Greetings from Boston! What a fabulous city! I’ve been thoroughly enjoying immersing myself in the art scene here. Today I will round out my visit at the Institute of Contemporary Art, tomorrow I head home.
It’s been quite a journey, from April until now, and I’m grateful for every moment. (Especially the three weeks we spent in Santa Fe and Taos!)
When last we met I posted about weaving throws. I wove several in the intervening months, along with a few more botanical weavings.
Five new botanicals went first to Borrego Art Institute’s Kessler’s Kitchen, for the month of May.
Then, in June, at the behest of owner/manager Molly Begent, I took a mix of four new and old weavings to 2Create Gallery in Ramona. (www.2creategallery.com)
Two have sold (yeah!) and since then I have adopted a routine of replacing/switching out a new weaving each month. As you can imagine, this keeps my focus on weaving, and I’m loving it!
I finished my latest work before I left for Boston, so it’s ready to hang this weekend when I am home again.
Here it is: Sacred Waters
Friday, November 10, 2017
Saturday, April 29, 2017
To Weave a Throw
In between my last post and today, I designed, measured, threaded onto looms, and started weaving two new warps: one botanical and one a throw. Many people comment on what it must take to ready a loom for weaving, so I thought it would be fun to post a blog on this topic.
The inception of the process does not follow a singular path, but varies. Sometimes it starts with an impulse of colors and/or types of yarns, other times it might be what plants catch my eye, and occasionally a comment from someone who sees my work and and wants "something like that".
The latter spawned my newest warp for a series of four throws.
B wanted a throw like the one I made in October, but a different color. "How about blues?" "Okay!"
Here's what the warp looked like as I was winding it on my warping mill:
I wound twelve yards each of six different yarns to give me 46 inches of width on which to weave four throws. Total 546 strands, six strands at a time in four bundles, to increase the efficiency of the processes of measuring, counting, which took just under a couple of hours.
Next: transferring the yarns onto the loom:
The inception of the process does not follow a singular path, but varies. Sometimes it starts with an impulse of colors and/or types of yarns, other times it might be what plants catch my eye, and occasionally a comment from someone who sees my work and and wants "something like that".
The latter spawned my newest warp for a series of four throws.
B wanted a throw like the one I made in October, but a different color. "How about blues?" "Okay!"
Here's what the warp looked like as I was winding it on my warping mill:
Next: transferring the yarns onto the loom:
This part takes several hours, and requires a good deal of concentration so as not to miss- thread a heddle or cross-thread the warp. I break it up into 30- to 45- minute segments so I don't lose concentration and also so I don't end up with a stiff shoulder!
Once the heddles are threaded and the reed sleyed, it's time to tie the warp onto the from beam and weaving can start. (Mind you, some would say it's all "of a piece" , meaning the weaving starts when you start measuring your yarns. This is true for me.)
Here's the first of the four throws:
B, I hope you like it! It was a joy to weave, as always!
Next post: Romancing the Sages.....
Thursday, March 23, 2017
This morning the thought came up: find beauty in small things.
Finding beauty in small things magnifies the beauty each cycle of day and night holds. It magnifies the beauty that life holds. We need only hearts that open and eyes that see.
The fragility of life, its ephemeral nature, gives us pause, brings beauty into focus.
This is what my latest botanical weaving represents: beauty in small things, life's fragile, ephemeral nature, bringing beauty into focus.
Please take a moment to pause, and see what you can see....
"Oaks" is 37"x19".
Finding beauty in small things magnifies the beauty each cycle of day and night holds. It magnifies the beauty that life holds. We need only hearts that open and eyes that see.
The fragility of life, its ephemeral nature, gives us pause, brings beauty into focus.
This is what my latest botanical weaving represents: beauty in small things, life's fragile, ephemeral nature, bringing beauty into focus.
Please take a moment to pause, and see what you can see....
"Oaks" is 37"x19".
Thursday, March 9, 2017
Greetings! As you well know, Spring is bursting out all over. However, this morning I want to take you back in time to December 15, 2016, for the weaving I want to show you today was inspired by a scene I witnessed on that date. To wit:
What a glorious sunrise this was! And I was moved to try and capture it with yarns and twigs and a collection of amber beads I had stashed away in my studio. Here's the final product -- you may recognize it from an earlier blog, when I was pictured at my work table twining the fringe. I call it "Mesa Sunrise". 53"x29"
What a glorious sunrise this was! And I was moved to try and capture it with yarns and twigs and a collection of amber beads I had stashed away in my studio. Here's the final product -- you may recognize it from an earlier blog, when I was pictured at my work table twining the fringe. I call it "Mesa Sunrise". 53"x29"
Saturday, February 18, 2017
Wednesday, February 8, 2017
Tuesday, February 7, 2017
From the OED:
REVERIE: 1) joy, delight, wildness, wantonness; 2) fantastic, fanciful; 3) a daydream.
Yes! That perfectly captures the essence of this happy piece, which I have entitled "Manzanita Reverie". Those bits of plant that you see wantonly arranged in the body of the weaving pictured here (more clearly if you enlarge the image) are manzanita catkins.
I collected them late last fall. They were all over the great rounded manzanita plants which practically cover our hillside, and they simply called out to me to include them in a weaving.
Of course, manzanitas are not the only native California plants we have here; hence I've woven in sages and everlastings and asters and grasses and poppy pods at the top of the piece, and then inserted a row of sweetly fragrant salvia clevelandia leaves along with that vibrant red stripe just below center line.
I have my friends Jill and Beryl to thank for the rough-spun natural flax yarn I used as a major component of the weft, and I have my friend Carolyn to thank for the coral bead embellishment on the fringe. Overall measurement: 24"x24".
May this reverie of mine bring you much joy!
REVERIE: 1) joy, delight, wildness, wantonness; 2) fantastic, fanciful; 3) a daydream.
Yes! That perfectly captures the essence of this happy piece, which I have entitled "Manzanita Reverie". Those bits of plant that you see wantonly arranged in the body of the weaving pictured here (more clearly if you enlarge the image) are manzanita catkins.
I collected them late last fall. They were all over the great rounded manzanita plants which practically cover our hillside, and they simply called out to me to include them in a weaving.
Of course, manzanitas are not the only native California plants we have here; hence I've woven in sages and everlastings and asters and grasses and poppy pods at the top of the piece, and then inserted a row of sweetly fragrant salvia clevelandia leaves along with that vibrant red stripe just below center line.
I have my friends Jill and Beryl to thank for the rough-spun natural flax yarn I used as a major component of the weft, and I have my friend Carolyn to thank for the coral bead embellishment on the fringe. Overall measurement: 24"x24".
May this reverie of mine bring you much joy!
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