Wednesday

Artist Series - Gilfling

I have been visiting with Gilfling for over a year now. We met when a thread was posted regarding mentors and matching shop owners who could provide some moral support to one another. Boy did I need it then and Gilfling was a great sounding board. Another plus was that I fell in love with her work and purchased not only some of her cuffs, but also some artwork. Her customer service is exceptional. I'm glad that I met you Gilfling and send you best wishes for continued success.

1. When did you become interested in art and did you choose art, or did it choose you?

I wanted to be an artist for as long as I can remember (in-between periods of dreaming of growing up to be a paleontologist, archaeologist, and dancer) and was constantly creating, whether in the form of artwork, writing or poetry. However, by the time I hit my late teens (and ‘art college application time’!) I had run out of steam a little and turned in a rather pitiful portfolio. A break of many years in which I pursued varying careers including being a nanny, swimming teacher and learning disabilities nurse, eventually, in a round-about-way led to art choosing me and I have never lost my feeling of gratitude at the amazing way my life has been turned around because of it.

After suffering a serious back condition, I had a long period of inactivity. This consequently led me to take a few art classes and eventually I had the chance to study performance costume at university. Now I manage to combine teaching, costume and my own artistic creations in a rather haphazard but ultimately satisfying way! When not teaching, I am painting, sketching, designing, felt making, playing with fabrics and textiles, making accessories, thinking of all the things I want to make and procrastinating about which idea to tackle first. One thing I can say about myself is that I am never, ever bored!

2. You get to spend one weekend each with three historical figures, an artist, a writer and one of your choice. Who are they and what will you talk about or do?


Oh gosh – how to cut it down to just three! If I were able to spend time with any artist, it would have to be Leonard Baskin. A sculptor, illustrator, writer and printer he also took on important commissions such as the Holocaust Memorial. His work just moves me, the expressions in his portraits and the beautiful detail in his etchings. I would ask him to teach me printmaking and perhaps we would just sit and talk of his inspirations, but most of all I would just like to see his work in real life and lose myself in the details and characters of his work.

I have a permanent collection of Angela Carter books by my bedside and read them often. The short stories, her fairy tale collections and her novels and I just get lost in the descriptions and tales, which I can visualize so clearly in my mind. Her work is a great influence on my art, the richness of detail and the darkness and melancholy that to me is present. I would love her to read her stories to me by a log fire so that I could sit, sketch, paint, and imagine I was lost in the worlds of her characters so that they unfolded on the paper as I was working.

During my costume degree, I discovered the collections of Henry Wellcome. Whilst working on a project in which I became fascinated with cabinets of curiosities and historical medicine I found a book called ‘The forgotten Museum of Henry Wellcome’. This man traveled the world, and attained a vast collection, which represented art, science, anthropology, and the history of medicine. With items from all over the world and from many different centuries, it is a fascinating collection. During his lifetime (1853-1936) he must have experienced and seen incredible things and his work is a real inspiration to me. Of course I would want to travel with him and visit many different cultures, learning, sketching and dreaming of the things I could create from that inspiration.

3. Do any of these choices influence your work? and why?

Each of these characters inspires me in the work I do and I think my own personal aesthetic reflects that very strongly. Layers, memories, character, sadness, the strange and unusual, storytelling and anthropology all inspire me. There are so many layers and hidden and subtle meanings in my own work and this has developed form my own eclectic interests. One thing that I am always reminding myself when I feel the days are too short and there are never enough hours – is that my days are as long/short as those of Leonardo da Vinci, Mozart, and all the other artists and creators I admire. They too only had those precious 24 hours in a day and look what they achieved! That is very humbling and stops me in my tracks when I (all to frequently) utter the phrase “there are never enough hours in the day to do all the things I wish to do…..”

4. How has the popularity of the internet affected your work?

The internet has been invaluable to me. When in late 2006 I first tentatively put a few handmade, crocheted items up for sale in my etsy shop, I could never have dreamed of the impact it would have on my work and on my life. Even then, it took me an age to have the confidence to put my artwork out there. Always lacking in confidence, I cannot imagine I could ever have approached a gallery or boutique owner face to face and offered up my work for their inspection. The internet gave me the ‘distance’ that I needed. My work is there, for all to see and people can have an honest reaction to it and respond to it only if they so wish.

