Showing posts with label Glasgow Rose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glasgow Rose. Show all posts

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Mourning...

The loss of a legacy.

The library in the Charles Rennie Mackintosh Building,
Glasgow School of Art, destroyed by fireFriday, May 23, 2014.

It's reported that the School's archives are safe, and the majority of the building is intact.  Students who were graduating have lost much -- if not all -- of their work -- even as a new fire prevention system was due to be installed.  Kudos are being given to the firefighters:
"Due to one of the most astonishingly intelligent and professional pieces of strategy by the fire services, they succeeded in protecting the vast majority of the building, apparently by forming a human wall of firefighters up the west end of the main staircase and containing the fire." -  Muriel Gray, broadcaster, former student, and current Chair of the Art School.
I visited Glasgow in May 2007, and saw this building for myself... Long an admirer of Charles Rennie Mackintosh, who bears a strong resemblance to my grandfather, Frederick M. Rennie, and whose mother bore my name (her name, Margaret Rennie, is my maiden name), I recently finished this tribute to his Glasgow Rose motif:

Mackintosh's Garden: Hardy to Zone 3 (C) 2014

With God's blessing, this Phoenix will also rise from the ashes...


Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Now I've Gone and Done It

For almost 2 months you've heard me hint about "that roses piece" or "the Mackintosh piece" I've been working on.  I've shared a bit of the process, and snips of photos of it under construction.

I'm pleased to announce that -- it's finally finished! AND this morning -- just a few moments ago, in fact -- I entered the piece in "Coming Up Roses", one of the "Quilt! Knit! Stitch!" (R) Calls for Entry, about which I received an e-mail 'way back in January.

This is the most major juried event I've ever entered.

It carries the possibility of "Houston" with it.

Am I nuts?!

Roses in Calgary, 2007
Maybe...or not.  But I was captivated -- definitely captivated -- by the theme and by the fact that I at last felt I could work in the minimum size required -- 25" x 25" (thanks to my Fifteen by Fifteen group!).  For some time now I've longed to do something with the motif of the Glasgow Rose, made popular by Charles Rennie Mackintosh (1868-1928) and, well, I dug out a photo of a bouquet from the garden I had in Calgary (my roses here in Mirror are still finding their feet, as it were)...and the rest is history.


Last night a photographer came to shoot the finished quilt, and the process was complete.  The photos were in my e-mail this morning.  I saved copies with the required naming convention, completed the on-line application and pressed "SUBMIT".  Then I began to breathe again (grin).

Mackintosh's Garden: Hardy to Zone 3 (C) 2014
27.5" W x 27.5" L

The entry deadline for this Call is May 2, 2014, and entrants will be notified by June 6th.  Selected pieces have to arrive in Houston by July 8th, for the opening in Portland, OR, in mid-August.  Pieces could travel until July 2015.

Say a wee prayer; send 'good vibes'; wish me luck -- whatever!   You'll be the first to know!

Tuesday, April 01, 2014

A Bit Behind...

The 15th Annual Lacombe Art Show and Sale opens in just over 3 weeks, and if I'm going to enter my "roses" piece in anything, I have about the same amount of time to finish it...So posts will be farther apart for the next while, even though I no longer have to travel miles to a library to do them!

Miniatures are flying out of my sewdio these days.  Here are two of the latest:

Boot Dance - (C) 2014

For Sale - (C) 2014


Because the above photo is a tad blurry -- here's a detail shot:

For Sale - detail

Yesterday I finished two more -- but have yet to photograph -- and two more are sitting on my cutting table as I type, waiting for me to get at 'em...

But not before I leave you with a taste of the roses, blooming despite the persistence of two or three feet of snow outside! 

Roses...stitching detail...
It's too early to link to WIP Wednesday over at The Needle and Thread Network...so I'll just say "see you later".  Have a great day!  :-)

P.S. For those interested, "Mark on the Body" has been updated.  Thank you for your support!

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Roses are Beginning to Bloom

Well...in my sewdio, anyway.  :-)

Yesterday I had lunch with my friend C and showed her some sampling I'd done on the "grid" for the Mackintosh-themed piece.  I'd put two squares of painted Wonder Under on my sample...but they looked rather stark to me, and I'm going for subtle.

Clever gal, C suggested using a red/variegated thread -- to key in with the roses.  Early this morning, I gave it a go:



You can see the painted WU squares very plainly.  I marked off the "grid" squares with that purple pen that disappears in the air, and then auditioned four threads: a variegated red and three variegated greens.  It's a bit tough to tell in the photo (the purple pen was still in evidence) but as of this moment, I'm liking one of the greens best -- a Sulky 'Blendables' selection, #4019 -- Forest Floor.  One of the other greens had too much yellow in it, and one, too much blue.  As for the red...it was more subtle than either of the WU squares but not subtle enough.  Of course, I'll not really know for certain until the roses are applied to the background, which I began to do this afternoon.

