Saturday, March 16, 2013

March Meeting 2013

Old Business Plans were made for the Umpqua Valley Quilters' Show in April, set up is Thurs. April 11, the show is Fri. Sat & Sun, at the Douglas County Fairgrounds. We will display our three challenges from this year, "What's My Line?" "Beatles" & "Weaving." A membership list was passed around for updates and corrections, a copy will be made for everyone. The Fyber Cafe Textile Arts Retreat is in Bandon, Oregon at the Forget-Me-Knots retreat center, June 17th-19th, RSVP with Amy ASAP. It will be a "do your own thing" textile arts event, with creativity, fun, shopping, field trips, food and chocolate. Plans for our new challenge "A River Runs Through It" were discussed, and river fabric and patterns were handed out, we still have one more piece if anyone wants to get join, it's not too late. Jan?? Maureen?? New Business" At our May meeting Landreth will do a talk/presentation on "Studio Space" storage ideas, etc... A May Play Day at Meredith's in Grants Pass, will be Saturday May 4th, fabric dyeing and a demo of Meredith's Glass bead making. Plans, info, directions and carpooling will be at the April meeting. Show & Tell A new member joined us, Linda Walker is a recently retired, friend of Dorie's, she does machine embroidery, knitting and crochet, and is a new quilter. Kay had a photo of Sherry's tree project in the Ketchikan Library, some of our members helped make painted leaves for it. Cheryl plans on needle felting her River project, with a 3-D tree and figures, and brought a sample of her needle felting, a Wildman sculpture on a wooden branch. She also knit 2 scarves with handspun wool and alpaca. She crocheted 2 purses in heavy fat yarns, with acrylic handles, and washing machine felted them. She also made crochet leg warms in "Water" colors for her son, and furry llama slippers. The slippers in llama are very strong fibers for good wearing strength, then the guard hairs are brushed out to give a furry appearance. Dorie brought products called "Catch and Release" from Crawford Designs. These are discharge pastes similar to Jacquard de-colourants, that paint on and heat set with steam to activate. They also come in "Sparkly" colors, that caught all our attention. She painted the edge of the hood on her sweatshirt for a sample. Nancy worked on her computer skills, doing photographs for the "Celebration of Literacy" an Altrusa project, she emailed photos, learned to make prints. She also helped to hang the "Animals" show at the Umpqua Valley Arts Center, which has several art quilts on display, notably from artist Cassandra Williams of Hugo. Vera discussed her trip to Malaysia to visit her daughter, she visited a batik artist again, and took Guta and a Jacquard water based resist for her to try. She traded these for 4 meter piece of batik. The artist uses dyes from Germany, that takes steam to set. Meredith brought her photo transfers, from Pat's Play Day to show, and a new piece for the "Weaving challenge" She painted papers, and collaged them onto a wood frame with a cut out area, she wove copper wires in the opening, and stitched love, laugh, life, onto the canvas. She brought "Ikat Tape" to share, it is used in weaving as a resist to tie around warp threads for dyeing Ikat patterns. Pat took a class in Eugene from Angela MacIntyre on creating fabric papers, they layered various tissues, papers and fibers on a muslin base with a glue and added more paper and dyed cheesecloth and other fibers to create a colorful textile. You can find Angela on the web at Laughing Cat Designs. She also showed her peacock pattern she had made from a photograph, related to Amy's demo. Kay took a "nuno felting" class in Eugene from Tylar Merrill. They used a thrift shop silk scarf as a base, and added silk fibers, wools, and embellishments to make layers, that were then covered in plastic and toweling, then rolled up to felt. They hand rolled 400 times, then 100 more, then 400 times and MORE!! The hand nuno felting process took a lot of elbow grease. The Eugene Textile Center, has a machine to do this. Tylars company is Thimbleberry Felt Designs Crystal brought three quilted projects, a wall hanging pieced with bright fabrics and appliqued with flowers and birds. An Easter print table runner with patchwork, and a boy's Pirate quilt with a 5 point star in the center, and various pirate fabrics. Amy brought for show & tell, the start of her River project, a raw edge applique piece of a night scene with hand dyed fabric for the sky and moon, birch trees and ferns/foliage, with the river below. It is a work in progress, as details are added a little bit at a time. Landreth finished her "Weaving" piece, it has beautiful golden fabric with an open woven grid of rust yarns. It is over laid with 3-D rust dyed fabric leaves. Demo Amy did a hands on demo of creating a pattern from a photograph, by tracing with a ultra fine point Sharpie pen on clear plastic, creating pattern pieces for applique, to outline shapes, details, color changes and quilting lines. These can be enlarged on a computer, in "Tiling" or "posterizing" mode, or by the Copy Center by the Court House, which makes blue print size copies.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Photo Transfer Fun at Pat's