Of course I am buoyed and elated by the reactions that I have received. When someone ‘connects’ to me through a
piece that is incredibly important to me in that it is a complete reflection of who I am, well there is nothing to match that emotion. Of course, I have now realized that the ‘distance’ that I at first thought the internet afforded me, is in reality non-existent. Rather the internet has ‘connected’ me to like minded souls and for that I will forever be grateful.

5. Have you discovered any new technique to creating your work that you can share?

I recently discovered the joys and unpredictability of gluing and then removing background papers to my painting surface. I love the way the paper tears and leaves ghostly hints of an image or text, which I then draw, paint and glaze over to create the aged and damaged surfaces that I love. Free machine stitching with my beloved gold thread is another frequent addition to my paintings, as well as accessories, again creating texture, which is an important feature of my work. I have recently been teaching felt making in my workshops and have rediscovered my love for creating texture and color with fibers. I am currently working on a range of accessories that combine this beautiful textile with my usual materials of lace and machine and hand embroidery.

6. How do you overcome artist block?

I have to admit that at times it is a real struggle for me and can hit me like a wave. But I am always ‘creating’ in some form. When I am struggling with painting, I get the sewing machine out. When the ideas are stuck in the recesses of my mind, I crochet or knit. When I cannot ‘visualize’ or see what I want to create, I write – endless pages of automatic writing. Even if at first I am writing about the fact that I do not want to do the housework, or what we need from the shops, it always turns into pages and pages of my own inner dreams, thoughts and struggles. I love to play with words and I love how the very action of writing can release me from the fogginess that can smother my ideas. Inevitably, these meanderings become ideas for paintings and other work. Yet again, I am never, ever bored!

7. If I walked into your studio this moment what would you show me first? What would you want to hide?

I think I would be excited to show you the layers and textures of my work. I feel that is something I can never truly convey in the photographs or even the prints of my work. I love working with layers and building up subtle tones and depth and I would love for you to see that. Also I would show off my inspiration boards! Both my loft space and painting studio are crowded with images, photographs, bits, and pieces that constantly inspire me. As far as the thing I would hide – oh dear, I have to admit to eating far too many biscuits and drinking far too many cups of earl grey tea when working. But perhaps rather than hiding them, I would just ask you to join me!

8. Describe something that comes up in your work because of a life experience.

I am constantly inspired by the theme of ‘memory’. Perhaps one of the reasons for this is that my own is so atrocious! I am terrified of not being able to remember not only the important and big events of my life, but also the subtle details of the emotions I felt at a particular time, or the way I was inspired by something beautiful or sad or thought provoking. Costume and the age and details of garments feature strongly in my work too. Clothes and costume to me are not just something we wear, but they are an extension of our own character. When I paint garments, I am not only thinking of the fabric or the color, but also the stories and experiences which would be stitched into the hems, the times that have past and our own memories. It is strange but it often seems as if the strongest memories I have, are not of my own childhood or years gone past, but the memories that could have been stored from before my own lifetime – and I think that is what I want others to see in my work.

9. Describe what you do, or who you are in a haiku.

Oh dear – this is my first ever haiku – (I know they are not necessarily about ‘thoughts’ so I have cheated a bit!)

Memory whispers,
Ancient thoughts torn and threadbare
Forever I dream

10. Is there anything else that you would like to share?

I think just that, for me following the ‘wrong’ path was not necessarily a mistake, rather a matter of timing. Ultimately, the opportunity to follow your dream can come a calling. It is just recognizing it when it happens!

Also just to thank you Rose for your valuable support and encouragement – It really is the friends I have met through blogging and the internet that have provided me with the inspiration to follow this path!

Saturday

Bumble Bee's and Daisies

I'm not sure that I'm ready for summer, but I love summery things. Splish splash at the pool, flip flops...lemonade... Weather forecasters state that in some areas here it could get as hot at 130 degree's. Thankfully I live far outside the city and not in those spots that get that warm. To celebrate summer I'm making some wool cuffs, lined with silk (to keep those wrists cool). This one I hand embroidered with daisies and one single bumble bee ...I can hear him buzzing now! You can see all of my cuffs in my Etsy Shop.

