Planning Mode, 4

January 14th, 2025

After quite a bit of experimentation, these last few samples of the day were the most interesting, in which I achieved the goal of messier stitching, an important element in my overall theme.

Making these samples helped me think about the order of making, too:

  1. stitch in whatever grid lines I finally decide on
  2. place the pewter metallic blob with a black wool blob on top of that onto each point in the grid layout I finally decide on 🙂
  3. and baste them into place
  4. add the textures and stitches detail to each blobs unit
  5. add the wool back
  6. quilt – decide between contrasting thread, or in black, by hand or machine…. and I’m sure by the time I’m at that point, I will know what the quilt needs.
  7. edge finish – bound or raw/unfinished? Again, I’ll know when I get to that point.

Now all I have to do is decide on the grid. It will be irregular, whatever I choose –

  1. vertical/horizontal
  2. mesh-like lines
  3. so I think I’ll make another cup of tea and toss a coin – best of 3.

Planning Mode, 3

January 11th, 2025

So many ideas, so little time! With several important calls for entry in mind, plus visitors and possibly some travel looming in the middle months of the year, I’m starting some new works. It’s really quiet in the neighbourhood, and many of our friends are along the coast or out of the country – with regular activities in summer recess. In a recent post I wrote a goal in my current planning: “These new works need to reflect my current focus on texture and grids of a kind…” and yesterday I spent quite a bit of time reviewing recent and early works plus those all important samples that I never throw away. In the last few years I’ve photographed them as I went along and often posted them on FB or Instagram. But there are others – and I’ll go through the large tote-bag of samples to make sure I didn’t forget one snippet of an idea to consider.

Another important part of my process is to look through my Pinterest pins. I have a board labelled ‘Grids!’, and from those 200+ images I’ve saved several in a Word document labelled “Grid Ideas” The images are cropped to capture just the essence of that particular grid idea, which also saves printer ink!

Why grids? A grid layout is perhaps the most prominent infuence in my art from the brief time I spent making traditional patchwork quilts. Next comes my love of pieced fabrics in basic geometric shapes, aka patchwork, and the use of hand stitched textures that I’ve loved since I was very young. Somewhere I reached understanding that a grid pattern represents order and stability. Ancient mapmakers and surveyors understood the importance of a grid as a framework of reference on direction and distance. Laws and social customs provide important written and spoken frames of reference for groups of people. In today’s turbulent world long-accepted frames of reference, those international agreements and laws plus rule of law in various countries, collectively known as rules based order, have begun disintegrating in some regions. Perhaps I heard someone say it… or maybe my mind started thinking of a wonky, crooked grid as a sign of ‘rules based disorder’ … as recently I’ve made several small pieces with this title. There will be more off-kilter grids, and I’m aiming for lines and stitched textures to be messy, too – because as I wrote on October 24th last: “A life can be long or short, and it can be a smooth continuum, but it is more likely to be untidy in places, occasionally punctuated by upheavals or mistakes at some points along the way. Fabric marked by stitches is a statement or an exploration of something on the artist’s mind, and, just like a life, a stitchery can have messy stops, starts and changes of directions, stitches or threads along the way.”

Selecting, auditioning and deleting got the word document down to 3 pages which I printed off to take up to my workroom. Those pages look like this one –

The above examples uses only images of my own works, but the 3 sheets compiled from my research contains these and several more examples of how others have used the concept of ‘grid’ as a layout. It’s then up to me to work out how I’m going to use techniques I know and/or love to combine them into cohesive works.

An Art Quilt In Wool

January 10th, 2025

I’ve been making samples this week in preparation of putting my ideas into an art quilt using wool for the ArtQuiltAustralia 25 call – of I enter two, one must be ‘substantially’ of wool on both back and front sides.

Later today I’m visiting fabric store that’s new-to-me, and their location, website and prices suggest it is possibly a bit outlet-ish, which would be great. I’m looking for wool, and they have some 100% at about US10/m which sounds reasonable. They also have listed some black cotton which I’d give my right arm for at the moment, but might only have to give about $3/m. Quality’s not really relevant for what I plan to do with it 🙂 It sounds like the kind of place that might have a remnants table…. and they have haberdashery / merceria. I am always on the lookout for the large but fine needles I prefer to use surface stitching and hand quilting, or stitching in combination with machine stitch.