We had a wonderful time, printing photographs onto fabric, at Pat's on President's Day. Seven of us got together, and brought their photos to download into Pat's new Laptop computer. I had a handout on preparing treated fabric, printing from Windows Photo Wizard, and printing from Adobe Photoshop. We mostly used the Photoshop program, because it allowed us to enhance the photos, kick up the color and contrast and otherwise play with them. We also wanted to print 8" x 10" to save fabric. Peggy printed two versions of her hand painted flowers, we changed the color on each, and printed two sizes. Sherry's photo of a barn in the snow, was a study in contrast, we brought out the texture in the shingles and fence, and the contrast on the white snow. We printed her two versions, in horizontal and vertical orientations. Meredith had 3 photos her son had taken of rocks in the bottom of a crystal clear stream, with light reflecting on the ripples of water. Kicking up the color gave the gold rocks and the blue water strong contrast in complimentary colors. We cropped a section for detail and reprinted in an 8 X 10, giving her matching fabric to coordinate. We also made a negative of one and reversed the image into a light blue image, then played with distorting it with "Liquify" this made "star fish" and swirls through the pattern. Kay and Dorie printed family images, and realized how focus, and cropping help the image. Pat had a photo with blah color of Monarch butterflies in Monterey California, adding color and severe cropping helped make a bad photo interesting. Dorie and Meredith were impressed with how it could make an average photo (or photographer)into something special. We printed several photos for each person, and played with cropping and flipping images. By lunch time we were ready for a fabulous potluck, taco soup from Pat, homemade bread from Amy and brownies, banana bread and various other desserts. Really good cheesy-melty french bread from Landreth. After lunch we mostly talked about printing options and what to do with our photos, and called it an early day. I am looking forward to seeing what people make with their prints.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

