Category Archives: Electric

Spring Warmth April 10, 2014

Carol-with-my-work Hello,

Spring is really here!  I went for my walk today with out a coat.  I even ate my lunch on the patio today.   It was around seventy and the sun was shinning.  It made me feel glorious.

I had a busy week end as I took at three day workshop with Carol Soderlund( www.carolsoderlund.com) called Waxing Eloquent.  It was about how to use soy wax and build up layers of dye on fabric to create great depth.  We had a grand time and the three days flew by.  In this first shot the teacher is holding my experimental piece.  I had tried this before several years ago and I am more excited about it  on this second attempt. Print-stuff  I sewed the prepared fabric with to two layers of batting and  normal thread on the top and a wash away( water soluble ) thread in the bobbin.  Then I painted the soy wax on the “mountains”  of the project and painted the dye in the valley’s.  ( the work is at that stage Lindain this first photo.)   We all brought along a big supply of tools to apply the soy wax to the fabric.  I enjoyed the old calulator plastic and the empty spool a lot.    After the wax was dry we applied the dye to the fabric .  This shot is of Linda who was setting across the table from me.    We  worked all afternoonwall at adding wax and color to the pieces we had started.  This shot is of my pin wall in the middle of the afternoon.    By the end of that first day the floor of the room BA10the-floorlooked like a magic carpet shop where the pieces “batched” all night long.  We then added more soy wax to the surface.   Things were really getting lucious at this point.   This piece Peg'sworkis by a new friend, Peg.   The big circles in the wax were created with a sponge that had a hole cut in the middle.      To fully use the dye, Carol had us layer the fabric in two and three stacks. drying    I folded over several of my pieces and so I had softer second pieces and there was much less dye to mop up when the pieces were picked up off the plastic sheets.

There is a little problem with the water soluable thread- the dye also causes the thread to disolve.  So before I put on the second layer of wax I had to cover the valley area of the surface to keep the white.

There are several  ways to remove the soy wax from the fabrics.  One is to iron the fabric between two pieces of BA10-the-potnewspaper and this should always be done first.    This process was done with my work and then it was placed in a boiling kettle of water.  All the milky color is the soy wax in the pot rising to the top.     The water is then carefully poured out of the pot and the fabric is ready for a hot was in the machine.  It is OK to pore the water soy mixture down the drain because the soy wax is a natural product and will bio degrade.   I was surprised by the color change.    This photo shows some fabric( at the top that did not  have-washout-1 the color washed out and the thread is still attached) and the bottom is the final color of the washed and ironed fabric.    The green color came from the blue dye added over the yellow dye of the day before.   It will still be a fun piece to do hand stitching work on top of.

Washout-form-class This shot shows several of the fabrics that I washed out at home on Monday.

Then on Wed I went off to visit my friend Ethel and we did more soy wax work.   She has a wonderful electric Jaunting tool and I used it on just about all the pieces I worked on yesterday.    I wrote several bits of poetry as well as drew with the tool.   Great fun!Ethel's-work They are still batching and will be on the blog next week.  Ethel is working on a wonderful piece on her pin wall.   It is about  50″ wide and 60″ long at this point.    I love the intense colors she is playing with here.

 

-Patti's-workThen the FAB group meant at my house this morning.  Patti is doing this wonderful portrait of her mom.     She is still in the building stage without any of the pieces stitched down, but I am impressed.     She told us she is using the front and back of some of her fabric to get the tones and shades  to match her photo.

Then we did a little work with the silk screen so the gals could get the Nancy's-screen-workhang of using acrylic that was thinned with GAC 900. (  a Golden product especially made for use with fabric.)   It was also a chance to play with a deconstruced screen as I had used  Elmer’ s school jell on the screen to create a pattern.   These are Nancy’s prints.   I will continue to print with the screen until the image is mostly gone and I can show the others the effect at our next meeting.

 

Electric  19.5 " X 31.5" $215.00
Electric
19.5 ” X 31.5″
$215.00

 

 

Progress Report:  Electric   I finished this quilt last evening.  All the stopping, changing direction and starting sewing quilting patters made this project take a lot longer to quilt then I expected.   I used the images I had created with the silkscreen print as my inspiration.  I started quilting around them first to get a feel for the shapes.   After I had done this it was a bit easier to create similar shapes on my own in the other areas of the quilt.   The fact that my machine as a needle downElectric-cl1 position for the stop helped with this process.    But there still is a lot of quilt were the printed images is not avaiable for a guide.

Electric-cl3

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Out the Window    This  is my solution to

Out the Window  16.5" X 21.5" $125.00
Out the Window
16.5″ X 21.5″
$125.00

the quilt that I cut in half two weeks ago.   Last week I had decided to add the tree and I tried it in several locations before I decided on this final resting place.   After I had stitched the wool tree to the quilt I loaded my bobbin with black embrodery thread, and drew in smaller branches from the back.      The whole picture  makes me think of looking out my friends window in Brookline where the next building was so close there was hardly any space between the two.  But a out the window -cl2young tree had grown up there anyway.     The nine patch from the origional quilt looks like a near by-out the wnidow---cl1 window too, so it adds to that feel.

