Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts

Sunday, December 8, 2024

creativity a bit of sewing, a bit of paint

 

Even when going through grief, one wants to make art. I am slowly working on my Moravian star in fabric

the little star units are lying on my portable design surface. (cardboard / batting/ felt ) with a sand paper bottom. This tutorial said to make 12 star units of 5 petals. See the little diamonds on the bottom right. 
moving anticlockwise up here are the 5 sewn together.  
moving anticlockwise to the left top the five are sewn into a cupped star shape
and the bottom left is two sewn together (wrong sides tog) with a third to be sewn in

I'm not sure of the tutorial, it doesn't show where they are all joined into a big shape so I'm stuck

I painted a wee house, and that's about it this week.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UowBhx-IeqY

4X 6" or so, a mix of pencil watercolor-pencils (prismacolor) and water color paint with ink on top

 


Maybe I'll feel like making more next week in between doctor's appts. Not sleeping well at all. 
hope all reading this are finding more creative time than I did, but we know it comes and goes even when the artist shows up in studio to do the work. 

Saturday, November 9, 2024

Using creative time to feel normal... quilting, painting, memories of a granny

 

I finished the golden circle this week, and here's a photo of it with the other warm colors. I took this to show the difference between the yellow and gold. 

In doing the rsc this year, I picked my last 4 colors to use, since I wanted 12 blocks for my quilt. I love quilt making for the pattern, color and lines. 

The more the merrier says I, so I adore scrap quilts.

Being a painter, I'm used to mixing colors, seeing what colors come from different proportions. I think our eyes blend color which is why pointillism interests me

I approach paintings/drawings/ and quilt making differently although each relies on the same principles of art. 
(thank you for allowing me to talk about something familiar and safe for a moment, carrying me out of the constant worry about the future in America) 

I sewed the half hexies in red to the edge of this little piece by the end of the week because well you have to do something during sit and stare time

I sat and basted the center hexies on a plane ride home from the Houston show one year. It was the year I met my good friend I called "plane-mate-Pat. We sat next to each other and didn't stop chatting the whole ride, kept up with each other in Maryland after that, and became close over the years. 
She's in Heaven now, her breast cancer treatments changed her body, her meds for arthritis reduced her resistance, and she died from what started as a cold. She was such a good person. So I put the hexies away for years and recently pulled them out to sew. 

(Pat's laughing from Heaven) 

I added in the half hexies instead of sewing it to a base fabric. Why? more sewing time to handle it and think of the next step, what to add and how to quilt it.

While mindlessly wandering around the house I spied two packages of pre-cut 5" squares bought on a big sale. I thought, I will just sew them together without too much thought. I put them in mesh bags to wash (yep even precuts get washed here, as I don't need a chemically induced migraine too.

to get to know the patterns I laid them out on the cutting table in groups and thought, wow, meh. Bland. 
perfect for who cares sewing. 
I fleetingly thought of doing more, like 9 patches

but there are 80-ish squares and this won't add up to a lap quilt shape. Plus I don't like it.
I considered 4 patches but those would probably require setting strips to set them off. 

My ribs will not allow me to use a rotary cutter lately, and I don't see the chiro for 10 days

DH is not good at cutting strips for me to use. He's willing but not so able, I think it's his eyes and reluctance to be good at something he doesn't want to do, LOL

Before I stopped for the night I put all squares up on the design wall. I sort of arranged them to give me some order. Stepping back I thought... meh.   The line if from leslie riley, and it doesn't excite me
the graphics are odd when cut in squares and I wonder if I'd like the fabric as a whole? 
It does look better in a photo.  Maybe I'll tweak it by forming more 4 patches with the only bold color, brick red. 


That picture reminds me of Granny...

My granny made quilts from old clothing. She figured out ways to put color and pattern together. An early memory was of standing by her rocking chair and watching her hand stitch squares and sometimes sewing odd shapes to ripped out pages of the old phone book, early paper piecing. She must have gotten tired of me hovering, so she put me to her mother's treadle machine and gave me my own ugly squares and showed me how to stitch a straight line, then went back to her chair.

