Friday, March 28, 2014

Weekly Report 2014 - 03/28






Detail near the center of Tumbling Blocks
Tips, Thoughts and Techniques:

This week I have been suffering from a severe case of monkey mind. If you aren't a yoga practitioner or don't spend time meditating daily, monkey mind is probably a new term for you. Basically, it means your thoughts are zipping from one idea to the next. The thoughts can be wishful, full of anxiety and cycle through a continuous non productive loop, much the way monkeys swing from branch to branch. When I can't settle my mind, I find it difficult to settle into my work. Fortunately my monkey mind did slow down periodically, so that by the end of the week I had made some progress. Here is how this week went:

Tumbling Blocks at week's end.
 1) Finish piecing Tumbling Blocks I (Due April 30) 

I almost finished piecing Tumbling Blocks, but not quite as you can see from its picture  on my design wall. I got hung up on design decisions. I knew I wanted color fabric between two strips of black for the border. The sticking point came with how intensely to piece the colored fabric and how wide each of the border strips should be. I settled on a progressive 1" of black, 2" of colored and 3" of black. Rather than miter the corners I thought I would replicate the three stacking blocks from the inner panel for the four corners. I began laying that theory out on my design wall - DISASTER! The three blocks stack to 4" and the 1" black strip plus 2" color strip cut the stacked blocks in half. Instead, as you can see from the picture, I went with a 1" black strip, then 4" color strip, followed by a 1" black strip. "But wait," you ask, "why is that outer black strip clearly wider than 1"?" That is because for once I remembered to make the outer border several inches wider than needed for ease of machine quilting. 

Appliquéd corner motif

2) Leah Day projects.

a) Baste the face, torso and arms to Express Your Love II. - On hold until the quilts with deadlines are completed.

b) Do Leah Day's Free Motion Quilting lesson. - 

There was no free motion quilting motif to practice on this week. However, appliquéing the stacking blocks was done in a method I learned from Leah. Remember all that English paper piecing of hexagons that I did several months ago? I did a mix of machine piecing the blocks  and then basting the resulting motif over the perimeter of a paper form cut from hexagon graph paper  I gave it a heavy dose of spray starch and pressing before removing the paper. Don't those edges, inside corners and points look nice and crisp? 

3) LifeBook 2014 - Do the assignments. - Done!

Life Book 2014 project

This week's lesson was taught by Lesley Riley. Her focus is on transferring images to fabric and paper. She has had a product developed that she refers to as TAP, Transfer Artist Paper. I didn't have any, but I do keep EQ Printables: Premium Cotton Satin 283 count fabric sheets on hand. So, that is what I used to print the picture of my granddaughter, Mikayla, for this week's project.  I feel I am getting the mixed media bug, because I actually felt let down that the assignment required such a simple background. I just used a stencil to apply gesso roses and then painted with diluted spray ink.

4) Little Lake Butte des Morts in Fall (Due August 3) - a commissioned quilt - On hold until quilts with earlier deadlines are completed. 

Start piecing the quilt.

5Tickling the Ivories - make and attach the label. - Not yet, but there is no rush.


Will I have monkey mind again next week? There is a good chance. What set it off is that one of my two half sisters (the back story can be found here if you missed it ) got in contact with me. We have a date to chat by phone on Sunday. What should I ask? What shouldn't I ask? What will she ask? What should I answer? It is a bit like working out the border of a quilt. In truth, many options work, it is just so tempting to go for the best and always believe that there is something even better out there that remains elusive. The big decision for next week is how to quilt Tumbling Blocks. I am currently leaning towards stippling, perhaps with Xs and Os scattered through out, since the quilt is for my grandchild.

1)  Tumbling Blocks I (Due April 30) 

a) Finishing piecing the top
b) Piece the backing
c) Baste the quilt for quilting
d) begin quilting

2) Leah Day projects.

a) Baste the face, torso and arms to Express Your Love II. - On hold until the quilts with deadlines are completed.

b) Do Leah Day's Free Motion Quilting lesson.

3) LifeBook 2014 - Do the assignments.

