Welcome

Welcome and have a look at my work for Distant Stitch - Creative Sketchbooks, Module 6, with tutor Lizzy Lewis

In this module I will make a free-standing book on a theme chosen by me - Close to my heart.

Donnerstag, 23. August 2012

Chapter 10: Resolved samples

But first a rest of chapter 9, woven paper designs.

 

After feeling very much at a dead end when posting my last entry I decided - with the help of Sians feedback - to have another go at paper weaving without even looking at the photo. And it worked. I realize now that I had been looking backwards to the starting point of the whole creative journey when I should have looked at what I had in hand and where it pointed to.

Weaving 1 Weaving 2

In the second of these two final paper weavings I aimed at more irregularity, variety and a sense of movement. My first choice, the image on page  56,  still appeals to me (and I intend to do a sample based on it later on outside of this project), but for the resolved samples I chose this section:

Chosen area for design I like the colours and the open spaces and the torn edges of the paper.

 

Chapter 10: Resolved samples

 

a) using stitchery

Page 63 Preparations: I took dark blue hessian as stitching ground. It provides a grid but is more bumpy and irregular than canvas, also softer.

Recently I got aquainted with needle felting. I enjoy it very much as a means of drawing on cloth.
Page 62 The delicate lines between the stones had interested me when I worked on the shape studies. They kept coming back to me. So I tried to include them into the resolved sample by using needle felting.

 

That’s me stitching away. My friend Eva took the photographs.

Me stitching 2 Look over my shoulder

Under the table you see my “yellow” drawer. It is a part of an old library catalogue case that stores my embroidery threads.

Sample 1 finished My finished sample. I concentrated on building up coloured and textured areas. I thought that additional features like working on several layers of fabric, transparency etc. would cram in too much.
Sample 1 in progress 1 Work in progress: The first layer has been stitched in bulky threads: wool, cotton and tubular knitting yarn. I have begun to add the second layer.
The stitches are mostly variations of cross stitches, plus chain stitch, cretan stitch, darning and the preparation for raised chain stitch on the left.
Sample 1 in progress back side More layers are worked in Danish flower thread, embroidery cotton, sewing thread, sometimes with several threads in the needle, altering texture and colour. When stitching I noticed I used the thread more like a pencil making a mark and all but forgot about a definite stitch.
For the white felted lines I used wool fibres picked loose from a handspun knitting yarn.

On the left is a view of the back side.
Sample 1  detail 2 Sample 1 detail 1
Sample 1 detail 3 A few details of the finished piece.

Size: 8,8 x 7,2 inches
Cost: 3,25 € for hessian
Time for stitching: about 10 hours

The sample fulfils my expectations for colours and texture,  I like the distribution of warm and cool colours, light and dark.  The materials work well, and I am glad I decided to use hessian as the fabric to work on as it allowed me more freedom in stitching than canvas. I might have used a wider range of threads, including material like plastic, raffia etc, and might also have varied the size of the stitches more to get more contrasting textures. But still I like the finished piece.

Next time I would attach several pieces of hessian to a loosely woven background fabric with more open spaces between them and try to express the ragged edges with stitching.

 

b) resolved sample, taken from the same area of the woven paper design, using any skill I might already have

 Chosen area for second design Design source: I like the open space. So I chose a part of my  design for the second sample, with the window as a more prominent feature and placed it at a different angle.
I hope this is still in keeping with the assignment.

The choice of a method was more difficult. I have done a lot of knitting, so I did this little piece for fun, aiming for a less than perfect look.

 

Knitted trial 2 Knitted trial reverse side

A look at both sides. The knit side conveys a sense of movement with the linear texture of the stitches, it looks as if they are whirling around the window – which turned out to be smaller than I had wanted it to be. The purl side suggests a more gritty texture. Size: 7,2 x 6,4 inches, stretched on kebap sticks.

Machine stitching has always appealed to me, but I have little experience. Still I decided to have a go and did a few trials in preparation.

 

Page 65 Machine Stitch pieces and trial
Page 64 Page 66
Darned piece Darned and stitched piece

I darned and stitched five strips of different fabrics with simple machine stitches: curtain fabric and net (both on water soluble fabric to make stitching easier), hessian and canvas.

Sample 2 whole I was pleased with the stitched strips. But when it came to putting them together I did not want to repeat the arrangement of the paper weaving and began to move them about.
I ended up with this  geometric arrangement. I put the strips on a piece of painted canvas and added lines in running stitch.
Sample 2 part 1 The finished sample has a background of heavy watercolour paper painted with black acrylic.

I painted the unstitched canvas with acrylic, gel medium and pastel and added a few stitched lines in grey.

Sample 2 part 2 Size of the whole piece: 15,2 x 12,8 inches
Cost: none
Time for stitching, colouring etc: about 8 hours

 

A few details:

Sample 2 detail 2 Left: stitched lines on the canvas and across the painted canvas (dark grey).

Below left: the window. I cut away the canvas behind it.

Below: I painted the curtain fabric with silk dye (should be fixed with steam), but did not fix it. When I washed out the water soluble fabric the whole stitchery was dyed! First I wanted to make a new piece, but I came to like it and only added a little stitching and darning.
Sample 2 detail 1 Sample 2 detail 3
SANY3157 A photograph of the whole piece – it could only be scanned in two parts.

The sample turned out quite differently from what I had planned – although I must admit that I did not plan very much beyond the paper weaving and the idea of machine stitching. The element of surprise was very exciting. Yet I think that ideas I found interesting in the design are expressed in the sample. There is a sense of stability in the densely stitched pieces and the geometric arrangement, but the lines make for a sense of movement from on edge to the other and across the window. I like the loose threads across the window and around the stitched pieces.

I could not say what I would do differently next time, but the sample itself and the work I put into it suggest further exploration. For instance add pieces of coloured fabric to the initial darning or instead of it, explore my “accident” with the silk dye – I am sure there is a lot more.

 

Looking back to chapter 7: the extra texture sample mounted on a piece of fine wire mesh. And the sample in sunlight and shadow.

 

My extra texture sample scan




 
My extra texture sample with shadow
   

 

SANY3164 Finally: my sketchbook. 70 pages full  of surprising ideas – if someone had told me in advance “You will make this” I would not have thought it possible.
A wonderful product of the great experience this module has been for me.

Thanks a lot, Sian!