Quilting time

You might remember this that began in June. It’s taken five months to put it together, in between other things, but it’s now one complete square, about 37″ or so.

removing the basting stitches – always the best job

I hadn’t originally envisaged ‘proper quilting’ it – as in backing, batting, and top, but somehow that just happened. Normally I would just have used a top and a backing. My batting of choice is Hobbs Heirloom wool, which is lightweight and very easy to quilt; I’ve never got on well with the cotton or polyester battings. The backing is cream cotton calico.

making a start

It’s very pale, and very neutral, and I’m currently undecided about whether that’s a good thing or a dull thing. It’s definitely quiet, and I like quiet. And it’s winter, which is a good time for quilts and quiet.

The circular outline (couched, black and cream silk bourette yarn) is a little thin, and the quilting so far is probably a little small.

silk bourette circular outline

But it’s a start. For now, it will rest on the chair while I look at it a bit more.

Gutermann cotton 12 thread

My problem generally, and this applies to painting as well as textile art, is that I usually like backgrounds as they are. I often have trouble adding the requisite focal point because I don’t want to obscure the background.

This little quilt has some really interesting patches, some of them made from layering sheer fabric over another, like this tea-dyed silk with a layer of dress net over the top:

layered patch, silk and net

And this vintage cotton with textured nylon chiffon over the top:

layered patch, cotton and spotted chiffon

I don’t want the quilting to trample all over the piecing and the more interesting patches, but I do need to quilt all the layers together securely. I may try tying the layers here and there. I think it just needs to sit on the chair for a bit while it thinks about what it needs (don’t we all!)

The sketchbook I’m plotting this (and others) in is an A4 landscape-format book, one of my favourite layouts.

Remember sketchbook

Everything in this sketchbook is about remembering, recollecting, and forgetting. There are spots of time, there are ghosts (from time past), there are attempts to turn something intangible and unfathomable into something visual and tactile. There are shadows from time past, and there is the light of time present.

sketchbook page

The thinking and the testing is all part of the finished thing.

sketchbook page

Today I will be mostly looking at a small quilt as it rests on a chair. And yes, I call that work now. It’s ridiculous really.

Marking Time

This week saw the arrival of this lovely book by Tommye Scanlin all about the various ways fibre and textile artists mark the passage of time.

Marking Time by Tommye Scanlin, published by Schiffer Craft

It’s absolutely full of wonderful textile art, and reading the artists’ statements has been inspiring and thought-provoking. It always amazes me how weaving can look like embroidery, patchwork, or even knitting, from a distance. It’s basically all magic with thread.

You know I don’t enjoy the whole self-publicity thing (the post of unpaid Marketing Manager is still up for grabs), but here’s my quiet corner of this lovely publication:

stitch journal 2022

Towards the end of the book, Tommye writes about her own textile art practice. I really like the way she uses dice to randomly choose a shape and colour for her daily weaving, letting chance play a part in the work, as it does in life.

It’s a beautiful book that I’ll enjoy returning to again and again.

In other news, I’ve been adding some little landscapes to the shop:

shop here

Of course you can always learn to make your own little landscapes here. Just saying.

October

I say it every month but even with the extra hour from putting our clocks back last weekend, time is still flying by so quickly. It’s unstoppable, of course. Time is all we have, and it keeps on rolling. And time is what I’m trying to illustrate here. A map of time, moments in days, days in a life.

October, stitch journal

Today is Samhain, in the traditional pagan calendar the beginning of winter. The days are already short, and the nights are already dark. Some say the veil between the worlds is thinner today.

31st October, whisper-soft greys

I know a lot of people don’t enjoy the dark days and nights, but I’ll take hats and scarves and boots over shorts and sandals any day. There’s a lot to look forward to: cosy evenings with good books, lamps and candles, warm quilts to wrap around chilly knees, hot soup, and (even better) hot chocolate. I sometimes wonder if the season of our birth somehow becomes our favourite time of year. Maybe having a winter birthday means I enjoy this time of year more than summer.