February 2013 Meeting

Old Business Beatles challenge pieces were removed from the Library and returned. The weaving pieces are finished and will be hung in the Sutherlin library next month. Reminder to new members to make profile pages for our members binder. We will be participating in the Umpqua Valley Quilters Show in April. March meeting will be pattern design from a photograph, with Amy, materials list we be emailed. Pat's Play Day will be Monday the 18th, focusing on photo transfer techniques, specifically computer printer to fabric, we will then make a project with our photos on fabric. New Business We are going to pass on the "Art in the Garden" this year, it is Fathers Day weekend and the same time as our Quilt Retreat. The Bandon Quilt Retreat days are June 17th and 18th, arrive Monday thru Wednesday noon. I Emailed info, final payment is due at the April meeting. The new Group Challenge is a bit more formal than the last few, "A River Runs Through It" is a series of 14" wide panels that go together in order. Therefore there is a commitment to do the section you selected. If you did not get a pattern piece and directions at the meeting, contact AMY. The challenge will be due in May. Jana advised there will be a Quilt and Antique event in Oakland, Oregon, on August 17th, and asked if we want to put the River Runs Thru it challenge there, or otherwise participate, she will keep us advised about it. Show & Tell Dorie has been making several scarves with a combo of knit and crochet, and even weaving in bits of other yarns. She was wearing a creamy eyelash yarn with a darker mix in the center. She told us there is a large old floor loom at Heartwood Resources in Green for sale, if you know anyone who is interested. Corienne says it has about a 36" to 40" wide weaving area. Corienne has helped her daughter design a quick arts project for a group, using heavy mountain wool or Pendelton wool scraps, they made a square basket/bowl. She used fusible interfacing to layer scrap weaving pieces into the bottom of the bowl, and pinched the four corners together to shape it. Finishing it with pearl cotton edges or knots. Peggy told us about a place called "Mecca" in Eugene, next to the Amtrak station, that collects and sells recycled, reusable, art materials, salvage, and miscellaneous. Also that teachers can come in and get materials for free. Info at www.materials-exchange.org Peggy got her weaving challenge piece done, it is a beautiful birds nest on a tree, with glittery copper bird, silk leaves, and the nesting material was a naturally woven palm frond she collected in California. She used a computer printed fabric for the background made from scanned scrapbook paper. Unfortunately I did not get a photo, send me one Peggy. Jana has been struggling with a paper pieced art quilt of trees, and we all gave her advice which probably complicated it even more. A website was recommended for Linda Hibbert in Colorado, who specializes in paper piecing and has a tutorial on her website. Kay has been taking lessons on her new Janome sewing machine. Landreth invited us to tour her studio space when we go on the Bandon trip, or if you are just in the area, in Coos Bay, at the old Charleston School complex. Amy brought her little fold up accordion book with the single line of stitching forming the entire sketch. It was colored with watercolor pencil and wet with a Qtip. The back was colorfully painted with acrylics and stenciled with flowers and sequin waste. She and Peggy had a play day and painted fabrics, stenciled and stamped, just having fun. One of the pieces of fabric with 3 roses was then machine thread painted and quilted, into a small wall hanging. Amy also had made two t-shirts for a gift, one was fused and stitched with a saying, the other was stenciled with torn freezer paper and Shiva oil sticks. The oil sticks had dried out a lot, and advise was giving on storage, wrapping in wax paper before zip lock baggies. So every one is excited about the new challenge and several play days, and the retreat that we are working on. If you know anyone who is interested in textile arts, ask them to join us for our continuing adventures. Demo Peggy brought in a book about photo transfer processes, "Image Transfer Workshop" by Darlene McElroy & Sandra Wilson, she challenged Amy to try the techniques and give a presentation on them. So after trying many of the various methods I concluded that printing on fabric with a computer printer is the best technique, by far! Most of the techniques in the book were for transfer to paper, but some could be done on fabric. I learned there is a difference between Ink jet and copier toner images, and magazine images, so many of the techniques can be tried with both types of images. Putting matt medium on fabric, with the photo rubbed onto it was my 1st choice, only a faint image resulted. When the photo was left on to dry, then the paper rubbed off with water a good image was left, but a little bit of the paper fibers left a white washed look, a little bit of fray check rubbed on helped the image but gave it a light plastic finish. Taping a piece of paper backed fusible webbing, or plain white tissue paper onto printer paper, and run it through the computer printer gave a clear result. The iron on interfacing left a slightly sticky texture, that wore away after a while, and reversed the image, but left a good impression. The tissue paper was applied with matt medium, and the paper fibers merged with the fabric and disappeared, but left a shiny finish, that I think would still be easy to quilt over. So there are many options to try, get the book and try some of them yourself, it was interesting experimenting, and record keeping was a must.

Monday, January 14, 2013

January Meeting 2013

Old Business The 12 Beatles challenge pieces are at the Sutherlin Library until our next meeting. February all the weaving challenge pieces are due, please bring them to the meeting. They will be hung in the Sutherlin Library by Peggy and Kay. They must have a sleeve, with a dowel and screw eyes, or an other appropriate hanging device, if you have questions about hanging, talk to Kay or Peggy. We discussed having a display at the Umpqua Valley Quilters' Guild show in April. We have 12 "Beatles," 8 "What's My Line" and approximately 10-12 "Weaving challenge" pieces of textile art for display, this will make a nice example of what our group does. We also discussed whether we want to have some one there during the show to represent our group and talk to visitors. We will have sign ups later, and will need a hanging committee. New members, please make a biography page for our membership binder, with info on yourself and your interest in textile arts, and a second page of photos of some of your work. See earlier blog posts on member profiles for ideas. For the February meeting, we will do the photo transfer techniques, materials list will be emailed before meeting. New Business We discussed the new challenge, "A River Runs Through it" with 18" wide pieces with a common river running through all the art work to be displayed side by side. There is an example of the idea in a book Amy will bring next meeting. In March Amy will present a hands on, "how to" on drafting patterns from your photographs. We have several "PlayDays" in the planning stage. Feb. 18th is Presidents Day, a fun get together, place TBA - Pat's? When the weather warms up we want to do a day at Vera's doing wet felting. and Meredith would like to do a playday at her house in Grants Pass. Several people want to do a play day with de-colorants/replacement dyes, any volunteers for leadership and location on this one. Announcements There is a Fiber Arts Show at the Maude Kern Gallery on the campus of U of O through February, any one want to organize a field trip? Show and Tell Nancy has been finding a lot of lost and found items in her continuing sewing room cleanup. Kay finished her "Weaving challenge" a combination of gold & red woven paper, fabric and copper strips, on a black background. Corienne has made a beautiful woven "tall" man's vest in tan and brown hand spun wools, as a commission, it is lined with a rich dark brown batik fabric.
Vera and Meredith have started a "Design" workshop at Vera's house, to study aspects of design, with several ladies from Grants Pass and Roseburg. They are using "Finding Your Own Visual Language" as their guide. They are meeting the second Friday of the month, for info call Vera. Their first assignment was to use "Lines," Vera did her homework with black paint on white paper, and Meredith used discharge gel on black fabric. Meredith also did a weaving using lines as her design element, in lime green and black.
We had a new member recently from Southern California, Crystal has been in a modern art quilt guild in Eugene, and was happy to find us here in Roseburg. She had a beautiful quilted wall hanging of a flower, "fractured" after the photo was printed on four 24" squares of fabric, then reassembled to make one larger design. It was very bold and striking. She also had a square appliqued wall hanging of a tree with multicolored leaves on background fabric printed with poems and drawings from a children's book. They look like rubber stamped images, but she did them herself with the computer printer. A fun purse was also one of Crystal's projects, bright prints were used in a flip and sew technique, with the batting included, so it was a finished fabric when she made the purse. Looks like a fun demo for us to try the pattern.
The other members attending were too busy over the holidays to bring any show and tell, so we hope to see everyone next meeting Tuesday February 12th.