I was surprised to be handed the keys to the quilting kingdom then left  alone. What power! I spent time planning and learned to control that machine, my long legs were able to set a rhythm and my little head bent over the throat plate watching the needle go up and down. 
It had a certain smell, as did those old patches, but it was mine. Granny left me that precious machine when she passed. I have it still after so many moves. 

It represents so much. 
The connection between an older woman and her adopted grand daughter
The start of a lifetime love of fabric
The joy of controlling a powerful machine to make my art
A tentative connection between Granny's mother who ordered the treadle by mail in the 1800's, to a rural farm in Alabama, and me. What was she like? I assume it cost a lot for her, and she made clothing for she and her daughter (granny) I wish I'd known questions to ask before Granny moved up to Heaven
It was the start of independent art making for me, making decisions and seeing the outcome. 
An initiation into the world of being able to make clothing and quilts unique to me. 

A child who was so beaten down by authoritative parents who took all decisions from her, who controlled even her body, could see a place to go to express herself safely. 

Changing the subject.... painting 
here are some paintings done last month

before doing an art lesson I like to draw and sometimes paint the teachers, in my sketchbook

Iris painted with watercolor on the left, and gouache on the right. Raw, quick, impressions. Free

there are a few more I haven't shared that I think I'll put on an I Like post next week. If ... 

Saturday, October 26, 2024

creativity this week watching paint dry, then printing in on fabric to quilt, and book binding

 

I finished the gray rainbow scrap block for this week, and here it is with a few others. I now have 10 big blocks....

I have learned by doing these, that choosing to do one big block a month in one colorway, gives a big impact. In the beginning I might have mixed all the colors in each block thinking that might look scrappy. This way you see the color, then the patterns from different fabrics making it scrappy. 
I also love the tula pink background fabric with these... 
Happy Colors!

tell her to make another run of this fabric! 

I did sew tiny gray scraps together to test the machine, worked fine, but what do make this into? 


I am relearning how to use my little mechanical Janome Gem, and needed to put on a walking foot 
(to the non sewists reading, that keeps three layers together while it's being stitched) to make this Halloween quilt
11" and change by 11" -ish

I painted the branch moon and cat on paper a few weeks ago... and Joy's table scraps challenge was to include a cat and light fabrics. I printed this and another of my paintings onto a sheet of fabric in my home printer. (Jacquard printing fabric available at amazon and JoAnn's) I painted this as a full size painting and it printed very well on fabric
this was left to use in another quilt art piece later
so I had my printed art, chose these to be background, and backing, using peltex stabilizer instead of  batting...

I turned under the edges of my printed fabric, stitched over it with two sparkly embellishment threads (blue and purple) with a zigzag stitch, fused on a cutie witch  from a scrap, holding a cat too
since I'm using this basic machine, I didn't push my luck beyond using metallic thread to quilt it, so it's not heavily quilted. I like the look though, and finished the outside edge with a machine stitched binding in the same background fabric
and it's sitting on our entry table's easel now. Done in 2 hours or so 
One of the last sketchbook lessons I took before it was done, was how to make a watercolor sketchbook binding it in a way to make all the pages open flat

I have just the scene to paint over the two pages... a landscape in our 'hood. I took a pic today to use
I made the covers from a red manila folder cut to size. It's pretty but I thought it would look good with one of my paintings... I tested my two pics for size, printing them on paper before the fabric... and now I have those to use too!
some double stick tape should seal it enough

I've got a number of sketchbook pages to share with you so I'll show you a couple now, and more next week, I was very happy with my lessons in sketchbook this time, and what I learned, 

this exercise was to use tissue paper, paint it before or after, compose a a page with it. I saw mine as balloons. Each teacher shares her favorite supplies, and her tips overall when making art. 
Hers looked much better but, I now know more about the qualities of glueing tissue, and how it accepts and changes paint, how markers behave over it all 
this artist taught us to free ourselves up for making art, pour out all your colored pencils, grab one without looking and color in a triangle. Then grab another without looking or choosing a color, and do another triangle next to the first. Continue til you're out of colors. (I have a set of 24) 

then look at it, see if there are surprising combinations, colors you might never have put next to each other for instance, Choose one area of 6 colors you like together, and do the exercise again with just them... then she used just those colors do do a sketchbook page of little motifs to see how they might look. 
Mine looked like a 4 year old made it so I'm not including it today! 
There are others I truly love I'll show next week.... 