So far there have been falling leaves and blue-grey skies, and more to come.

October, stitch journal, detail

As usual, keeping it simple. Little stitches marking the passage of time.

October stitch journal, detail

I don’t often use backstitch – I find it a bit finicky – but I do like this one, worked in a space-dyed silk perle 8 thread:

October stitch journal, detail, space-dyed silk thread

I like the other side even better. The other side of back-stitch is split stitch:

October, the other side

There isn’t much left of this year:

Stitch journal, looking ahead to November and December

I’m starting to think about next year’s template, of course. I only have enough of this lovely vintage linen for one more year. My remaining piece measures about 5 feet by about 3 feet, and I’m thinking about whether to make another large cloth, this time in a 3 x 4 formation, or whether to cut and join strips of it to make a long cloth.

What I’ve enjoyed most about this year’s template is the variety. I really like the way every day is a different size and shape, as they often are in reality, and the way the days fit so seamlessly together, also as they do in real life.

I’m finding myself repeatedly drawing a kind of wavy grid in my sketchbook work lately, and I’m thinking I might base my new template on something like that. The grid pattern makes me think of an enlarged photo showing the weave of a piece of gauzy fabric, like cheesecloth or scrim.

sketchbook page, detail

It’s very much a work in progress.

the last piece of vintage linen and the beginnings of a plan

At some point I will be ready for 2025, but not just yet.

book cover (3)

Anyone bored with sketchbook covers yet?

Look away now, if the answer is yes 😎

This one is A4 size, and it’s the sketchbook I’m using for the Laura Horn Modern Mixed Media course. So far the course content is quite different in style from what I would normally produce, but there are some interesting techniques that I might be able to adapt into some kind of landscape work. Laura is very, very good at what she does, and she demonstrates the techniques expertly.

The cover for this one is mostly layered sheer fabrics – hand-dyed silk organza, chiffon and nylon tulle, on a plain calico base. I drew some loose scribbly marks and lines on the calico first, which you can just about see under the surface, and then layered the sheers over the top to form a kind of landscape.

sketchbook, front cover

The scrap of poetry on the front cover, held in place under the top layer of nylon chiffon, is from ‘Home Thoughts in Laventie’ by Edward Wyndham Tennant.

The back is a little more simple, but broadly the same technique:

sketchbook back cover

Sheer fabrics are notoriously difficult to photograph, so some of the colours are not quite right here – textiles always look so much better in person, in any case. This detail of the back cover shows some hand-painted builder’s scrim under the top layer of chiffon.

back cover, detail
front cover, detail

As usual, I’ve made a wrap-around slip cover, so the inside covers do double duty as pockets.

inside front cover

The Modern Mixed Media course so far has been quite heavily focused on ‘botanicals’, which I’ve struggled to render on paper without it looking like someone else’s work. The best I’ve been able to do so far is a kind of scribbly variation, which I quite like.

scribbly botanicals, pen and ink/watercolour

I’m not terrifically impressed by the paper in this sketchbook, which is a Fabriano watercolour 200 gsm. The paper has a very prominent texture, which I find distracting. You can see it particularly clearly on this page:

sketchbook page

I’ve taken to collaging the pages before adding any paint, which I’m finding easier to handle.

sketchbook page, collaged with vintage papers

This page is ready for something, though I don’t know what yet. I could easily say the same about myself, most days. Let’s see what the rest of the week brings.

Book cover (2)

This week’s sketchbook cover almost made itself. I had a quarter yard of this glorious Marcia Derse ‘wabi sabi polka dot’ cotton quilting fabric that turned out to be exactly the right size for this one. When something is already the right size, I tend to take it as a sign that it was meant to be.

The light isn’t great here today, so the colours in the photos are a bit greyer than in real life.

