Saturday, December 22, 2012
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.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment