August 18, 2020
Eye Contact P.S.
So, having just blogged about my entry in the Eye Contact show yesterday morning, this post about the exhibit showed up in the evening on my instagram! (It's in two pieces because I couldn't screen shot the whole thing in one go.)
Labels:
art quilts,
creativity,
design process,
Eye Contact
August 17, 2020
Eye Contact
An exhibit called Eye Contact: Creating A Connection has recently opened at the Virginia Quilt Museum in Harrisonburg, VA. The exhibit runs through September 15, 2020.
The quilts are small - 23" wide x 5" high - and the only instruction to the artists was that the subject be "two human eyes looking at the viewer".
Here's my quilt:
July 20, 2020
Piece on Earth
Hello, everyone!
All healthy, so no worries there, in case any of you noticed my absence and were worried. The whole situation in which we find ourselves took over my attention and energy, and certainly my ability to express it all in words. But I’ve been busy, and here’s what I’ve been doing. It’s been a while, so this will be long! Grab an iced tea (in my hemisphere anyway), and settle in.
May 29, 2020
Why Restore and Conserve Old Quilts?
Why do I like repairing quilts? My academic background is in anthropology, which taught me about how much meaning the objects we make and use every day can hold. And all quilts have their story.
"Storytelling is the place where social and personal history meet."
This is a line from a lovely book I recently received, How to Write Your Personal or Family History, by Katie Funk Wiebe. The book was written by the mother of a dear friend of mine. She wrote many books, many of them about family and history.
One thing she stresses is how small memories and facts can build a valuable memoir. I feel the same is true of quilts - it's not only the flashy and museum quality quilts that are worth gentle handling and care.
May 16, 2020
Courthouse Steps
Lately, I have been reaping the benefit of getting to the age of downsizing. And the benefit has been adopting quilts from many directions.
Not that I really have room or reason to have them myself either, except for being able to write about them here and share them when I teach. That's good enough, I figure. But really, the main reason I say yes and bring them in is that I love them and want to give them a home.
I am reminded of my brother- and sister-in-law who kept the garage door open a crack and a bowl of cat food inside until they had a population of 3 dogs and 9 cats. The 9th cat in the series was named E. Nuff Already. Yup.
Anyway, a friend offered me this lovely silk Courthouse Steps. She'd had it hanging on her wall for many years, and now the silks are doing that late 19th century silk "thing" of shattering and crumbling. So before I show you the detail photos, take a moment to appreciate it from a distance, in all its glory.......
Labels:
courthouse steps,
dyes,
log cabin quilt,
quilt repair,
shattered silk
May 10, 2020
A Blast from the Past
The other day, I met up with a quilt I'd made over 30 years ago and forgotten!
I got a text from one of the people who grew up a few houses away from me. She's been doing lots of sorting and clearing out over these last couple of months. In amongst her son's childhood items, she found this quilt, and asked if I had made it. At first, I didn't remember having made a baby quilt for her. But when I scrolled down further to see the photos, I recognized it immediately.
Wow. Hee, hee.
I made it in 1986, about 7 years after I learned to quilt. It was a pretty popular pattern at the time. A Google search came up with Garden Trellis, Garden Twist, and Around the Twist. Around the Twist sounds very familiar, so I think that was the name as I learned (and forgot) it.
And yes, at that time, I signed all my quilts and crafty items with those little name tapes. The name was suggested by one of my friends, a pun if you will. "Handmade" becomes "Ann Made" - see? I ran out of "Ann Made" business cards a long, long time ago, but I still have some of that tape tucked away in a drawer, and I still have scraps of some of those fabrics in my stash.
I got a text from one of the people who grew up a few houses away from me. She's been doing lots of sorting and clearing out over these last couple of months. In amongst her son's childhood items, she found this quilt, and asked if I had made it. At first, I didn't remember having made a baby quilt for her. But when I scrolled down further to see the photos, I recognized it immediately.
Wow. Hee, hee.
I made it in 1986, about 7 years after I learned to quilt. It was a pretty popular pattern at the time. A Google search came up with Garden Trellis, Garden Twist, and Around the Twist. Around the Twist sounds very familiar, so I think that was the name as I learned (and forgot) it.
And yes, at that time, I signed all my quilts and crafty items with those little name tapes. The name was suggested by one of my friends, a pun if you will. "Handmade" becomes "Ann Made" - see? I ran out of "Ann Made" business cards a long, long time ago, but I still have some of that tape tucked away in a drawer, and I still have scraps of some of those fabrics in my stash.
It's this kind of color play and geometry play that are a big part of what intrigued me about quiltmaking - and has kept me going all these years. I still love green and I still love little spriggy prints the best, like the background white print. So, it was a very pleasant walk down Memory Lane. And I'm posting about a crib quilt just under the wire, as it's still just barely Mother's Day here.
Labels:
crib quilt,
dated quilt
April 28, 2020
Quilt Restoration Workshop Announcement
Sadly, Martha Spark and I are canceling our Quilt Restoration Workshop which was to be held this July 23-25, 2020. We have potential plans to offer the workshop again August 19-21, 2021.
Please keep in touch here and via our other social media sites for new information. In the interim, we’ll be working on new content to share with you and to stay connected through our shared quilt restoration tales.
Labels:
quilt repair