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Profile, New Member - Cheryl

Our newest member brought a bunch of her art work for Show & Tell. Cheryl is a spinner, weaver, needle felter, knitter and doll maker, she works with angora rabbits and llama fibers.
First up, was a set of llama slippers, that she knit then wet felted in the wash machine, very sturdy and fluffy. She also brought a pair that was not felted yet, so we could compare the difference. Next was a colorful beret, made with her hand dyed roving and spun, then plied with black wool, and knit. The skein of yarn was beautiful too.
A needle felted "Lion Man", with a wild mane, and serious face, was an interesting sculpture. We might need a demo on making stuffed needle felted dolls. Her "Gypsy" doll was gorgeous with lots of layers in her outfit, beading and fiber work. With her hand painted face and arms & legs, she was very pose-able and life like.
Cheryl did a short demo on Navajo thigh spinning, with a large wooden spindle that she took camping in Arizona. She had a large hank of wool roving that she hand dyed with Lanocet acid dyes, in rich colors of rust, burgundy and warm browns.
She showed several samples of her loom weaving, in wools, in several different patterns and colors, and one made with hand spun wool. She also showed us how she is making a rag rug, with the Pendleton Wool trim from Maureen, and trim she already had, and the technique of straw weaving. She has taught the straw weaving to children's groups, and this might be a fun project for us to also try.
So at the next meeting, say Hi to Cheryl, she is going to be a wonderful talented addition to our group, with various skills to show and share.

Group Picture- Pumpkin Lasagne Recipe

At our December potluck meeting we also took a group picture.
Back Row, left to right - Dori, Corienne, Cheryl, Nancy, Jana, Meredith, Vera, Landreth Front Row - Kay, Pat, Peggy, Amy -- Missing - Sandy, Maureen, Georgia, Sherry, Marcia, Sylvia, Gracie, Cynde, Jan, Bonne, Karla. Pumpkin Lasagne The recipe for pumpkin lasagne, which everyone loved, is a combination of garlic, and cinnamon and spices. It is a vegetarian main dish, not a dessert. It can also be made with butternut squash. In a 2 quart pan melt 3 tablespoons of butter, and brown 3 cloves of minced garlic. Add 3 cups of pumpkin puree(1 1/2 cans), 3 tablespoons of lt. brown sugar and 1 tablespoon of maple syrup, 1 tsp of cinnamon and 1/4 tsp of nutmeg, 1/2 teaspoon of salt, stir til warm. Mix 1 1/2 cups of ricotta cheese with 1 1/2 pounds of shredded mozzarella. Boil lasagne noodles, layer noodles, pumpkin & cheese mix, make 4 layers of filling with a layer of noodles on top, add extra mozzarella on top. Bake at 350' for 35 minutes with foil on top, remove foil, bake an extra 5 minutes, let rest and set before serving. Enjoy!