4) Little Lake Butte des Morts in Fall (Due August 3) - a commissioned quilt - On hold until quilts with earlier deadlines are completed. 

Start piecing the quilt.

5Tickling the Ivories - make and attach the label.


I am now linking up to two blogs on Friday's. The first is Leah Day's Free Motion Quilting Project and the second is Nina Marie's Off the Wall Fridays.

Friday, March 21, 2014

Weekly Report 2014 - 03/21


Detail of the backside of Tumbling Blocks
Tips, Thoughts and Techniques:

I have been piecing Tumbling Blocks this week. Each block (cube, hexagon) finishes at 2 3/8" and is made up of two diamonds and two triangles. In other words there are lots of tiny pieces and the back of the top is nearly obscured by the seams that I have pressed open. Usually I use my Rowenta iron to open seams and press the back side flat. However, it just won't do with so many overlapping and nearby seams. It is so easy to shift a seam in the wrong direction, creating unwanted lumps in the quilt top. Instead I am opening the seams on the back with my Clover Iron and then flipping the top over and flattening the seam again, but with my Rowenta. If only I had thought of this method years ago.


The Tumbling Block
quilt after Tuesday's
piecing session

With my ironing method resolved I could get to work in the studio. This is what I did:

1) Continue piecing Tumbling Blocks I (Due April 30) - Done

I am getting a good rhythm down now that I am a 2/3 of the way through piecing Tumbling Blocks. All the time piecing gives me time to think about how I am going to quilt it and if I should add borders. 

2) Leah Day projects.

Jagged Flames is done in turquoise.

a) Baste the face, torso and arms to Express Your Love II. - On hold until the quilts with deadlines are completed.

b) Do Leah Day's Free Motion Quilting lesson. - Done

This week's motif was Jagged Flame. It is the section that I quilted in turquoise. I continue to struggle more with straight line quilting than curves. This motif is worth the struggle, though. I like the primitive feel to it.


3) LifeBook 2014 - Do the assignments. - Done
Family connections made after
viewing Finnabair's lesson.

Our teacher this week is known as Finnabair. Her work is lush, layered and captivating. I highly recommend you drop by her on-line gallery and check it out for yourself. The theme for the month is connections. No surprise I opted to do another piece based on being an adoptee who just found her birthmother and discovered she had two half sisters. The face is my birthmother's face. The three flowers dangling from the ladder like yarn represent me and my two half sisters.


4) Little Lake Butte des Morts in Fall (Due August 3) - a commissioned quilt - On hold until quilts with earlier deadlines are completed. 

Start piecing the quilt.

5Tickling the Ivories 

a) Make the label - Not yet.

b) Attach the sleeve and label. - The sleeve but not the label is attached.

Next week will look much the same as this week, as I am in the home stretch of piecing Tumbling Blocks. Here are my plans:

1) Finish piecing Tumbling Blocks I (Due April 30) 

2) Leah Day projects.

a) Baste the face, torso and arms to Express Your Love II. - On hold until the quilts with deadlines are completed.

b) Do Leah Day's Free Motion Quilting lesson.

3) LifeBook 2014 - Do the assignments.

4) Little Lake Butte des Morts in Fall (Due August 3) - a commissioned quilt - On hold until quilts with earlier deadlines are completed. 

Start piecing the quilt.

5Tickling the Ivories - make and attach the label.


I am now linking up to two blogs on Friday's. The first is Leah Day's Free Motion Quilting Project and the second is Nina Marie's Off the Wall Fridays.

Friday, March 14, 2014

Weekly Report 2014 - 03/14

Entwined by Gwyned Trefethen
64" H x 48" W
Tips, Thoughts and Techniques:

It is said that to become a true artist you need to have a recognizable style. The artist's voice is strengthened by working in a series. I have one series/voice that I tend to return to as a place  to recharge. This is my Shifting Value series. Most of the pieces in this series are anchored with a primary palette of black, grey and white. Another commonality in the series is that the majority of the work is traditionally pieced. I love the process of working in this style. In order to start one of these pieces I first determine the piecing structure. Next I select how I want the light and shadow to flow. I mark my pattern with the numbers corresponding to each value, so that white would be #1 and black #10. I never, ever shade in the pattern. This way as I piece the quilt I simply pull a square #3 or a half triangle #7 and stitch the seams according to the structure. I am as surprised by what materializes as anyone else who looks at my work. It is a very soothing, meditative way to work.

