Showing posts with label CQ Summer School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CQ Summer School. Show all posts

Thursday, 17 October 2019

Stitching Autumn : Contemporary Quilt Summer School with Helen Parrott

 At the end  of September  I travelled with my friend Sue  to Contemporary Quilt Summer School in Birmingham . When I arrived at her house,   before I could take my coat off , we  went gathering  horse chestnuts  on Ealing Common, filling an African  basket's worth  to take with us! 

We had a lovely  weekend :  excellent food , good company ( great to catch up with so many friends)  and excellent , insightful tuition and guidance from Helen Parrott. I've used her book on Mark-Making  a lot , this loopy piece ' Red Stapelia' took years, a labour of love .   

The  workshop was based on her new book ' Mark-Making through the Seasons'  ( I bought a signed copy  at Knit and Stitch later ) . On the Saturday evening she  unrolled her  fabulous  quilt  ' Nine Yards ( or thereabouts)' which was  juried into Fine Art Quilt Masters 2016  and talked about  its background  based on  the 1773 Mary Ware notebook  and techniques used  (  I loved the old ruler used a  wooden batten) 
The first exercise  on  Friday evening   was to make a collage based on  colours and shapes   using 5- 6 images  from magazines / photographs  then to write on a post-it  our thoughts on it. 
 Mine were :  " Contrast of  different yellows against dark. Nights drawing in .Abundance of fruits :reds, oval and round shapes" 
 We then  went  round the room , looking at everyone's  collages and left a post -it  with  comments .  The work was as you might expect,  very diverse  and it was interesting on returning to your own  to  note what other people had seen in your own collage.  

 The following  morning  we went for a walk around the grounds  with a  focus on structure ,colour  and detail  gathering images  as well as items.  I took  lots of photos  and  picked lots of leaves  and berries

The dried teasel leaves  were particularly  interesting and I gathered  some of them to draw but left the  fungi in situ ! 

 I was wishing I'd  brought my hand lens when it came to examining our finds in more detail  but the phone camera wasn't too bad.  I was reminded  how inspirational the  Kew Plant Glossary  is for diagrams  of leaf shape, flower structures, stem joints .
Helen  shared some of her methods for  tracing, simplifying,  looking at the details , the angles of stems, where things join  and  how to  develop patterns  in this case drawing with  chinograph pencil, repeating marks :  " Repetition is how you get good at things "
 She then showed how  she   developed these into stitching through production of samples , looking at the difference  qualities of solid and dotted lines, overall pattern or isolated element, use of colour,  working from centre or in a grid. She covered the  materials  she uses : fabrics, needles , batting, threads  and methods  such as use of templates and the corded line  and had lot of the samples  from the book which we could  look.   I particularly liked the ' Radiance ' patterns developed from Cow Parsley 

 So I started  with  a birds-eye view of birds-foot trefoil  seedpods,  drawing to capture  their shapes and variety  then moving into  stitch on  2 layers of fabric
  I prefer the stitching on the back  ( they show  up better on the plain cloth)
 I then used  couched paper  string  to depict the curves of the teasel leaf 

Sue had placed all the  chestnuts  we gathered in a large red pottery bowl : on Sunday  it was time to  turn attention to those.  By taking some of out their casings, I managed to find 100 ( thinking of  Kurt Jackson's  Fig paintings  and the 100  mussels  exercise I did with Dorothy Caldwell in Puglia  ) 


 I did several drawings of them , including   layered  marks on Abaca paper   " Conker Calligraphy"

 And raided everyone's collections of fabric , cutting out chestnut  shapes, pinning then tacking them to a section of Japanese  fabric I'd brought with me  



It's now  one of  my current train stitching projects  "100 Chestnuts (or thereabouts)" 


Besides the practical  tuition, Helen  shared  her  inspiration   including poetry ( eg   Thomas  A Clarke  and Nan Shepherd)  and thoughts on the seasons , posing questions about what made up our  our personal year.   She also devoted time each  day for personal one-to-one  sessions, the opportunity to discuss current and possible future work  was incredibly useful and helpful 

So much joy, friendship, laughter and inspiration in a just a few days, banked for the future. 







Tuesday, 15 October 2019

Daily Drawing: Setember










 West  Country Quilt and Textile Show ;  Edgy Stitchers  'Textiles from the edge' at  Creek Creative; Ashley Hanson ' Window'   painting workshop;  stitching the seasons with Helen Parrott ( CQ Summer School) 



Thursday, 4 August 2016

Journal Quilt Update

 I  like my Journal Quilts to reference  what I've been up to : classes I've taken or places I've been.
So June's  JQ  above is  based around techniques  learnt  on CQ Summer School with a combination of photos printed on silk ( lighter colour)  and on black t shirt transfer paper ( more intense colour)
July's JQ  is based on 'Reading a Paint Surface' course at City lit , with  photos of final piece printed on cotton.  I've got several of these fabric studies  on the design wall , mulling over ideas.

A journal quilt of sorts ( it's 12  x 12 inches), this is my contribution to the SAQA Benefit Auction. All are now listed on the site, such a variety, and I'm currently thinking about choosing 6  for my ' dream collection' . It's very gratifying to see my piece  included in a couple already!
 Ian is on the mend and I've set up my sewing machines and  fabric is strewn around my studio composing  a quilt on the theme 'green ' for International Threads. About time too! Looking forward to FoQ next week!!!

Saturday, 22 August 2015

May to August Journal Quilts


 After months of  preparing house for sale and then maintaining it  in 'show house'  viewings condition, I'm FINALLY  regaining studio time and space and actually using my sewing machines and 'sew-ezi' table finishing my CQ  Journal Quilts before deadline of end of August. It's been a bit frustrating  tracking down where threads and equipment  are as my studio was set up to look tidy rather than for practical use but it's proving useful in thinking about planning  layout for new studio space in Faversham.
After worrying whether I'd  complete 4 quilts in time , I've actually made 6, all based on the 'mark-making' from my 2 City Lit courses  ( Printmaking and Develop your Drawing) and CQ Summer School  which took place during this period of time.
  Photo of Collagraph of  feather printed on fabric and applied to monoprint of threads
 Photo of A1  drawing in graphite  of pewter pot from multiple viewpoints, heavily machine quilted with variegated threads
 ' Landscape' of layered lines  achieved through fabric collage on wool constructed on CQ Summer School
 Another fabric collage using fabrics with marks ( 1 commercial, 1  discharge  fabric from Dorothy Caldwell masterclass). Quilted with fancy machine embroidery  stitches ( hearts and stars)  with connecting threads left.  Needs more practice but this technique has possibilities in producing a different set of marks to my hand stitching and usual machine quilting.

 My favourite drawings from CQ Summer School of positive and negative circles built up of tiny pencil marks interpreted in black stitches on boiled wool fabric purchased in Shrewsbury. Edge finished with blanket stitch. Mainly sewn on train journeys! This fabric is lovely to sew even though it stretches, I'll be doing more stitching experiments  with it.  
Photos  from CQ  Summer School drawings printed on hand dyed grey cotton : spiral in ink; circle of fine pencil marks ( as above); graphite stick filling  square with tiny white circle left.  Quilted with spiral lines

My next set of 4 ( or more) journal quilts will be based on  my eco dyed/ printed  fabrics