Thursday

The Patchwork Quilt, Carrie A Hall


Of all the things a woman's hands have made,
The quilt so lightly thrown across her bed--
The quilt that keeps her loved ones warm--
Is woven of her love and dreams and thread.

When I have spoken to you of its beauty--
"A mere hodge-podge of calico," you said,
"A necessity of homely fashioning,
Just a covering made of cloth and thread."

I new you'd missed the message hidden there
By hands that fashioned quilts so long ago.
Ambition and assurance are the patches
And the stitches of a quilt are love, I know.

I think a quilt is something very real--
A message of creation wrought in flame;
With grief and laughter sewing into its patches
I see beyond the shadows, dream and aim.

One of my favorite poems and my favorite past-time.
From: The Romance of the Patchwork Quilt in America, by Carrie A. Hall and Rose G. Kretsinger, written in 1935.

Tuesday

After The Storm!

While it is absolutely no fun to recreate your blog, Stormy Designs has created a beautiful blog once again! Stormy makes beautiful polymer clay jewelry. Earrings, bracelets, necklaces...naming just a few of the wonderful creations you will find in her Etsy shop. OH, and you can't miss the dragons! Make sure you stop by....she is also having an April sale so that you can buy more for less! Stormy is a member of the Etsy Bloggers Street Team...come and visit us!



Sunday

Million Blog List --Be A Part of It!


Well if you are like me you end up in places on the internet that you can't quite remember how you got there. Yesterday I was cruising around and came across a site that is collecting blog addresses in order to get to a million blogs. Currently their observation is at the rate that blog addresses are being added it will take 50 years to get to a million. Imagine that! They are still under the 1000 mark. I'm number 699. I posted information in the Etsy forum and many Etsian's have added their blogs to the list. As of now, it is around the 783 mark.

It is a little confusing on how to post your blog with a number, so you might want to follow these instructions that I also posted on Etsy.

Check it out!

Million Bog List

When you go to the page you are going to see something similar to what is below and below that I have shown you where you need to fill in your information

Right now people are still adding to the 700 - 799 section. Go to that section if that is still appropriate, the line that shows the current group number being added to, there is the word "edit" click on that and it will take you to a screen that shows HTML code. If you follow the format below you can list your blog.

SAMPLE:
:727: [http://newfoundlust.blogspot.com/ New Found Lust]A blog dedicated to fashion's odds and ends, trends and anti-trends.
:728: [http://dayat.kiub.org/ : The Orange Day :]I Am
:729: [http://danceoutlook.blogspot.com/ Dance Outlook ]

WHAT YOU NEED TO FILL IN

:next number: [http//yourblogaddress/ your blog name ] description of your blog

You will be updating the number, so in the case above, the next number is 730,
then within the brackets you are putting your blog address,
then between the / and ] your blog name, which should come out in bold.
after final bracket, you add a description of your blog

Example:
:730:[http//waterrosez.blogspot.com/waterrose handcrafted obsessions] ...description of your blog here...

After the final bracket you can describe your blog.

Then you can add their widget to your blog stating what number you are on the list.

So add your blog to this list and be a part of blogging history!

Monday

Artist Series - Sewphisticate


Sewphisticate has been such a wonderful resource in the forums for everyone who has questions. She was also recently featured in a Storque article on Etsy discussing the trials and tribulations of making one of the most important dresses in a woman's life, her wedding dress! Look at the range of creations that Genevieve makes, business card holders, her own creative origami take out box bag, beautiful chain mail, hammered copper...and don't you just love those berets?


1. When did you become interested in art and did you choose art, or did it choose you?

I have always worked with my hands in some way, but never considered myself an artist. When I was in early grade school, my Mom put me in this great summer camp that had a ton of activities planned. I went to music classes and acting classes and even got to be a runway model for Winnie the Pooh clothes by Sears. It was a lot of fun. But I dreaded and hated the art classes. My work never looked like everyone else's and the teacher was constantly correcting my technique and criticizing my results.

