Monday 14 November 2011

Alma's demonstration

Alma has been experimenting - she passes on this quick tutorial....

"
When free machining fine fabric or making lace I find -

1. Embroidery hoops awkward and very restricting

2. Romeo and disolvables better but difficult to remove completely leaving the work hard.

A cardboard frame is much better -

Attatch support threads firmly round the frame in both or all directions. It slips easily

under the needle for stitching. When completed the work can be cut out and extended if desired.


See you soon

Alma"
 
A brilliant, brilliantly simple idea- thanks for that.

Wednesday 28 September 2011

Olive gets a head start



Olive has sent a few pictures of the drawn threadwork on linen she's been doing- a wall hanging with long fringing threads.... I like it a lot....   when you see the amount of withdrawn threads you know it must have taken ages just to prepare.


And thats the gauntlet thrown down!  We'll all have to get working now!












Kindle covers and trips out

Life has been a bit brisk lately- But in keeping with my therapy I have to do more things for myself...so in the last 2 weeks I have made a fabric from gauze scraps, designed and made a kindle cover with them, and been to see 2 out of 3 textile exhibitions. I have yet to sort out the building work I'm having, or  arrange my finances....but the important stuff  has been done!

First... The Kindle cover....

I made the fabric by bonding bits and pieces of lace and gauze to calico.










Then I machined on some fancy and metallic threads














Then I used it to cover some felt padded mount-board  to give a hard protective shell, and added elastic straps.....And a beaded self-cover button.

Just to be sure - I held the whole thing over my bed and shook it like a terrier with a squeeky toy...  The Kindle never budged!

I'd call this a success.


I got to see the Starstuck exhibition at the Ulster Museum- such lovely costumes... took a few close up photos of the embroidery and beading but failed to note which was which....
So have some fun guessing at these.....







I also called in at the "through the eye of the needle" exhibition in Armagh... Some beautiful work on display. - not allowed to use the camera.  I loved Armagh museum - it was full of  old fashioned dark wood cabinets with typed ( on a remmington, not a pc!) labels. Well worth a visit.

And in case you were wondering about the 3rd exhibition- I've arranged to see Frankie Creiff's exhibition at Lisbane old postoffice tomorrow


Thursday 15 September 2011

Folk Museum day out










We chose "Linen" as the theme of our next exhibition, and to get  the creative year started and to do a little research and gossip we went to see Valerie Wilson at the Ulster Folk and Transport Museum. She has all the costumes and textiles in her charge, and she culled a few titbits out of the enormous collection for us to see.


Irene and Johanna studying a quilt


 Alma and Carol






Olive and Valerie




First Valerie showed us some amazing white work quilts dating from 1790-ish-  beautiful tiny hand embroidered stitches- white on white- work that would a be challenge today with modern daylight bulbs and fine strong steel needles













Then she produced some wonderful coloured embroidery on linen - this amazing early (1760) bed quilt- with the smallest back stitch I've ever seen. Its reputed to be the best example of this type of quilt in any museum in the UK












And  bedspread from the 30's - hand embroidered on unbleached linen from a commercial pattern- the reverse almost indistinguishable from the front!

















There were cross stitch samplers on linen



Damask samples from weaving factories ( coloured so errors could be easily spotted)




and a school sample book  from 1905 (ish) with amazing mini garments made by the pupils to exhibt their prowess with a needle.

And a lot of other amazing stuff as well. - I  found it really inspiring,.... I must really do more handwork.....

The museum collection is an fantastic resource,  and Valerie gave us loads of information, enthusiastic support, and the use of a room for the afternoon.  She even invited us back to see the photographic collection and do reseach in the library. 
Many, many thanks to Valerie for her help and support.








Saturday 10 September 2011

Alma's singing with the choir

Alma sent me 2 photos of work she putting together for Christmas craft stalls ( Christmas!- I refuse to acknowlege it until we've had Halloween!)
She says the scarves were tiedyed "The acid lanaset dyes are easy to use - set in the microwave for a couple of minutes instead of ironng or boiling. The colours are stronger than expected but I will keep trying."



I'd never heard of lanaset dye- could be the subject of a messy play session.....







Isn't this wee choir sweet?!

Carol 's handstitching

Carol has sent me  photos of some amazing hand stitching shes done. Each piece has been created using a single stitch, and her wonderful sense of colour.
This piece, ( my favorite) has been made using fly stitch





feather stitch
Couching

Crossstitch
Creatan stitch- (thats a really tricky one )
 french knots








raised chain









 chainstitch








Composite stitch









 and  mountmellick









These are wonderful pieces, you should be so proud Carol!  and  pieces created with a single stitch could prove a good theme for a future exhibition......


Tuesday 6 September 2011

Impromtu post

I have just seen this   Scroll down to the sewing machine cake- It is amazing!!!!  While you are there rummage around the site for some of the worst cakes ever- so funny

enjoy...

Thursday 1 September 2011

Trying to find my inner embroiderer.....

I've done no embroidery  for a long while....so I needed to put some jump leads on my creativity.  Feeling dull and bereft of ideas, I scheduled a morning at my table. ( literally put it in my diary a week ahead, and treated it like an appointment- so I didn't find myself starting to to clean the bathroom, or refold laundry , or any of the other time stealing diversionary tasks that we do instead....)

I  had no new ideas , so I dug out some old drawings I made years ago when I had been working with images of wrought iron gates.





I painted some satin, traced the design onto some calico to back it, and machined the design. The result was inoffensive, but a little dull.









So I pinned on a few scraps of gauze and painted scrim,









ferreted out some hand- sewing threads,











A few rows of running stitch, and I cut back the  scrim-
much better......

I shisha'd on a couple of recycled dental mirrors-(well washed!!!) and added a raised wheel...a few beads....and there it is.










Its not the most exciting or cutting edge piece ever made.... but I'm pleased with it

 I've got my inner embroiderer back!!!!!

Can't wait for our day out at folk museum!


Tuesday 2 August 2011

.... and we're back!!!!!

After a short illness I'm back- well, nearly!  Apologies for the long gap in blogging, but I haven't been doing anything worth blogging about.

Olive, on the other hand... It seems her holiday in Cork was cancelled so she decided to make an "art journal" instead.




She sent these images from it- the first is an experiment with lutrador.

I REALLY like the spiral page-.theres a lot one could do with that  image as a starting point.

I never used Lutrador... can't say I ever even handled it.... Perhaps we should ask Olive to lead an afternoon of messy play with it?

Sunday 29 May 2011

Mr Pringle


Christine did the residential course at Drumalis house, a weekend devoted to machine embroidery led by Carol Naylor. Heres a couple of pics of her work


The pieces were stitched on unprimed artists canvas in reverse - thick threads in the bobbin,and stitched"upside down" with heavy impasto type stitching. 

I particularly like the impressionist style of the top one.- (must have a go at this myself!)

Christine also sent a snap of Mr Pringle-
 a monkey made from a pair of socks- a real character.