Saturday, October 19, 2024

creativity this week feathered star block and lessons with paint



welcome to this week's creativity round-up! Mostly I've been learning, drawing, painting with some sewing as well! On with the show.... I'll start with painting, go on to sewing so you can find what you like best here. 
I took a lesson in how to use my gouache paints. They are quite a different creature from watercolors. 

It's good to learn new things. They are opaque, and because of that, thicker than my usual watercolors. They are water soluble though and can be mixed on the palette before using, and cleaned with water.  
My brushes were too soft and held more of the intense paint than needed. I had to figure out how to dilute them enough to use without losing the opacity. 

The presenter, Kate Cooke led us through combining inspirational elements from different sources into one picture. I have a lot of skipped paper and a lack of straight lines as my paint was too thick to cover with my brushes but I love the overall painting
I like the style reminiscent of the 1920's . I like that if I'm careful to be fast I can paint over with new motifs and it is not see through. I like that when I didn't like my shade of sky, I could brush on a darker shade, then a watery white pushed over created clouds. 
I didn't like the lack of coverage along straight lines, and will need to figure out how to get that. I see more gouache lessons in my future, and more experiments. I did try it several times this week. 

c coThis class by Effie Wilde was fun but I used watercolor instead of acrylic (gives me headaches) the acrylivers dried acrylic so you can cover up, add to, etc that is hard to do with watercolors other than a glaze. I like her colors and modern look. 

I tried a new to me method of book binding, cartoons, and took a course from another free online workshop (Nina Rycroft) on four ways to combine into one painting. More next week on that.


My poor overworked Bernina was packed up for now, I found my tiny Janome Gem to use in a pinch. I forget how BASIC it is. I have to turn the hand wheel each time I stop and start, and go to the manual for things like winding a bobbin, inserting it, changing needles, etc. I'm glad to have it as I get antsy when I don't sew. 
This week I did my RSC block in GRAY. Her colorway is "light" and there is light gray... it's not finished as wedging that big paper pattern under the needle on this machine is challenging taking much longer to piece. 
Here are the four sections with the color  pieced, next is to add in the pretty tula pink fabric around each section, then join the sections. Hope I get it done for next week! 

printed pattern section, do four


a close up of some of the gray scraps I have

Gray isn't my favorite color, I find it cold unless you combine it with black but this is a challenge right? To use our scraps? 

I'll share more about the paintings I've done, and the book binding next time. 
for now, enjoy these short tutorials anyone can do

 amazing drops of paint make a painting!

https://youtube.com/shorts/kv0-Q9dugMw?si=Nx0UCvHLBkkqkpNh

Well I've never seen this painting technique using dots of paint and a hypodermic needle

https://youtube.com/shorts/9VlizSQsQp4?si=BqNKr65mJX0rg35C

 linking to


design wall Mondays at smallquiltsanddollquilts

https://songbirddesigns.blog/

finished or not

https://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com/

https://beadwright.blogspot.com/

https://myblog-lunchbreak.blogspot.com/

modern, simple painting anyone can do

https://youtube.com/shorts/CMeOu3cYMKQ?si=nEQSK7R01iaTz06R  

 

Saturday, October 12, 2024

watching paint dry this week.... stretching my creativity

 

For my quilt making update, I did baste the three layers of this quilt (my Portal) together. I safety pin the layers, backing is a lovely fall print, batting is warm and natural, the top was made a bit ago. It's the back breaking task I dislike the most in quilting. It's ready to machine quilt now! yea! but....