Marcia Derse quilting cotton, wabi sabi polka dot

This sketchbook is quite big, with pages about 14″ x 11″ (roughly A3-ish). Unable to find what I wanted, I ended up making my own using some large sheets of 250 gsm mixed media paper and some very helpful online bookbinding tutorials. I even added header tape and a bookmark ribbon. The hard casing is just cardboard packaging covered with brown paper, which is why it needed a more decorative cover.

handmade sketchbook

This book is for mixed media paint experiments, which I’d like to do more of when I manage to find the time.

Labelled spine

All I did with the fabric was lay it on a calico backing to stabilise it and then outline each of the circular shapes with running stitch in a dark perle 12 cotton thread. I also added some straight stitches in very pale grey to the plain dark shapes along the spine.

Ready for action

It’s just a simple slip case, so it forms its own useful pockets in the front and back inner covers.

inside back cover

I’m not often attracted to something this bright, but I really like everything about this fabric – the varied mark-making behind the shapes, the painterly/collage style, the patterns in each circle and the colour palette. I wish I’d designed it.

I love being surprised by fabric. Looking forward to getting started in this one.

Book cover (1)

I’ve been having a tidy-up in my workroom and trying to round up All the Sketchbooks. Turns out there are a few more than I thought.

some sketchbooks

Some are complete, some are nearly complete, and some are completely empty. I do like a well-dressed sketchbook, so you know what’s going to happen next.

I have a little 6″ square Seawhite sketchbook (140 gsm cartridge paper) where I put paint scraps – leftover paint from another project, not enough for a new thing but too much to pour away. Then I go back in and add marks/other media, with no real plan. However hard I try to keep each sketchbook to a theme, they always end up being a fairly random collection of colours and marks.

6″ mark-making sketchbook

The cover for this one is made from hand-dyed silk organza and dress net, roughly cut into circles and rings, layered onto some plain calico. Then I’ve covered it with very sheer nylon chiffon and stitched some simple lines and marks over the surface to hold it all together. I’m very bad at stitching text so I’ve sandwiched a small piece of handwritten card on the spine between the chiffon and some net.

mark-making sketchbook cover (back)
mark-making sketchbook cover (front, detail)
mark-making sketchbook cover, in progress

If anyone’s interested in the contents, here are a few pages showing how simple it can be:

watercolour and acrylic ink with pen
watercolour with 8B pencil sketch
exploring colour and patterns

I recently got some Roman Szmal watercolours to try, just a starter set of five, and I really like the Caput Mortuum and Aquarius Green:

Roman Szmal caput mortuum and Aquarius green with fine black and white pens

Mostly this book (so far) consists of various rings and circles, hence the design on the cover.

watercolours with walnut ink, marks made with cotton bud (q-tip) and cocktail stick
watercolour with Derwent drawing pencils

There are lots more books needing covers, so there’s more than enough here to keep me busy over the coming months. If you’re in the northern hemisphere, do you have long/ongoing projects planned for the coming winter?

Sketchbook Revival

Quite a few links in this post; I hope they all work.

Firstly, a huge thank you to Fiona, who told me about the free online Sketchbook Revival course hosted by the wonderful Karen Abend. I’ve been following along, and it really has been an exciting and inspiring two weeks. If you missed it, I think the classes are still available for another couple of weeks or so. And another huge thank you must go to all the amazing artists who so generously shared their time, experience, and processes.

I kept a sketchbook (more of a notebook, really) to remind me of the content, and I had a go at most of the projects – some more successfully than others, but then you generally learn more from your ‘bad’ art. I stayed pretty close to the techniques and images presented, but made enough notes to be able to attempt something similar in my own style, and I think I’m still learning what that is. Shown here are just a few examples; this particular book is actually full-to-bursting now.

Sketchbook Revival 2024 notebook, front cover

I added pockets to the notebook so I can write extra notes to myself. I have a lot of sketchbooks, most of them constantly in progress and nowhere close to being finished, and I often struggle to find enough time to use them meaningfully.

