This has been a couple of very productive months on the creative front
Exploring Texture and Pattern
I continued my Exploring Texture and Pattern course, first completing 2.3 the exercise in mock herringbone. I could only find one piece of striped fabric in the house and the stripes were wider than I would have liked, but I made it work. The four examples were supposed to relate to each other, so I used similar shades of pink. The first example was one strand of embroidery cotton. The second was three strands of embroidery cotton and I played with spacing a bit. The third was Retors a Broder cotton in a five ply and I used the whole thread. In the fourth example, I repeated each of these three, playing with a second colour in between the threads of each. For the Retors a Broder, I used three strands of black floss. For the three strand column I used two rows of three strands of a pale yellow. And for the single strand column I used a single strand of a blue.
The next exercise, 2.4, was couching and this was fun. First I did a three ply tapestry yarn in a light yellow, winding it back and forth in tight rows. I couched it down with a single strand of yellow embroidery cotton. For the second example I used three strands of a warm brown embroidery floss running it in a grid, first horizontally and then vertically. I then couched it down with a crossstitch using two strands of matte gold embroidery floss where the vertical and horizontal grid met. This is called Jacobian Couching. My third example was back to a tapestry yarn, an orange colour this time, in circular pattern starting from the center. I couched it down with a complementary colour, blue, using two strands of embroidery cotton in a ray pattern from the center. The fourth example was a piece of Christmas ribbon I bought at the dollar store, laid in a wandering pattern, including one crossing, couched down with a single thread of green embroidery floss. I really enjoyed this exercise. and am thinking about how to use couching in my own designs.
Kiwi Crafts
For Kiwi crafts, I did a stamped pattern on a stock canvas backpack. This involved cutting my own stamps from rubber blanks provided and using them and acrylic paint to stamp the backpack. Edges of the stamp sometimes picked up a bit of paint and show, but this is a pretty casual project, so that look doesn't bother me. I was anticipating summer outings and went with a beach theme, creating three stamps: a wave pattern, a starfish pattern, and a shell pattern. For the wave pattern, I used blue and white paint, trying to have white show at the top of the waves. For the shell pattern, I used a wine and a lavender paint, and for the starfish I used a mustardy yellow paint.
I am happy with the result.
EAC/ACB Seminar 2021
I also participated in two Embroidery Association of Canada Seminar classes and am partway through several original pieces for those.
Here are some teasers from my canvaswork design class with Carolyn Mitchell
This is an Alberta Rose design I'm working on.
Natalie Dupois Ode to the Palette
I took this course over six weeks, but mostly did colour theory and analysis, little stitching yet.
We had to choose a painting to analyze the colours of, and then use the colours in a stitched piece. I chose Elyse Dodge's piece Elfin Lake, as I loved the colours, the subject, and the feel of it.
I decided to work with overdyed silk threads for this and here are the threads that I chose. I also looked at the threads in black and white to see the range of tones.
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