First, a reminder of the inspirational photo for the roses, a bouquet from the garden I used to have in Calgary:




I began in the lower left of the piece, working in pinks.  Here are the first two roses, fusible web applied, positioned before fusing:

Positioned...

And here they are, fused, on the design wall:


Fused!
Note that I've intentionally left narrow spaces between the pieces of each blossom, patterned after Macintosh's Glasgow Rose, so they are stylized rather than representational.  All the blossoms have been traced from the transparent "pattern" sheet on to Wonder Under, and I'll add them gradually to the piece, using the transparency as a guide for positioning.  So far... I like it!

In other news, Rural Rhythms will be part of the Focus on Fibre Arts Biennial Show, "Prairies", this year.  Due to an e-mail that vanished in cyber-space, it took some time for the news to reach me, but I am pleased.

And here's one more mini.  An acquaintance from my days as a member of  the Alexandra Writers' Centre in Calgary spent the better part of last year working in the United Arab Emirates and blogging about his experience.  Bob is a skilled writer and his posts from overseas were always interesting and colourful.  He also took great photos and has given me copies of several to use as inspiration.  With his permission, I used one to create my latest miniature:

A Silvery Moon, an Orange Sky and Dhow
Music fans might recognize the two plays on words in the title.  ;-)
You can find the inspirational photo on Bob's blog HERE. (scroll down)
Materials: hand-dyed silk, hand-dyed semi-synthetic fabric of unknown origin, grey tulle, painted fusible web, a snippet of black commercial cotton, Pitt (R) pen and a bit of InkTense pencil.

Linking up with Nina Marie's Off the Wall Friday...and then curling up with a good book.  It's been a very full day!

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Winter School Continues...

Photo courtesy of
the CRM Society and the
Glasgow School of Art.
In my last post, I promised an update from "Winter School".  Recent study hasn't involved a class, though.  Rather, I've been working through books on Charles Rennie Mackintosh for the piece on roses I'm preparing (scroll down).  There are two motifs he favoured that I want to refer to for my work: the Glasgow Rose, which I already mentioned, and the idea of squares/grids/lattices.

To wit, I've been exploring ways to create grids, including surface design, and the work of Beryl Taylor -- specifically her diamond grid hanging shown in Mixed Media Explorations (QuiltingArts, LLC, 2006).  This is a step out on a limb for me, as I far and away favour working with fabric over paper and glue...but in the course of this work, I decided to go ahead and try a couple of samples.

I began by making what Ms. Taylor calls "fabric paper", with a piece of muslin, basic white glue, and assorted paper and tissues:

Paper fabric hanging to dry
Once it was dry, I cut it up and made this sample:

Paper fabric grid mounted on felt-backed silk
with stencil ready for paint

What I did was this:  I had an 8 1/2" x 11" piece of acrylic felt which I covered with a piece of thin silk fabric from a bag of scraps recently given me by my friend C (from her friend, G in Calgary).  I then cut a piece of the fabric paper, and stitched it down over the silk piece.  I further stitched a grid of rectangles over the whole thing, and cut out every other one to make the grid...but left space at the bottom because I wanted to test out the layout and impact of a Glasgow Rose motif stencil.  I did the stencil in gold -- it turned out rather well -- and mounted the entire thing onto a larger piece of the fabric paper, stitching it down by hand all the way around on the pink silk.  (Sorry, no photo taken.  Later -- I promise!)

The upshot of all this was that while I liked the effect, I don't want to work with fabric paper in a large size.  It's messy to make, and -- more importantly -- too stiff for what I want to do.  However, it gave me a sense of what the work could look like if I combined a grid and the rose motif, and I learned something new in the process.  Oh...and I have one more grid sample to make from the left-over material (again -- photo to come; I promise!)

Meanwhile, back in the woods... I made up a large version of "A Walk in the Woods" that needs to be quilted for my 15 x 15 "Contrast" theme, and then I thought about interpreting it on blue background, like this photo:



Yesterday, I dug out some of my own hand-dyed blue fabric, a closely woven cotton, that would be tough to use as sky because it had some 'spots' on it that were very uneven.  I thought about how to paint it, and decided to use freezer paper to create a mask.  Here's what it looked like partially painted:


It's clipped to a piece of foam core for stability, and sitting on the counter in my south-facing sunny back room, but you get the idea.

So...as of today, two pieces are ready for quilting, and a third is on the wall in a life-sized mock-up of paper and plastic film:

(L) Mock-up of "Homage to CRM" (working title)
and (R) painted "A Walk in the Woods II"

Anything else?