My older brother is a wonderful artist and I could never ever compete with his skill or vision. When I was six, I was given a package of Origami papers and a little basic book. I loved it and spent many happy hours folding paper. I discovered yarn when I was about eight or so and taught myself to finger weave, loom weave, crochet and knit. I tried cross stitch, needlepoint, plastic canvas and latch hook. It was not until I was about 12 or so that I discovered my Mom's sewing machine and fabric stash. I discovered a pre-printed pillow panel that was exactly the same as the pillow my older brother had had on his bed for as long as I could remember. His pillow was literally falling apart, so I cut out and stitched up a new pillow for him and stuffed it with his old pillow. I gave it to him for his birthday and he said it was the nicest thing I had ever done for him.

But for me, the sound and smell of that old sewing machine, the magical way it worked and the rhythm of needle going up and down wove a spell on me that has lingered throughout the rest of my life. I love fabric, color, texture and sewing. I can't imagine not being surrounded by my tools and bins of fabrics. When I am sad, I go to the fabric store. When I am stressed out, I pull out a new project. When I am depressed, I look through pattern books and get inspiration to design my wardrobe. I still don't think of myself as an artist, but rather an artisan. My Dad is an engineer and I find that I approach my work much the same way he does. I have an idea and then I try to figure out how to make it happen. It's not about beauty or artistic expression, but rather how to manipulate my materials in such a way that I get the result I want. The beauty is there simply because my materials are beautiful, not because of my talent or skill.

2. You get to spend one weekend each with three historical figures, an artist, a writer and one of your choice. Who are they and what will you talk about or do?

Wow! That's a pretty tough question. There are just so many to choose from.
Artist - Mozart! I would love to spend a weekend with Mozart and just listen to his music the way he wrote it. He was so crazy that I have no idea what we would talk about. But, I woud love to ask him what he thinks about when he isn't writing music. I listen to Mozart when I am struggling through design elements. He
got me through all of my math and science classes and I just think better when I listen to his music. Writer - Anne McCaffrey. I guess technically she's not an historical figure, but I don't really enjoy reading the classics. The worlds she created in the books of Pern and her Crystal Singer series were my refuge when my own life was too difficult to handle. High school was a terror for me and I could often be found curled up in a corner somewhere reading the adventures of Lessa or Menolly. Other - Jesus. I would love the opportunity to just ask all the questions and get the answers directly from Him.

3. Do any of these choices influence your work? and why?


Well, I am not sure. I do know that every ounce of talent I have is a gift from God, so in that light, yes, everything I do is directly influenced by Him. Mozart is a genius and his music has the ability to help me process through difficult problems. It's as if my mind is a train and his music is the track. Without it, I wander aimlessly and often crash. As for Ms. McCaffrey, her heroines are brave, spunky and overcome tremendous odds just because they persevere. No matter how terrible the circumstances of my life, I know that if I keep trying and maintain my own sense of honor and integrity, then I, too, will persevere.



4. How has the popularity of the internet affected your work?


The ability to research techniques, tools, ideas, inspirations, supplies, etc. is completely invaluable to me. I have tried things I never would have known of without the internet. And of course, there is the addiction of Etsy. My Hubby is threatening to take my wireless connection away from me if I don't come to dinner soon.

5. Have you discovered any new technique to creating your work that you can share?

As a self-taught seamstress, most of my favorite techniques are my own
ideas. The most recent discovery I have made has me so thr
illed I cannot adequately express my joy and excitement. It involves putting a bias binding on an odd shaped item. The bias is made from special occasion fabrics, like satin, taffeta, crepe, etc. which does not hold its shape as well as cotton. I like very clean, uncluttered lines in my work and get extremely frustrated when I cannot achieve this. After many frustrating hours and several ruined projects, I finally came up with this solution:

a.
cut the b
ias 4 times the finished width. these fabrics stretch quite a bit, so you really need the extra width.

b. sew the binding in place by aligning a single raw edge of the binding with the edge of the project, right side of the binding against the back side of the project

c.
fold binding over the edge and press into place


d.
stitch in the ditch from the back side of the project. this will secure
the binding in place on the front


e. trim the excess raw edge on the front side of the project close to the
stitching line from the previous step

f.
place a narrow decorative ribbon or trim along the stitching line and
stitch into place. The result is a nice clean finished project on both sides. Beautiful!

6
. How do you overcome artist block?

