Yesterday was the last reveal of 2022 and it did not disappoint! We had a full house of members and walls full of beautiful quilts.
Seashells
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Remembering Sanibel 20" x 22" by Pat Gillings |
Artist Statement: This fits the challenge by incorporating seashells. This was made in memory of my sister, Carol. We spent a lovely weekend in Sanibel, FL some years ago and some of the shells are from there. With the recent hurricane Ian destroying much of Sanibel, it is particularly meaningful to me. Most of the quilt was hand stitched on wool fabric. Materials: Sari silk ribbons sewn to represent the ocean. White waves created with a wool roving webbing and a dyed scrim for sand. I used various hand embroidery to create elements to go with the actual seashells. This quilt was actually challenging in that I used heavy interfacing to keep shells from sagging but then couldn't fuse layers as wool would just absorb it. Had to add more layers which then made the quilt too thick to face and had to improvise a binding.
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It's all Shells 18" x 37" by Jane Haworth |
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Practice seashell painting |
Artist Statement: I am exploring using seashells in my work for various projects and mediums. The inspiration was painting of my own collection of seashells. Materials: Home Depot drop cloth, various commercial cottons, textile paints & acrylic paints. While exploring making seashell patterns in various sizes, making watercolor paintings of them and also in fabric collage, I opted to paint these shells in fabric & acrylic paints on the drop cloth base. It was quite hard to paint on. I also played around free motion stitching on my new longarm sweet sixteen machine. After the painted shells were stitched, I added collaged shells and an impro layered background. This will be a table runner.
Reflections
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Turtle Reflections 38" x 34" by Michelle Peerson |
Artist Statement: Inspired by a photo by Hailey E. Herrera of Los Angeles. She gave me permission to make her creation in fabric. I dyed several of the fabrics, mainly the whole cloth piece. I used sun dyes, salt to create the bubbles & designs. I waited too long to finish "Reflections" and plan to do more embellishing with quilting, shells & hand dyed cheese cloth.
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Evening Reflections 23.5" x 26" by Jan Mitrovich |
Artist Statement: Her own thoughts and reflections were habitually her best companions" - Jane Austen. The inspiration was Betty Albert (Cree nation). NW artist paints native American women. When I saw her painting in a gallery in Washington labeled Evening Star Women, I immediately knew this one should be adapted to an art quilt. Materials: Cotton, silk, tulle, misty fuse, batting, beads, rayon ribbon (hair), paints, watercolor to shade the sky, acrylic spatter for background starts, staff ornament, purchased dreamcatcher embellished with paper features, embroidery floss, crystal stars from a diamond paint kit & lots & lots of thread. This piece created itself. I had the basic image of a woman looking at the moon, but the fabric choices, embellishments and process was revealed to me as it came together. As I reflect over my past year with MAQ and my beginner's journey with art quilts, I thank you all for your instruction, inspiration & friendship.
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As Through the Wishing Glass by Stephanie Bennett Strauss
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Artist Statement. This fits the Challenge by showing
a cat looking for his REFLECTION in the mirror. Materials: Cotton & Organza fabric;
cotton, polyester, and monofilament thread, cotton/poly batting, Iron-On stiff
Interfacing. I chose the Reflections
Challenge because it immediately invoked a memory of a greeting card I had seen
many years ago, and I thought it would translate well into an Art Quilt. My
quilt depicts a Lady’s Vanity dresser with a large mirror, and several
beautifying items on the dresser scarf. Nearby is an antique Tiffany shade hung
from a Steampunk style floor lamp. This lady’s
Tabby cat has jumped up to admire himself in the mirror. The perfume
bottles reflect nicely in the mirror, but something Magic has occurred when our
feline friend looks for his reflection. He sees himself through a silvery mist,
appearing very grand, powerful, sleek, and handsome, indeed. Seeing his
Reflection has confirmed for himself that he really is who he thinks he is. He purrs,
loudly. This quilt was quite
challenging for me. I was trying to do things I had not done before, like using
organza, working with vinyl (which did not make it into the final quilt), and
an attempt at trapunto. Working to create a dramatic up close perspective was
new. Figuring out the geometry of reflections was a trial. I thought about
trying out the facing method of finishing, but given a deadline, and the many
time-consuming mistakes I’d already made during this learning process, it was a
bridge too far. Making this quilt was very rewarding, and I learned quite a
lot.
Leaf it to Me
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Leaves - Botanical #2 by Lynn Tubbe |
Artist Statement: I decided to challenge myself to try some techniques new for me - curved piecing, as well as pulled printing on organza and seeing if it was possible to paint dryer sheets. What better way to practice - using one of my favorite subjects - leaves. This was my own design, inspired by Joan Dyer's work. Materials: cottons, silk, organza, painted dryer sheets, painted and stamped fabrics. My first attempt at painted fabric ended up with fabric so stiff, i ended up using it for the leaves sewn down after the facing was finished. Next time I will use fabric paint, rather than adding textile medium to craft paint. Steep learning curve.