This morning I came across this image, made for a teaching gig a few years ago. I keep a file of the grid/blanks squares on my computer to print off and pencil ideas into sometimes, though I do tend to go back to my favourites, and there are some old friends here. My regular readers know how I love grid-like layouts and how many of my designs feature lines and defining those layouts, or dividing the whole into parts.

Simple but potentially striking patterns formed by solid lines, dots and dashes and fillings.
The little hand stitched square (top right)might not feature in this one, but I love the potential of this favourite S.D. element in metallic finish polyester.

Making samples can teach more than just what a chosen technique and colours will look like. From handling just this one sample, I now know that (1) I’m open to ditching the metallic and using another fabric to show behind the top wool layer (2) Whatever fabric shows through those holes, it really needs to be a complete layer between the front and the back as in reverse applique, the finest examples of which are the molas of the Kuna people of San Blas Is., off the coasts of Panama and Colombia.

Wool? Rayon? or both?

Though the metallic fabric is pewter finish, it looks gold here, and both the wool thread and the rayon thread actually tone well; but in keeping with the look I want to convey, the wool might come out as the preferred thread. It partly depends on what I find in this shop later today.

A Satisfying Sample

January 7th, 2025

Yesterday I followed up on how those gifted knitting samples unravel and separate out into 6 strands, with which I hand stitched on Moth Buffet a couple of years ago. At that time I was 100% all in for hand work, and it never occurred to me to try to sew with it by machine, apart from couching, which didn’t interest me particularly.

At the top of the sample are two sets of the stitching with the wool strand feeding from both the top and the bobbin. Of course I had to loosen tension, use a jeans sewing needle, and set the stitch length to the longest on my very basic Bernina, and found it gave a great line.

The top pair are what the underside looks like, a little wonky. I then turned the fabric over for the next pair to compare the results, and did a little stitching between them as that is a border possibility. Different, better.

The pieces of the pewter metallic finish I’m so interested in are shown with several treatments. Also, a bit of distortion occurs when I unthinkingly (a) pull the thread a bit firmly and (b) use the needle on a slant – it needs to enter and leave the fabric as vertically as possible.

Hand Stitch/Slow Stitch – What’s In A Word?

January 5th, 2025
detail, “On The Golden Mile, 1986

Plenty. Among the most consulted texts in the English language are those dictionaries of synonyms and antonyms – thesauruses. Using the most appropriate word is very important to me. My parents were well read and my sisters and I grew up with word games – the Scrabble set was very worn last time I saw it, and on sunday morning ABC radio (Australian Broadcasting Commission, modelled on the BBC) we listended to a word game program called My Word

I’ve written several times here about the hand stitch / slow stitch thing, and this post https://www.alisonschwabe.com/weblog/?p=8160 summarised my thoughts pretty well I thought, until just now. I was browsing ‘for a few minutes’ on Pinterest and this one came up in my feed along with a bunch of other images of contemporary hand stitch. It’s a lovely embroidered flower, with heaps of stemmed fly stitches and french knots and many straight stitches. Someone who found it elsewhere pinned it, but did not attibute the maker, and she just labelled it ‘slow stitch’. As there are several similar pins of hers in my feed, clearly she has a thing about the look, artistic potential and restorative benefits of all kinds of hand stitching.

But why did she just label this pic ‘slow stitch’? She was not the maker, so she probably had no idea whether the work went fast or slowly, and whether the maker was mindful at the time, meditating, listening to the radio or an audiobook, or chatting with someone while she was stitching it? Why didn’t she just say it was hand embroiderered or hand stitched ?

This little thing irritated me quite disproportionately, and I don’t blame you for seeing me as just as obsessive about hand stitch as the slow stitch fad followers whose posturings get up my nose! In my view, the old fashioned word ’embroidery’ covers it all, including the vast dictionary of stitches and embroidery styles from different cultures since the dawn of time, and some amazing favourite contemporary textile artists who work in fabric+stitch – Carolyn Nelson, Emily Barletta, Roberta Wagner, Stephanie Fujii, Dorothy Caldwell among them. And in a big project with heaps of hand stitching, whatever kind and whatever speed you’re working at, the stitching does become rhythmic, adding the calming benefits that slow stitchers so ardently extoll.

Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).

All images and text are © Alison Schwabe
Reproduction of any kind is expressly prohibited without written consent.

Translate »