I change my materials/techniques frequently. I sew, coppersmith, chainmaille, bead, crochet, knit, tat, Origami. When I hit a dead end with one of these, I just pick up a different material and work with it for a while. When I am really stuck, bored, or uninspired, I go to the library or bookstore and hang out in the crafting section reading books. Even books that I have already read can provide new inspiration. I also go shopping in stores that carry work that I admire...jewelry stores, fabric stores, small boutiques, etc. Just touching finely made items can spark my own creativity.

7. If I walked into your studio this moment what would you show me first? What would you want to hide?

LOL! The
first thing I would show you are the pictures of my children which hang directly behind my sewing machine. I would want to hide my mess...LOL! As for my work...I would want to show you everything.

8. Describe something that comes up in your work because of a life experience.

My wire work has evolved over the years. But I started working with wire because my Dad is an electrical engineer and I used to go work with him. He had these huge spools of colored wire that he would let me play with and I made rings, woven bracelets and necklaces and hairbands. My Husband is a blacksmith and I have started hammering heavy gauge wire, using black smithing techniques to get the results I want.




9. Describe what you do, or who you are in a haiku.


crap...haiku...uh...i actually do write poetry and song lyrics, but haikus
are my personal bane....

fragile bud blossoms
exposing hidden beauty

life begins anew

10. Is there anything else that you would like to share?

I would like to offer a little piece of advice to any young people who are
unsure of who they are or what they are supposed to be doing in their life. I grew up in a family that was highly educated and professional. My Mom is an RN, CNM, PhD and my Dad is an EE with a masters. I never had any interest in regular college, nor did I want a desk job...ever! I loved to work w
ith my hands and I was told my whole life that I would have to grow up at some point and 'do something' with my life. It has taken me until now (I will be 40 this year) to realize that working with my hands is not just something...it is everything! If I had the opportunity to do my early adult years over again, I would attend some of the specialized folk art schools, like John C Campbell in North Carolina and learn from masters in all the fields I am interested in. Art is not just music or dance or painting or sketching...art is life and it exists in metal, fiber, wood, fabric, color, texture. If you love to work with your hands, then DO IT!

VIDEO! Embroidery 101 - Straight or Running Stitch


The first video is done! For such a short video there were a lot of takes!

This first lesson will be easy peasy....you will be covering everything with straight stitches in a matter of moments.

The straight stitches that I have shown you are even and evenly spaced. For another interesting look you may want to vary the stitch length or spacing.


I am working my stitches on yellow felt with black thread so that you can easily see the method. If you are using a less stable fabric to handle you will want to hoop the fabric to keep it taunt. The picture here shows you a couple of styles of hoops. I prefer the metal, with spring and cork, since it holds that fabric securely. However, this is a vintage type hoop and is not readily available at craft store. But, if you stop by any Goodwill you may be able to find these.

In the next lesson I'm going to talk about embroidery thread. In this example I am using a DMC 6 ply thread that I have divided into three strands so that you can easily see the stitching. Depending on the detail that I want I may only use one strand for a delicate look, or all six strands for a more pronounced look.



Let's get started!

Thursday

Recycled Paper Quilt



I finally found some time to work on a project that had been delightfully nagging at me for a while. I’ll bet many of you look at magazine publications and think…what lovely photos, colors, textures and hate to just give or throw them away. So, what do you do with them? Well, I’m a quilter so my first inclination was to make a quilt. Usually I announce to everyone around me my next great idea. This time I wasn’t so verbal, because I thought they would think I’m nuts. You see I have an entire wall unit filled with lovely fabric that I have collected for decades. I knew what they would be thinking….why in the world would she resort to paper when she still hasn’t used up all this fabric. But all of you know, when an idea strikes you just have to go with it.

Well I went with it. I got out my paper cutter, tore pages out of magazines, color sorted those, and found graphics that I could use as appliqué pieces…there’s one magazine in particular that really helps with this –can you guess which one? Yep, Martha Stewart. Then I began cutting strips, triangles, and squares. Then I cut all of my potential appliqué pieces. This project is technically a recycled paper quilt, since I also used wrapping paper as the backing and envelopes from mail that I received as the batting. Then I began weaving and gluing. Once everything was in place and stabilized, I backed it. Then I made the binding with mitered corners and sewed it together with metallic thread. Isn’t the bird cute with string in its beak ready to make a nest?
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