The quilts for my first four grandchildren were on the traditional side with alphabet animals, sea creatures, beach elements and pond life. For my fifth and I expect final grandchild I just couldn't resist working in my own voice, a strong black and white palette, traditionally pieced. It felt good this week to relax and do what I know best. Of course that isn't all I did. Here is what I accomplished:

1) Tickling the Ivories - Due March 15th

a) Photograph the quilt. - Done
b) Make the sleeve. - Done
c) Make the label - Not yet.
d) Attach the sleeve and label. - I have started attaching the sleeve.
e) Create a Tickling the Ivories web page - Done
f) Announce the completion of Tickling the Ivories on Facebook - Done
g) Add a Tickling the Ivories album to my Facebook fan page - Done

2) Leah Day projects.

a) Baste the face, torso and arms to Express Your Love II. - On hold until the quilts with deadlines are completed.

b) Do Leah Day's Free Motion Quilting lesson. - Done

Two interpretations of free motion quilting motif Basic Star

Leah's free motion quilting assignment for the week is titled Basic Star. It is an eight spoke star inside a circle. It requires a fair amount of traveling stitching and the pattern didn't grab me. I was curious as to what it would look like if I replaced the eight spoke star with a traditional five point star. I quilted half the space Leah's way and half the space my way. I decided that for small spaces, where the circles are around half an inch in diameter I prefer the look of Leah's motif. However, as the circles get bigger than I think a five point star has merit. 

Mixed Media interpretation of
my family tree.
3) LifeBook 2014 - Do the assignments.

If you read last week's blog posting then you know I found my birthmother only to learn that she died in July 2013. In one of those Twilight Zone moments this week's Life Book assignment was titled the Tree of Life and focused on our interconnectedness. I couldn't resist creating a family tree that shows me as part my adoptive family, part the family I made with my husband, part my birthfather's family and part my birthmother's family. I'm the bird at the top of the tree free to hop from family to family and containing colors from all four families.
Tumbling Blocks is
50% pieced

4) Continue piecing Tumbling Blocks I (Due April 30) - Done

5) Little Lake Butte des Morts in Fall (Due August 3) - a commissioned quilt - On hold until quilts with earlier deadlines are completed. 

Start piecing the quilt.

It should be another relaxing week next week as I focus on piecing the Tumbling Block quilt. I will take occasional breaks to work on Life Book and free motion quilting, too.

1) Continue piecing Tumbling Blocks I (Due April 30) 

2) Leah Day projects.

a) Baste the face, torso and arms to Express Your Love II. - On hold until the quilts with deadlines are completed.

b) Do Leah Day's Free Motion Quilting lesson.

3) LifeBook 2014 - Do the assignments.

4) Little Lake Butte des Morts in Fall (Due August 3) - a commissioned quilt - On hold until quilts with earlier deadlines are completed. 

Start piecing the quilt.

5Tickling the Ivories - Due March 15th

a) Make the label


b) Attach the sleeve and label.


I am now linking up to two blogs on Friday's. The first is Leah Day's Free Motion Quilting Project and the second is Nina Marie's Off the Wall Fridays.

