiching piled up on soluble fabric, it is all sorbello stitch.
I am on tea duty on the Sunday morning, so if you are in the area pop in and say hello, and I'll make you an extra nice cuppa.
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