Adopt a Quilt

I was reading some of my artsy friends’ blogs today and I wanted to share with my readers Chris Predd’s fun blog. She always has interesting artwork and inspiration to share.

To celebrate her birthday month she is sponsoring an Adopt a Quilt project. Adoption of a piece costs 25 dollars, that includes shipping, within the United States. Her work is wonderful and this is a good time to buy gifts for people for the coming holiday season. Details are on her blog! Here is her latest offering group. Aren’t these great??:

Where did it go?

They were here a minute ago, they disappeared. Must be a glitch in Blogger…but no, I deleted the post on Quilt National.  I received some great comments on the pieces and one not so great. They are based on a very real outlawed custom in India and a few other countries of cremating the living widow on the husband’s funeral pyre.  The hands that disturbed people really did their job if it was disturbing….emotions were evoked whether you understood them or not. Sometimes we want our art to be pretty pictures with nothing disturbing in it and definitely no social commentary. But like life, that isn’t reality. If you are one of the people who were disturbed by the hands and wondered why they were on the pieces, do some research on the practice of sati and look for images of the sati gates. Maybe then you will understand why there were burned saris and red hands on my quilts.

I respect all of you for your view points…but after all, these are my babies, with all their warts and scars. I thought it was time they went back into hiding.

My First Hardcover Book!!!

I was honored and thrilled to be included in this international book of art quilting. It is published by Sixth & Spring Books.
I received my advance copy of the book while I was traveling and had to wait to see it. Bummer…but it was worth the wait. If you have never been published in a quality hardcover glossy page book….along with some of the world’s most well known art quilters…..you have no idea what you are missing. I can tell you that the feeling is amazing. Someone besides ME or RON thinks what I do is art and recognized it. I’m one of 100 international quilt artists in the book.
I am on page 53 with my little quilt “Oda Pagoda”. You can buy a copy at AMAZON. I hope you enjoy it!

My finished Indigo pieces

Below are some of pieces from the Fabric Fondlers indigo dyeing days. These were all experiments since none of us had experienced this before. We tried different kinds of resists with blocks, bands, clips, shibori pole and others. A really cool piece that I don’t have pictures of was clamped between 2 pieces of peg board. I did a few pieces without designs in case I decide to cut any of this up to make a pieced quilt.
It was a lot of fun and each fabric that was revealed was better than the last. We all did shirts and socks, too. Even my hubby Ron got an indigo tie dyed shirt out of the day.