As Karen Abend so wisely says in the last session, however passionate you might be about your creative practice, it can be very difficult to be consistent with it, and it’s true – life gets busy; often I don’t know what to do in the sketchbook so I end up not doing anything in it; and then there’s the potentially overwhelming problem of the inner critic and imposter syndrome. After these two weeks of brilliant classes, I’m more determined to maintain a daily sketchbook practice. There are lots of mixed media ideas I want to explore, and I can now promise myself that I will find the time for it.

inside back cover, pocket (envelope) for notes to self

Usually these days my drawing consists of abstract mark-making, and it’s been a while since I’ve drawn ‘things’ that can be recognised as themselves, although lately I do seem to be drawn to flowers and leaves. A few of the techniques demonstrated in the classes are somewhere between abstract and realistic. I really enjoyed this poppy meadow session, hosted by Tamara Laporte:

watercolour poppy meadow

There was mark-making by Joy Ting, using twigs as drawing tools – I already do this quite often myself, and it’s been reassuring to see and hear artists voicing my own thoughts about processes, using similar techniques.

trees drawn with sticks dipped in walnut ink and acrylic ink

There was a bit of mixed media collage, with Lynissa Hayes:

mixed media collage page

And some proper drawing – upside-down thumbnails hosted by Linda Germain:

upside down thumbnails (left) and how to draw anything (right)

The right hand page shows the exercise presented by the utterly brilliant Suhita Shirodkar, who demonstrates how to tackle a complex street scene, featuring architecture and crowds, in pen and watercolour. This one was a bit out of my comfort zone – not something I would even think about drawing, usually – but she makes it very accessible and it was actually a lot of fun.

And then there were mixed media pockets and tip-ins (not a term I’ve come across before; from the context it seems to be an extra page that you stick into a journal or sketchbook) hosted by Roben-Marie Smith, and also really enjoyable.

pocket for sketchbook page

And there was drawing over (and under) collage with Julie Fei Fan Balzer:

(deliberately) wonky teacup

There’s a LOT more in the course than the handful of examples I’ve given here – there are more than thirty sessions altogether. I learned a lot, had lots of fun, and am immensely grateful to all the artists who took part in this.

Next up, I’m doing a mixed media class with Laura Horn, and am looking forward to getting stuck in. Maybe it’s something about the autumn that makes me want to go back to school. It’s probably all those Septembers as a child, with a pencil case full of new pens…

September

Immediately on writing today’s title I’ve given myself an Earth Wind and Fire ear worm (🎶 …ba-dee-ya, say do you remember, ba-dee-ya, dancin’ in September… 🎶) and now you have it too, I hope.

Aaanyway. It flew by, as usual.

September 2024, daily stitching

I really like the variety of shapes on this year’s template. Originally it was meant to look like an aerial view of fields, but it’s probably turned out to be a bit too colourful for that. If anyone has restricted themselves to a brown/green palette throughout, they might be having more luck with the realism. I still like it as it is though.

September, detail
September, detail

I’ve used a variety of thicker yarns and threads for the borders (field boundaries, I call them) – mostly cotton and silk boucle, plus a few scraps of textured yarns that I’ve found in the threads box. For the one below, I used some viscose hollow ribbon (from Oliver Twists fibres) stuffed with yarn. It’s fairly easy to thread yarn through the hollow centre with a big blunt needle or a small safety pin. Once it’s stuffed, you can ruche the ribbon up a bit and it creates a lovely ruffled effect.

hollow viscose ribbon

My favourite this month is probably this one, worked without any kind of plan, just meandering backstitch stems and detached chain stitch leaves, in hand-dyed silk perle 12:

The other side is a little quieter than the front, which is true for most of us, I think.

the back of September

October tomorrow… and before we know it, it will be the end of another year. If you’re starting to think about (whisper it) Christmas there are threads available here.

