I will be a vendor at a craft show at Deerassic Park Education Center/National Whitetail Deer Education Foundation on May 30. I believe that the show is a fundraiser for their education programs. The venue is near Cambridge, Ohio, across from the main entrance to Salt Fork State Park on Route 22.
I've been planning on developing a art/craft show line of small, affordable finished items, useful things. So far, I have a selection of small purses and whole lot of "picnic kits" - quilted placemats with side pockets for silverware. The placemats roll up and tie into a neat bundle and tuck nicely into a picnic basket, backpack or lunch bag. They would also be great for anyone who takes a lunch to work. I might take a small selection of fabric cuts to the show, though the focus will be finished work. I'll have some art wall hangings too.
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Sunday, April 19, 2015
Fredericktown Quilters' Market
I had a bit of a milestone today in my little fiber arts business venture. I had my debut as a vendor at a quilt show. The event was a nice, small show in Fredericktown, OH. I even managed to sell some things! Thank you to those of you who made purchases from me, and thanks even more if you made it as far as to look up this blog. I learned a lot from this first show, and I really appreciated talking to everyone who stopped by my table. I received some good ideas on post topics, so please keep checking back.
Here is a view of my table:
The show was held in the multipurpose room of a high school; the Rachel's banner on the wall was NOT part of my set up. Here's a bit of interesting trivia - apparently Fredericktown is where the iconic FFA (Future Farmers of America) jacket first appeared.
Here is a view of my table:
The show was held in the multipurpose room of a high school; the Rachel's banner on the wall was NOT part of my set up. Here's a bit of interesting trivia - apparently Fredericktown is where the iconic FFA (Future Farmers of America) jacket first appeared.
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
My fabric in Cincinnati
If you are in the greater Cincinnati area, you will find a small selection of my hand dyed fabric at Silk Road Textiles in the College Hill neighborhood. I just replenished the supply there; more vintage damask squares and Creativity Packs - assortments of small cuts of fabric and matching trims and embellishing fibers. Visit Silk Road's website
Monday, March 30, 2015
Hungry Squirrels
The squirrels in my area had to share their stash of acorns
and black walnuts with me this winter.
Believe me, what I collected for my fabric dyeing was miniscule compared
to what I left behind for the wildlife.
Here’s how my first attempts at natural dyes turned out:
The cottons didn’t take the dyes too well, some of the
literature on natural dyes hints at that.
The silk organza though, really soaked it up. I definitely want to try more silks in the
future, and wool fabric as well. I have been
peeling lichen off of my firewood, and I think I just about have enough to try
a small batch of fabric. I have also
been picking up fallen wild cherry branches, and have them soaking in water for
a dye session soon. The wild cherry is
supposed to yield pink tones. The
lichen, I have no idea as to possible color, but I know that it can be used as
a dye.
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
Let It Snow!
We finally got some snow last week, so I jumped on starting
some snow dyeing. It is a simpler
process than other dye methods. I first
learned of the technique from a fellow member of Contemporary Quilt and Fiber
Artists. One could also use ice cubes for
this dye method but snow is plentiful in Ohio and free! A helpful article on the process is “Dye Your
Own Iced Parfait” by Carol Ludington, Quilting Arts, June/July 2011.
I made up three main color blends this time; my “Painted
Desert” blend, a red-violet/yellow-orange shade/green blend and a brown/yellow
shade/green/red-orange blend. I have
made up two variants of each basic blend.
As the snow melts down into the layers of fabric, I can see some areas
where the dyes are blending with each other, and other places where the dyes
are separating into other colors. I’ve
had a lot of purples separate into blues and red-violets in this slow
process. Not that it is a bad thing, the
varied separation and blending creates some wonderful, unexpected
surprises. Here’s a view of the snow and
dyed covered fabric. Yes, there really
is fabric in there.
Back in college, I had the opportunity to work with raku
fired ceramics, something I miss doing and would like to do again. The snow or ice dyeing process is very
similar to certain concepts that I loved with raku: lack of direct control of
results, seemingly random results, extreme temperatures, and a lot of
unsuccessful pieces. Well, the high rate
of loss wasn’t really something I loved so much, but it was a strong lesson in
dealing with mistakes and loss, things to carry though in all aspects of
life. The iridescent colors or crackling
in the raku glazes depended on how quickly the pieces made it into the sawdust
reduction, whether or not any combustible material touched the glaze, and how
long the red-hot pieces were allowed to smoke and slowly cool. The shock of being pulled out of a red hot
kiln causes many pieces to break. With
snow dyeing, I often get a moderate amount of fabric that doesn’t get dye
distributed nicely. There are often
large areas of still white fabric. The
nice thing about fabric, I can always re-dye it again, and fabric doesn’t crack
or break. Unlike the heat of raku
firing, snow dyeing obviously goes to the other extreme. I have been running out in single digit
temperatures to gather snow to top my buckets of fabric. Once in a while, the color blends just don’t
work out, and then, there isn’t much to do to save it.
