Thursday, 12 June 2008

Tideline Journal

Been making some progress on the piece I'm making for Festival of Quilts inspired by the seaweed patterns left on a beach after a storm. After some watercolour sketches, I was ready to choose the fabric - some African dyed cotton damask ( for this sample I used the sleeves of a shirt - there should be enough left in the body for the final piece).
I inset some thin strips of seaweed like colour ( quite a job trying to find a brown madder despite my extensive stash)

I stitched it by machine with twin needle and by hand - seed stitching with cotton perle. In my excitement to start painting I forgot to take a photo of what it looked like. This photo is of the back - wherever possible I use the same fabric front and back so that people can see 'before' and after' - also gives me a second chance if it all goes horribly wrong!


After painting.
Detail of painting
I'm fairly pleased with the results. As it was a sample piece and with time marching on I don't want to do another, I crammed too many ideas and techniques in for the piece to work entirely successfully in itself . But its achieved its purpose, I've got a better idea now how to proceed - leaving more of the background fabric unstitched and unpainted for a start. The twin needle worked really well - I'm less sure about the fabric strip inserts , about how much they add?

3 comments:

  1. The source photo is beautiful! I personally like the inserted strips but I agree that you could have left a little more unpainted. Funnily enough that thought was going through my head as I read down your post and viewed the photos.

    It is really interesting to see the journey from source to worked sample so thank you for sharing.

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  2. What an interesting piece. Yes, I wondered why you used the interesting base fabric only to cover up the pattern with paint. But I love the squiggles - such a great way to give that feel of the rippling beach sand.

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  3. I think the inserts add a lot to the overall texture and would put them in again if I was in charge. (vbg) I was trying to look at the photo and imagine them not being there, and although I understand that you're not sure if they add much, I think it's just very subtle, and in fact adds a great deal. This is good. I like subtle - probably because I'm not!! It's lovely.

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