Sunday, 21 April 2013

Here, There and Everywhere!

In a crazy week where I've travelled from one Embroiderer's Guild branch in Peterborough to another near Canterbury there's hardly been time for my feet to touch the ground, never mind thinking about a blog post.
 
 
I've started another six week course teaching basic book making techniques which has got me exploring new book structures.

 
I've had friends round for a morning of stitching and we've contemplated the best way to display this wig, not using the polystyrene wig stand... still not resolved! (answers on a postcard???)

 
I've done lots of cooking including cheesecakes of both the savoury and sweet variety.

 
These were for a supper at my branch of the Embroiderer's Guild and involved me driving around half of North Hertfordshire with a boot full of food... very long story... I couldn't attend the supper so planned to deliver the food to the venue where I would leave it in the fridge. But the venue was locked, I didn't have keys, I couldn't locate anyone with keys, so I drove back home and after a zillion phone calls finally tracked down someone who could take the food for me which involved another drive... but it all turned out well in the end and apparently the evening was a success. I was a little sad at missing the supper and talk...

 
But not too sad... because I was at the O2 Arena with my Mum, Stewart, my brother and his wife to see Il Divo with Katherine Jenkins. It was our Christmas present from Mum and they were wonderful. Really superb and it was worth not getting to bed until 2 am!

 
Even though I then had to get up, load my car full of my work and drive to Canterbury the following morning to give a talk to the North Kent branch of the Embroiderer's Guild. But the sixty or so ladies who attended the talk were very warm and welcoming and gave me such an enthusiastic response to my talk that I felt like I was running on adrenaline all day! Just as well really.

 
And this morning I've been off to deliver some work for this exhibition "Threads Galore" which opens in Letchworth on 8th May.

 
I'm especially excited because ten of my Young Embroiderers will be exhibiting along with the older members which is a fabulous opportunity for them.
 
Now finally, I'm sat down with my feet up and a cuppa whilst I contemplate what's in store for next week. Not quite so much driving around all over the place, thank goodness!

Monday, 15 April 2013

Off my Needles

A  couple of weeks ago I shared this shawl... that was still on my needles.
 
 
Well it is now off my needles, blocked and has hardly left my neck.

 
I love it! So much so that I'm almost sad that it has warmed up over the past couple of days... almost but not quite!

 
I've also really enjoyed knitting it too and will almost certainly knit this pattern again. I could have cosy scarves in all sorts of lovely colours

 

Saturday, 13 April 2013

Beautiful Braids

I'm going to have to put aside my sketchbook play for a while and get down to the business of some "real" work, which today meant teaching at the Peterborough branch of the Embroiderer's Guild. Except of course it doesn't really feel like work to spend the day with a lovely group of ladies doing what I enjoy.
 
 
We were making a variety of braids on the sewing machine, using different types of threads. Although these can be used in numerous ways, by using dissolvable fabrics we turned the braids into beaded bracelets.

 
The photos below are just a small selection of the huge amount of work produced in just six hours.


There were yards and yards of braid... someone suggested they would make very snazzy shoelaces!

 
And most ladies made a bracelet too... decorated with a wonderful selection of beads and sequins. I do love a bit of bling!

 
Not everyone got around to dissolving away the background fabric (Which is why some look like they are stitched onto plastic)


 
But most people finished something to take home.


 
And just to show that it wasn't necessary to make a bracelet, Pam created this fabulous piece of fabric constructed from braids which I believe is destined to be a book cover... I'll have to watch Pam's blog to see the finished result!

 
Thank you ladies of Peterborough... it has been a lovely day.
And should you be interested I'll be teaching this again on 29th June at Art and Stitch.
 
Got to get my thinking cap on now as we are off to a village quiz night... don't want to end up with the dunce's cap!

Tuesday, 9 April 2013

Frivolous Fun

I promised you frivolity in my next post.
You can decide for yourself if what I've been doing is frivolous but it has certainly been fun.
 
 
Working in my Frida Kahlo sketchbook, I've returned to paper cuts. I'd forgotten how much I liked them.

 
Stencilled with some coloured paints they produce another interesting page underneath

 
Turn the page over and stencil with black paint and it gives a totally different image.

 
And another page to work on underneath. Interesting left black and white... or painted with coloured inks.

 
Best of all I like the 3 D effect of looking through the paper cuts... on the black side...

 
and on the coloured side.

 
None of this is perfect... the paint has run, there are slodges and smudges but it doesn't matter. The point of the sketchbook is to play with ideas... have fun... be frivolous... and let ideas flow.

 
Which is exactly what has happened as I start to translate the ideas into fabric and thread and I know what I want to make for Frida

 
I'd forgotten how good it feel to immerse myself in ideas and I want to keep the momentum going. Unfortunately I've got some Schemes of Work to produce pretty soon for some upcoming City & Guilds classes... I think my dealine was the end of March! Ooops!

Sunday, 7 April 2013

Craft and Creativity

We were back in London at the V & A again on Friday to see a screening of Alan Yentob's 1974 film Cracked Actor (Which ironically had been shown the previous night on BBC 1 on Imagine... so you can still catch it on i Player should you wish), followed by a question and answer session with Alan Yentob. It was an excellent eveing and we also managed to whizz around the Bowie exhibition again which was a bonus. It raised lots of questions about creativity and art among other things.
 