The buckets get set aside for about 24 hours, until the snow
melts. These look promising:
Then comes rinsing out, and washing with Synthrapol. I can get a fairly good feel for how the
fabric is turning out as I rinse, but it still transforms to a certain degree
while it goes through a wash cycle or two, then drying. This batch looks like a success:
Do I have to sell these?
I want to use them myself!
Monday, December 29, 2014
Marvelous Mugs
Never underestimate what an entry to an art show challenge
may bring out in yourself. The guild I
recently joined has a small annual show every November, in conjunction with
Cambridge, Ohio’s Dickens Village. They
had a theme for the show – “Mug Madness.”
The explanation, direct from the call for entries was; “A mug is many
things, a large drinking cup or the face of a person or pet. Get creative with faces and think outside the
mug.”
I’m not into doing portraits, but I felt compelled to put
something in the show to support the guild, especially since I am a new
member. So, I tried my hand at making a
3-D, non-functional fabric mug. I dug
around in my box of scraps and found two rectangular pieces of wool onto which I
had felted roving, thread, yarns and fabric bits while I was learning to use my
needle felting machine. The two pieces were
just about right for the bodies of two mugs, one large and one smaller. I matched the pieces up with some of my hand
dyed damasks, and started cutting and stitching. Within the evening, I had two cylinders of
fabric. With added handles, they looked
somewhat like mugs. Off they went to the
show.
This was an all media show.
Drawings, and paintings dominated.
The piece that I thought was the best in the show was a dramatic oil or
acrylic portrait of a man (I do believe he was portrayed drinking from a mug,
thereby capturing both aspects of the theme), done in white and grays on a
black background. There were a couple of
nice ceramic mugs. I was surprised that
there were not more ceramic entries, considering the clay history of this
region and the number of active potters in the area.
To my great surprise, my goofy little green fabric mug, made
out of scraps and my imagination, was selected the first prize winner in the
adult division! My little mugs were the
only textile art in the show. I’d like
to think that I opened some eyes to what is possible with fabric, and
encouraged others to stretch themselves creatively.
Thursday, November 20, 2014
Getting into the Holiday Spirit
Call me Scrooge, but I am just not
into the Christmas holiday hoopla. I
haven’t been for a long time; it has been years since I set up a tree, and I’d
rather not do the gift exchange. I
realize I am pretty much in my own little world on shunning the end of the year
festivities. Naturally, when I was asked
a couple of weeks ago to make a few Christmas ornaments for Art Market 649, I
was reluctant, but I recognized an opportunity to maybe sell a few and make a
few dollars. The first set was a
disaster.
It shows that I was not interested
in them – I tried to save time by gluing the trim, and managed to leave glue
fingerprints on the fabric and I sewed them on a machine that still needed some
fine tuning and had a too small needle in it for the thread I used. I started out making inchies that were double
sided. I wanted both sides to be
presentable, as ornaments often twist and spin while hanging on a tree. This was not my first attempt with inchies,
so it was not like I was unfamiliar with handling small bits of sewing. Most of my problem with this set of ornaments
was my attempts to save time. I have
been thinking a lot of how much time I spend on a project in order to be able
to ask a fair price, yet still be able to sell it. However, I still have to be satisfied enough
with the result to be able to put my name on it.
I
walked away from the ornaments for a few days, then decided I had to make
something. The second attempt was
better.
I cut rectangles out of Pellon
808 and base fabric, fusing the fabric to the Pellon. I then tacked down scraps of paper and trim
with a glue stick (just enough to keep the bits where I wanted them). Next, I free motion quilted each
rectangle. On half of the pieces, I
stitched a charm or button, then I paired up the rectangles, wrong sides
together, tacking then with a spot of glue.
I tucked the ends of a loop of rick rack in one short end of the
resulting sandwich and then zig zag stitched the edges. They were very quick to make, and I am
pleased with the result. They really are
a complete realization of my business name – scraps of repurposed vintage
fabric, bits of paper, stitched together.
If they sell at Art Market 649, I might make more of them.
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