Friday, March 7, 2014

Week in Review 2014 - 03/07

Augusta Ingram Chadwick

Tips, Thoughts and Techniques:

It has been a personal roller coaster of a week. After 20 years of on again, off again searching for my birthmother my husband found her this week. Unfortunately, she died last summer, so I never got the chance to get to know her or her me. Every adoptee and birthparent have a unique story to tell. I feel fortunate that I was conceived by a young dating couple. My father was 18 and my mother 21 at the time of my birth. When they learned that my mother was pregnant my father proposed to my mother, but she said no. Together they contacted an adoption agency with the request that I be placed with parents who would make education a priority in my life. This request was honored. Between what I have gleaned from my adoptive parents, the non-identifying information that the adoption agency provided me and from my birthfather, whom I have been in contact with for over 15 years, I know it was important for my birthmother to not take on the responsibility of raising a family until she was able. It was the publication of the 1940's census and other public documents that let me know that mother, Augusta Ingram married William D. Chadwick of Ann Arbor, Michigan.  They moved to Woodland Hills, CA sometime after they married. (I've seen a  bird's eye view of their home on Google Maps!) They have two daughters. It is good to know that my birthmother was able to build a life for herself after relinquishing me for adoption. I am hoping to reach out to my half-sisters but don't know their current surnames.  I know at least one of them has children since grandchildren were referred to in the funeral home internet guest book. 
Detail of free motion quilting from
Tickling the Ivories

How does this relate to quilting? Maybe it does and maybe it doesn't. What I do know is that life can take you by surprise. I find working during the height of emotions is difficult for me. At the same time, I am so very grateful to have my art to turn to at times like this. Thank goodness all my work post learning about my birthmother was of the repetitive, calming, no decisions to be made sort. As I regain my equilibrium I am ready to move on. 

Much of my week's work was accomplished before my birthmother was found. Here is what I managed:

1) Tickling the Ivories - Due March 15th


Tickling the Ivories gets a binding
a) Finish the quilting. - Done! 

Finishing the background of notes and wiggly lines went smoothly. The sticking point came when I just couldn't settle on how to quilt the inside of the appliquéd notes. I created 8 different quilting motifs as a filler before I settled on the final version that mimicked the ribbon.

b) Wash, block and square up the quilt. - Done!
c) Make the binding and sleeve. - 50% done. I haven't make the sleeve yet.
d) Attach the binding. - Done!
e) Photograph the quilt. - Not yet.
f) Make the label - Not yet.
g) Attach the sleeve and label. - Not yet.

2) Leah Day projects.
Life Book 2014 - Lesson 10

a) Baste the face, torso and arms to Express Your Love II. - On hold until the quilts with deadlines are completed.

b) Do Leah Day's Free Motion Quilting lesson. - There was no motif to practice this week.

3) LifeBook 2014 - Do the assignments. - Done!

What mixed media and quilting have in common, beyond being art media is the layering of pattern, color and materials. This lesson was taught by Tamara Laporte. It begins with a collage that includes a face clipped from a magazine. There are layers of gesso, acrylic paint, stamping, text, washi tape, graphite and ink. It is definitely humbling to take on a new media.

4) Tumbling Blocks I (Due April 30) - Continue piecing the quilt - On hold until Tickling the Ivories is at the hand stitching/finishing phase. - Not on hold any more. I started piecing this again! I am approximately 33% done with the piecing.

Close-up of Tumbling Blocks

Top of the
Tumbling Blocks
Panel
Bottom of the
Tumbling Blocks
Panel

5) Little Lake Butte des Morts in Fall (Due August 3) - a commissioned quilt - On hold until quilts with earlier deadlines are completed. 

Start piecing the quilt.

My A1 goal for next week is to get full view and detail images of Tickling the Ivories worthy of using for submission purposes. Once I have achieved that everything else will follow naturally. At least that is the plan. :)
 1) Tickling the Ivories - Due March 15th

a) Photograph the quilt.
b) Make the sleeve.
c) Make the label
d) Attach the sleeve and label.

2) Leah Day projects.

a) Baste the face, torso and arms to Express Your Love II. - On hold until the quilts with deadlines are completed.

b) Do Leah Day's Free Motion Quilting lesson.

3) LifeBook 2014 - Do the assignments.

4) Continue piecing Tumbling Blocks I (Due April 30) 

5) Little Lake Butte des Morts in Fall (Due August 3) - a commissioned quilt - On hold until quilts with earlier deadlines are completed. 

Start piecing the quilt.


I am now linking up to two blogs on Friday's. The first is Leah Day's Free Motion Quilting Project and the second is Nina Marie's Off the Wall Fridays.