October ahead

I’m starting to think about next year’s template and so far am drawing a complete blank. I’ve enjoyed making the previous three, as a scroll, a cloth book, and a large cloth. I may well return to the long thin format as I really like the continuous stretch of days, long like a year, but I’ll give it some more thought.

Priority this week is to try and find someone who can fix our boiler because currently we have No Heating. Good job we have plenty of knitwear and quilts.

Flowers

In my last post I mentioned the online course I was doing with Suzanne Allard, and that bright florals weren’t really my thing. Figurative painting – as in proper ‘doing a painting’ of an object, like an artist – isn’t really my thing either, for that matter. I’m usually happier with needle and thread and abstract marks.

And then I said to myself, who doesn’t like flowers? I had a go at some flowers with collage, which I find more approachable than painting. What I like about collage is that you can take some shapes and colours and move them around on the page before committing to anything permanent.

collaged flowers, mixed media

Like I said, flowers aren’t my thing, bright colours aren’t my thing, etc etc. And what do you know, I quite like it.

flower collage, mixed media

What are sketchbooks for if not to try stuff and have some fun?

I had a little go at painting leaves with a watercolour sword brush. Definitely need more practice with that, but it’s a really lovely brush.

watercolour with sword brush

And I really like the way the scrap of paper forming the centre of one of these flowers just happens to have the word ‘blooming’ on it.

blooming

My desk is looking a little chaotic, but I am having some serious fun here.

paper everywhere
watercolour with Faber Castell Pitt pen

If you’ve ordered threads and/or fabrics (thank you), they’re on their way. Rummaging in the stationery cupboard, walking to the post office, and playing in a sketchbook or three have brought me to a very happy place indeed this week.

Respite

It’s been a difficult few weeks and I needed a couple of days down time, so I’ve taken refuge in some no-pressure sketchbook work.

coloured pencil on acrylic/ink background

I’ve just started Suzanne Allard’s online course 31 Bright and Fun Sketchbook Paintings. I really like Suzanne’s calm and confident teaching style, and I also like seeing how other artists approach their work. The bright florals are not completely my thing but there are plenty of inspiring ideas and techniques to try, and it’s nice to sit back and watch someone else talk you through their approach to their art. And there’s always something new to learn.

My own sketchbook pages are nothing like the ones in the course, but I’ve been trying some of the layering techniques just for the fun of it.

sketchbook page
pen and Inktense crayon on acrylic ink background

Without really meaning to, I often find that my sketchbook pages are full of marks that could feasibly become stitches. Not really surprising, given that drawn marks are mainly dots and lines.

One of the things I’ve discovered is that I no longer enjoy using acrylic paints. The ecological aspect has bothered me for some time (as in acrylic=plastic) but having had a little play with them again I find that I really don’t like the slightly plasticky sheen.

sketchbook page background, gesso/acrylic

Layering or mixing acrylics with gesso makes them less shiny/glossy/plasticky. In the spirit of using what I’ve got, I’ll probably use my existing supply and then not replace them.

I do, however, like acrylic inks – also plastic, but I’m guessing not quite so bad as the paint. I like the inks because they behave like watercolour but they’re not water-soluble once they’re dry so you can easily go over them with other media without disturbing the base layer.

sketchbook background page: gesso and acrylic ink

The problem I have with layered backgrounds is that I end up really liking the base layer as it is and I don’t really want to add anything else on top of it. I’ve therefore ended up with a sketchbook full of nice backgrounds, which is also fine I guess.

I’ve had a little tinker in the watercolour sketchbooks as well.

watercolour mini-sketches

I used low-tack masking tape to divide an A4 page into postcard-sized areas. The marks on the top two were made by dipping a stick in walnut ink and drawing on wet paint.

I’m resolving to make more time for this as it’s something I really enjoy, and besides all work and no play etc. Wishing you an equally playful and creative weekend.