  • The Japanese Taupe Quilt design is making slow progress: the medallion centre block has half the applique finished;
  • And the traditional medallion quilt from the door prize I won a few years back looks like this:



  • Pattern: "Carpenter's Star" -- technique designed by Debbie Maddy of Calico Carriage.  The kit contained all the fabric for the top, and the pattern for a 70" square finished piece.  I've gone back to my Craftsy class with Ann Petersen - "Quilting Large Quilts on a Small Machine" -- and will be doing this with her advice and guidance.  There are 4 borders to add; all but the outermost are very narrow.  She's given me some great options for quilting the central motif and then adding borders in such a way that there's not too much bulk in the seams.  That said, I don't have enough batting to do such a large piece, so it will have to wait for now.
  • Knitting?  Yes...as always!  
    • DD's "Elm" socks continue: #2 is cast on, and I've made my way past the ribbing, past Chart A and into Chart B.  Much easier the second time around, now that all the pattern adjustments have been made and all I have to do is follow my notes.  :-)  
    • As a respite from all the brown...I started a quick scarf from stash 'novelty' yarns -- Berroco 'Cliche Colors' and Katia 'Flash', a ribbon yarn in hot pink (both discontinued, I believe):



I recommend this book for those of you who aren't into designing your own knits, and/or are looking for colourful inspiration -- especially for what to do with those fun and funky yarns you might still have in your stash and which are making a bit of a come-back these days.  It's Scarves and Shawls for Yarn Lovers: Knitting with Simple Patterns and Amazing Yarns by Carri Hammett, Creative Publishing International, 2006.  Mine is the hard-cover version, which has a spiral-bound spine so it lies flat when opened -- always a plus!

Now...off to quilt!  But before I go, I'm linking up with WIP Wednesday on The Needle and Thread Network -- because clearly, this week, I've got WIPs!

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Buzzing

Quite a bit going on here in the sewdio this week.  Having submitted my application for a booth in Lacombe, I've been putting together pieces...some of which, truth be told, began as samples for larger items.  Here's the run-down:

1. She's Come Undone:

I didn't like the quilting on "the tree piece" that I did in Pamela's class.  Specifically, I didn't like the quilting in the sky section.  Oh, it looked alright from the front, but the threads weren't "playing nice" on the back.  I also didn't like the fact that the roof of the building lined up with the 'horizon'.  Something needs to be done about that -- likely adding to the roof so that it covers the horizon line!  The piece remains (for now) in a state of "undone-ness" -- but at least I've given it a "proper" title: "Lost in the Woods":

Sky undone -- with bowl of threads to prove it!

2. Still Considering Contrast:

Remember how I was hoping my class with Pamela ("About Contrast") would give me something to use for our current 15 x 15 theme, "Contrast"?  Well...the best laid plans (as Robbie Burns would say)...

But I'm not one to last long without ideas.  The lovely sunny weather has brought forth beautiful shadows against the snow:

From my front window

One of my favorite walks

I'm thinking about the blue-on-white...and came up with this sample today:

A Walk in the Woods  (C) 2014

Of course, there are some folks who'd rather view it this way:

A Walk in the Woods (C) 2014

Either way, it's 9.5" x 6.5" matted to 15" x 12" (or the other way 'round!).


3. The Glasgow Rose:

CRM, circa 1893
One Example
of the Glasgow Rose
Made famous by Charles Rennie MacIntosh (McIntosh), the Glasgow Rose has long been a favourite motif of mine, and one I've wanted to use in a piece.  Turns out that a special exhibit of the International Quilt Festival (Portland) is featuring roses this year...so my mind is in a whirl.  At a minimum size of 25" square -- large for me -- well, let's just say, if it gets finished and entered on time, it does.  And if it doesn't?  'Twill be a learning experience.



For now, I'm sampling:

Freezer Paper Stencil
in Sketchbook
Freezer Paper Removed












Stencil, Stamps and Spray
A Bouquet Overlaid on a Water-colour Background

The 'grid' or squares and lattices, was an other of the well-known MacIntosh motifs.  I'm pondering using the grid mainly as a quilting design...but perhaps with some cut-back applique judiciously placed...

Playing w/ Grids
Using Bleach and Coloured Marker

4. A Thing of Beauty:

And at last, on the knitting front, the first sock of the latest pair of socks for my daughter is finished!!  It'a a bit big for me (her feet are longer than mine) but you get the idea.  I'm very pleased with how it's turned out.  Pattern:  "Elm" by Cookie A. from Clara Parkes' The Knitter's Book of Socks.  Yarn: "Twig" from Madelinetosh Sock.


Hooking up now to WIP Wednesday on The Needle and Thread Network...because I might just be too busy tomorrow!  :-)