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Hosta 30" x 25" by Jan Petre |
Artist Statement: The design source is a picture of my daughter's hostas in Michigan. Having spent half of my life in Michigan and Connecticut, I was inspired to capture the new leaves emerging from the dormant bulb in the springtime. This was a combination of hand dyed and commercial fabrics, with wool batting; leaf edges were shaded with inks.
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Leaf Dance 12" x 18" by Carole Rossi |
Artist Statement: I love leaves, any kind or shape, any time of year! They make me happy. This piece is meant to be joyful & fun. It's all about the imaginary leaves, dancing all around! The inspiration was improvisational piecing & machine applique. This was my own design - leaves, all sizes, flying out of a patchwork vase. Patchwork was repurposed from an older, larger piece. Materials: Commercial cottons, including batiks; fabric paint (Lumiere by Jacquard); beads; couched yarn; some hand-stitching around the smaller leaves; buttons; 100% dream cotton batting; Quilting: Simple straight-line quilting, both on the leaves & in the background. I enjoy working on smaller pieces because I am more courageous about embellishing. I'd like to include more embellishments in my larger pieces.
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Forest Floor 29.5" x 28" by Tracy Visher |
Artist Statement: This quilt is entirely comprised of leaves of many sorts. I had an idea that involved ferns (a favorite forest plant, as they seem so cool and peaceful). I came up with a design where I could feature the fern but wanted to create a full scene where its surrounding environment was included as a frame for it. I used an ombre fabric for the background. I loved how the light area of it looked like filtered light in a forest. I used a large stencil to get the fern image. I used stamps and stencils for other leaf outlines in acrylic and fabric paints. there are felt bits and embroidery threads. Theis is burlap and tulle. The biggest challenge was how to do something unique with the fern image. I didn't want to just stencil it. I used it for the outline, then stitched around the whole thing over fusible on the back as a stabilizer. I then cut out every leaf (which I used as "babies" along the ground). I backed the whole fern with burlap, but I covered it with green tulle, so it wasn't so "brown". I couched/embroidered the stem, along with a couple of vines elsewhere. It was fun using a variety of techniques to add in all of the other plant life.
Wild Card - Black & White + 1
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Pop Art Tom 22" x 19.5" by Karin Polli |
Artist Statement: All materials are black & white plus green. I have been trying for 2-3 years to get a good picture of my cat, Tommy. But he always closes his eyes when he sees the camera. I finally surprised him in September and got a picture: Materials: Cotton fabric, batting and thread in black, white and green. I inherited the black & white fabrics from a friend and wanted to use what I had without buying any additional fabrics. Because of the type of designs on the fabrics I had to use, it was somewhat difficult to get shapes and shadows to fit the picture. I am happy that even with the strange fabrics, it looks like my cat.
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I am Not a Frog 20" x 30" by Sophia Day
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Artist Statement: This used black, white & a light, medium and dark shade of green. 4 of us chose to combine this with a Quilt
Guild Paint Chip challenge. We drew
random paint chips. We also chose to
have a theme of "circles". This used commercial fabrics, monofilament thread and variegated
thread. I wanted to piece the circles but with so
many interlocking ones, I didn’t think I could do it accurately. It’s machine appliqued with monofilament thread. I left negative space because I wanted to
practice my Free Motion Quilting. My husband kept saying he saw a frog on a bicycle, hence it's name.
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Where Do Your Dreams Take You? 20" x 30" by Robi Holmen |
Artist Statement: Sophia Day, Holly Miner, Sue Marshall and I decided on a paint chip challenge using dark, medium and light fabrics, circles and black & white. This is my own design, drawn first on paper using a large compass to offset some of the circles. Flying geese imply movement. Materials: cotton solids, ombre dark to light, batik print and black & white cotton. Wool batting is used in this piece with a faced edge. I cut out each piece of the design, added 1/4" seams to everything, then stitched each section one to another. I chuckle to myself seeing it complete, thinking: "What in the world was I thinking". Applique is so much easier.
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Circle Party 20" x 30" by Sue Marshall |
Artist Statement: I used mainly black & white plus a color chip to meet a guild challenge also. This was a group challenge, 4 of us decided to do this color challenge, with the added element of circles. I tried to use fabric that I had: batiks, commercial black & white prints, grunge circles and dots. I used curve piecing, improv, did sketch for guiding design. It has FMQing with circles and rulers.
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Black & White Fibonacci 20" x 30" by Holly Miner |
Artist Statement: This uses blue, black & white. It features Fibonacci shown 3 ways: circles, spiral and boxes (in the quilting). Materials: cotton fabric, cotton batting, 12 wt Wonderfil spaghetti thread, 100 wt micro quilter thread. I designed in Adobe Illustrator and had a good time figuring out how to make the spiral.
We also had one show & tell for a quilt that is in the Houston Quilt show.
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Letting Go by Jan Reed |
The inspiration was an image from a 1920s magazine illustration by Cheri Herouard. It uses commercial batiks, seed beads and prismacolor pencils. As I worked on this quilt, I realized how many grievances I still hold onto and wondered why it was so difficult to let them go.
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