December Meeting 2012

We had a large turnout for our December holiday meeting, and a wonderful potluck. Old Business 12 Beatles challenge pieces were hung in the Sutherlin Library, thanks to Kay and Peggy's efforts. They had to add sleeves and hanging devices to some of them, so we discussed making sure we could hang the Weaving challenge before we display it. Mandatory sleeves at least two inches wide, and a piece of lath or yard stick with screw eyes on either end. If your piece is not able to have a sleeve, a weaving , 3-D sculpture, or doll etc... then some form of hanging device/display method must be provided or discussed with the people hanging the display. The January meeting will be photo transfer techniques, by Amy from the book Peggy provided. I'll email a supply list before the meeting. New Business We discussed having the blog printed into a book, Amy will get more details and a price, and let everyone know the cost. Amy's blog book was passed around as a sample. Amy got a new book "Art in Felt and Stitch" with wet felted landscapes, and a workshop is going to be planned at Vera's for trying this technique. Dates and materials list TBA. A new challenge was proposed with a Theme of "A River Runs Through It" with a continuous band of blue fabric winding through the side by side pieces. A sample was shown in a book, with this technique, and we thought it very appropriate for our group. Details to be announced later. If you are still working on your "Weaving" challenge, you still have time to bring it to our next meeting. We had many finished pieces in the show and tell, it will be a great group of art pieces. Any one with a technique to demo or hands on for our next couple of meetings, please volunteer. Show and Tell
Our new member Cheryl brought a large number of items to show us her many talents, I will make that a separate blog post. Dori brought her "weaving" challenge, titled "My Threads Of Life" she used torn material, yarns, strips of Corienne's weavings and other materials to make a woven hanging. She also brought a "Huck or Swedish Weaving" blanket to show. Her pine needle basket that she wove many years ago, is showing signs of wear and breakage, and we discussed what she could do with it, soaking in water occasionally to keep the moisture content up was the consensus. Landreth is making progress on her weaving project, using commercial fabrics, a woven grid made with chenille yarns, rust dyed fabric leaves, treated with GAC400 and she continues to add details to it. Oops no picture, I think I was waiting for it to be passed around. She also brought us the dictionary definition of weaving - 1. weaving in and out of traffic, 2. fiber weaving to a textile, 3. a hair weave. Meredith took Amy's advice to "have fun" to heart, she played with her weaving, adding her painted dowels, and some beading, she made two pieces with bright primary colors, and still had more painted sticks to use. The first piece is called "Fiddlesticks." She continued to have fun with brown Kraft paper scrunched up Japanese style "Momagami" she then painted it with Luminere paints and cut it in strips for her weaving. The first piece is woven with purple yarns and strips of paper, the 2nd is "Air Stitched" from Quilting Arts Magazine issue Oct/Nov 2012 then the paper strips are woven through the stitching.
Vera's finished weaving challenge, was woven on different pieces of hardware cloth, with bright colored strips of fabric and yarns. It is very 3 dimensional, with multiple layers, and embellishments.
Jana created a quilted winter table runner with chickadees and pine branches. Something she could use for more than just Christmas. Her weaving challenge was a delightful spider web quilted in silver thread onto a wall hanging, with a flower and leaves. A "weaving" saying was printed at the top.
Peggy showed off her new gadget, a lighted seam ripper with a magnifying lens attached to it, for the sight challenged. She made several Star Wars fabric pillow cases for grand childrens' Christmas presents. Two quilted autumn table toppers in Octagon shapes are also gifts.
Corienne the "Master Weaver" created a stunning black and red piece in a technique called "Taquete weaving" from a class she took on Widby Island last year. She edged it in alternating strips of red and black fabrics, and added tabs to the top to hang it.
Pat's creation is an example of "Everything that could go wrong DID!" Her weaving challenge is titled "Wild Fire" and was inspired by her views of the forest fires around Bend, Oregon last summer. She did a pin weaving, and her worst fears happened when she took the pins out and it fell apart. Corienne's advice helped her keep it together, she wove pearl cotton around it and stitched it on the sewing machine with a zigzag stitch that promptly ate the corner of the piece. She used birch bark strips from Wisconsin, hand dyed fabrics, silk hand dyed ribbons, and other materials in her weaving, she then mounted it on fabric and put it on stretcher bars for her finished piece.
Kay was hand stitching on her piece and will show it next meeting when it is finished and Amy had quilted several small 8 x 10 gelli prints, in preparation for embellishment work and beads and buttons. A wonderful potluck lunch was enjoyed by all, then a trip to the Umpqua Valley Arts Center to see the SAQA show, see separate post.