 

 

 

 

Foundations-XVfullFoundations XV- New Directions   I have been struggeling with this work for a while.  When I took it to the Diva meeting last week  Alice  asked ” Why are you keeping these Foundations pieces square?”     After considering that idea I have decided to try to alter the shape.   Hense the new name on the end.     Here is the process I am now trying to see if I can grow from an existing rectangle format.

First I add some additional Buckram Foundationscl2in the shape I think I want to add.   (I put the brown fabric behind so to allow the Buckram to show up.)    Then I build up the fabrics on top being sure some crosses over the original surface  and i sew it down as I Foundations-XV-cl1normally do.     I like the fact that this method allows me to change my mind a lot as I work.   I already know I want to change the left hand side and the top edge.  I will know better what the piece needs as I look at the progress.

 Grove     I did not Grovedo a lot of work on this project this week.  There has been too many other things demanding my time.  But one more unit was completed.    It is also at the back of the stack of work pinned to the pin wall so I run out of time before I unearth it many a day.    I only have one more tree to create here before I need to move onto the next step

 New WorkNew-work BA10new-work-cl1

 

 

 

 

I have pinned the fabric to the buckram for this new work.  I have the detail to show that when I begin the stitching down of the piece I start near the center and do not totally finish even that area until later.  That allows the work to change as I progress through the work.  I had cut the buckram before I decided to try the new shape, so I will at least start out with is as it is and let the piece grow with the work.

Daily's Daily’s    I seem to be doing more stitch work with the Daily’s as time goes along.   It is still enjoyable  and something that I look forward to every evening.

Keep Creating

Carol

Knowing when to stop. March 27, 2014

Hello,

BM27fullOne  problem I  often face when I  paint  is not knowing when to stop work on a painting.   So I often go too far and add that extra tree or bit of red and then  ruining a  work because I am not be able to repair the problem…… I usually do not face that with my fiber work because I can pin things up and nothing is permanente until I make the final decision ans sew then down.    This week I seem to  be filled with lots of doubt about this completion  “thing”.   I can not seem to decide if I am  finished with either of the  two Foundations pieces that I am currently working on.    So I pinned then backward to the wall top-halfand have not looked at the surface  for several days.  I hope when I  face them with fresh eyes early next week  the absence will help me make the decision about rather to go forward or stop.     There is one other little quirk in my mental state as I  discovered a work I had folded up last fall  with a similar problem. (This blue and purple work)botton half  Now it is easy to see that the there are really two haves to this work and they do not go together.   So I think I will slice then apart and try to solve each half independently of the other.  After I slice them in two I will be able to work with each half  to see if I can save all or any portion of the work.  I may still need to rotate the  sections but as seperate units I think my chances of success are much better.

Scarp-Happy-1 Progress Report: Scarp Happy  I have been working on this bed quilt for a few weeks.    It is done and has gone from my life.  The woman from Prevention Net Work came yesterday and picked it up for their Spring Fund Raiser.  This organization works to keep teen off drugs by providing alternate activites for them to work on.  My grandson worked on a play with/for this organization a few years ago.  I am glad to support groups that deal with teens.   scrap-happy- 2

Scrap Happy   I also  passed this quilt to a second auction.  This Scarp Happy  has a diagonal  block lay out.   It is going to the Meals on Wheels of North Syracuse for there benefit.   I was assured that it will sell well and add to their coffers.  Again I am happy to support this organization.

ElectricElectric    This top really went together quickly when I finally got to it this week.  I am now in the process of adding the quilting.  I am using the silk screen printed fabric that I made as the inspiration for that quilting.   It is fun- but very slow as I have to stop so often and change the direction of the stitches at sharp angles.  No  stitching line thus far is longer than an inch and a half and most are under a half an inch.

It is quite a slow  process.Electric close up

 

 

 

 

Green Grow the Grasses  Green-grasses-cl  I am having a good time doing the free motion drawing of the flowers on this quilt.  Some of the  machine drawing is just on top of the print on the fabric and some is just my own creation.   I have also added some leaves to the surface to add interest and varity.

Smoke-cl

 

Smoke I am still working away on this piece.  Every time I think I am done with it I pin it on the wall at the end of the day and then look at it first thing in the morning before I turn the lights on.  That is when I  can see what the quilt needs and thus far that has been more hand quilting.  One cannot rush the process.

 

New Worknew-work Then of course when I do not know what else to do I start a new piece.   Seriously,  I was not done exploring the slender inserts idea and this thing popped into my head just as  I awoke the on Tueseday morning.   So I am off and running with a new thing.

Daily'sDaily’s   These little works seem to be one of the constants in my life at the moment.  Thank goodness for routine.

Keep Creating

Carol