 
Mercury Rising Four panel lacquered teak screen with white gold detail, Sophie Coryndon
 
Which was interesting because before heading to the V & A we had popped in to Somerset House where for just three days there was an exhibition about craftsmanship, Crafted, featuring a variety of crafts of the most amazing standard ranging from watch making to knitting and glass blowing to silver smithing. I spoke for a while to the incredibly talented Sophie Coryndon who was working on gilded inlays on lacquered wood. I asked where she had learned such skills and her answer really resonated with me. She said she had been to Art college where she felt she had learned nothing of use. She said it was all far too conceptual and this was confirmed for her when a fellow student, for her final year degree show, had dipped the heads of Barbie dolls into toffee sauce. Despite this, Sophie finished her degree but then went on to learn the skills that she now employs through apprenticeships.

 
I know I made the right decision when I decided not to continue my Master of Art degree and one of the reasons I didn't want to continue (there were others) was that I found it too conceptual. As I listened to other students explain why they were doing what they were doing I felt like I was in a scene from the Emperor's New Clothes. I felt as though I didn't belong. I'm sure it meant something to the individuals involved, and I don't mean to put that down, but it really was not for me.

 
I've nothing against concepts or meanings in art and have produced my own work that has meaning beyond the purely visual, but for me art still has to be something beautiful. Not a very fashionable idea I know!

 
That beauty does not have to be a "pretty" type of beauty but rather an attraction that makes someone want to look or listen or find out more. And it has to be well crafted with skill.

 
Ridiculous I know, but since leaving the MA I have struggled to find concepts and meaning in my own work, believing that without something deep and meaningful behind what I'm doing that it is just a waste of time. How very silly of me given that was the very reason I gave it up!

 
Suddenly like a light coming on I realise that none of that matters. As long as what I do is done with integrity and done well... that is what is really important.

 
And I think that applies whether one is writing and performing some of the most iconic songs of the twentieth century, creating beautiful lacquered screens, baking cakes and desserts for friends, knitting garments, painting pictures, making sculpture etc.... or even dabbling with a bit of embroidery. Unfortunately I can't quite apply this thinking to toffee dipped Barbie dolls!

 
This weekend I have created a gluten free chocolate cake decorated with chocolate ganache and chocolate ribbons, baked a ginger and lime pie... and several individual sized versions, made a batch of lemon macaroons and have continued to play with ideas inspired by Frida.

 
And instead of feeling frustrated and disatisfied with my weekend's achievements which seems to have become the norm over recent months... it just feels good. I just want to make beautiful things! 

 
Well, that was all a bit deep for a Sunday evening... I'll be back with some frivolity next week! Far more me!

Thursday, 4 April 2013

Beautiful Bunny

I've received a very pretty parcel in the post today.
A week or so ago I left a comment on a blog post by Vivienne of Green Rabbit Designs. To be honest I didn't give much thought to the fact that Vivienne was giving away one of her crochet rabbits as Vivienne and I often exchange comments and I always admire her lovely rabbits. I didn't think for one minute I might win.
 
 
 
But I did win and today my parcel arrived. To be honest I would have been delighted just to have received this label which is so pretty... but I am quite thrilled with the little bunny.

 
I'm not a particularly "soft toy" type of girl but "Posie" the rabbit really is gorgeous and so beautifully finished. Her cardigan is exquisite and she is so much softer and smaller than I imagined.

 
And any thoughts I might have had on winning of finding a suitable little girl to have Posie have been cast aside because I rather want to keep her all to myself. And anyway, she looks quite at home on the dresser... and it would be rude to give her away.

 
Thank you Vivienne!

Monday, 1 April 2013

A Day to Play

After a hectic few days involving much cooking and consuming of chocolate, the family have gone, the house was quiet and today there was a chance to have another playday with the sketchbook.
 
 
I had recently decorated a piece of white fabric with a Sharpie pen, following one of the chapters in  the DVD that came with Alisa Burke's book Sew Wild. I wasn't sure what I was going to do with it but started by making several photocopies of the fabric which I then cut up and put into my Frida Kahlo sketchbook.

 
Much as I liked the black and white it was cryng out for colour... it had to be done to keep with the Frida Kahlo theme.

 
Gradually I painted more and more... taking photocopies of my progress. These photocopies will make good starting points for more sketchbook pages. 

 
I liked the black and white but I love the colour more.

 
The double page spread was finished off with lists of words that I associate with Frida Kahlo.  Text always features somewhere in my work.

 
After lunch I looked through my extensive collection of magazine clippings and found this image of a Jean Paul Gaultier dress dating back to 2008... yes, I keep clippings from that far back! And then I wonder why I have I have a problem with clutter!

 
And with a bit of collage, paint and stitch... I start to have the beginnings of an idea... (although I'm a little worried about how the arms fit onto the body of my collage of Frida!)

 
But I realise that a day spent "playing" is a day well spent!