... my beloved Bernina 1630 sewing machine began failing just as this was ready to go. I have replaced the motherboard in it, twice,  at Hinkletown Sewing in PA. They charge a couple hundred, the other stores charge thousands. I am no longer near Hinkletown... WAH!!! 

so... no quilting for me for now. Do you quilters love your domestic machine? what is it??? help! I'm not paying 22,000 for the new Bernina y'all, but I need to be able to quilt my own quilts!

Oh and my personal color of the month for RSC is gray, so I started the EPP circle this week by hand, 
I didn't have a gray dotted fabric for the hexies so I'm shopping from my small stash of gray scraps! I like the different values and patterns here though! 

I'll share some of my paintings instead...

I love how this came out... a close up

I like the moody nature of it, the way paint blended when wet, the idea of little birds

and the moon! clap clap clap! whee!

The next technique was taught in Sketchbook Revival by Linda Germain... take a magazine... cut out a 3" square from the bottom of a kleenex box to use as a crop to view the magazine pages...
I feel I learned so much from just going over the pictures this way. Finding angles, composing the photo differently, noting the parts I like the best. 

Oooo the curvy lines, the colors turquoise with coral, with gold


until you find 6-8 images. Trace and cut out the cropped part of the image
you'll be drawing then painting just this image in your sketchbook. 
the teacher said to leave room for your drawing. Then turn the image to the side or upside down and just draw the lines you see inside the square. Turning it changes it from, say, a vase to just lines. Fill in any details you like, then paint. 
AMAZING! and fun! 
Have I mentioned Sketchbook Revival is free online, Karen Abend brings together about 30 artists to teach us each  year. A close up...
magazine on top, my interpretation under that

I'm doing it again since it's so fun! 
This workshop got me to use supplies I had but haven't tried yet, like gouache. I am a watercolorist and gouache is a water based paint that is opaque. Like acrylics without the plastic binder to give me migraines, and flat not shiny. 
I was afraid to try them! wha??? 
Are you ever nervous to try a new tool like a specialty ruler, a different kind of paint, a technique? 

The teacher squeezed a large amount into cups to mix into new colors. I don't have that many plastic cups, so I just used a few yogurt lids as a mixing palette...
worked like a charm. I've used the same lids all week on many other lessons, because that pink morphed into coral, and orange, the greens and purples and yellow morphed into that mossy color. Just a drop of water from my brush, and they are ready to use again! I LOVE the effect they give. 

Oh I have just watched the lesson video so far... afraid to go whole hog into them but I will before the time is up... 

I draw and or paint a thumbnail of each teacher on my page too. This was a lesson to make bold random abstract marks first, then add blobs of paint, then collage on top, then paint, write or whatever you think of....
looks like a hot mess from here but in person you see the tree, the vignettes of flowers and sun etc. Yep, that pink/coral flower was from the leftover gouache on the lid, along with the purple. I cut words into a flower shape, glued it down and daubed gouache over it. 

Not fine art but lots of fun, and it was very different from the teacher's work. 

Michaelangelo said, "I'm always learning" 

I did more lessons to share, that I'll save for another post later, some will go on Thursday's "I like" post

Saturday, September 21, 2024

creativity this week: painting and feathered stars in lime green

 

Little by little a bird builds her nest, and little by little I regain some strength. 

For sewing this week I made the 9th feathered star, this time in my neutral... lime green. The color of the month for the next four months at RSC is not color actually, so I chose my own for the rest of this year. 

turns out I don't have a lot of scraps in lime but look at some I used...


I love that bit of words , the daisies, a Christmas angel, spirals, and that bit of repeated lime has sparkles on it in glitter!

I pulled 3 others from the 9 completed blocks just to start thinking about how to set them
just sewn one to the other makes that cutie pattern where they come together
the pattern source
I pulled sequins and beads to add to the orange embroidered flower... let the fun begin
Look at this video by Sarah Humphreys on many ways to add sparkle to a quilt/ or embroidery


I have been watching some lessons from Tam La Porte's online free workshop... and painted three really fun pieces. I only got one pic, I'll show the rest in weeks to come, but even DH liked them! 

and the close up
there are sometimes a small part of a painting I like best. This time it was the blend of colors on the body. Wouldn't it be fun to see something like this in your own yard?