Colaborative Art Quilt

Ron decided to help me out with a piece that was sandwiched for quilting. He has never stitched with one of my machines before.  I am a little under the weather right now so I told him to go for it. He did a great job and since this was one of the shibori pieces we worked on together it is only right that he helps with more of the work.  Of course little LuLu decided right away to lay claim to the newest piece of cloth. More in a few days as the work progresses. Linking to off The Wall Friday

This isn't so hard!
This isn’t so hard!

image

MINE
MINE

Fall is around the Corner

Antique Hamilton music stand from a garage sale last month. $1.00 bargain. Painted with homemade chalkboard paint to change messages with the seasons. Sad little geraniums will be replaced with mums and flowering kale when the garden center gets stock. I love finding alternate uses for other people’s junk.

image

Developing Under Developed Art Quilt

I’m on a mission. I have a pile of UFOs and pieces completed that I don’t think are quite right. Translation, they have no zing, no zap, no pizzazz. They need to be taken further. Sometimes a piece falls in place and I race to finish it with great results. Other times, not so much. Then I’m left figuring out what I need to do with it.  When I have taken some pieces further, there have been good results. One piece was  featured in a Quilting Arts Community Spotlight article.

The first one I have a re-do on is The Red Wall. I loved the piece just the way it was. It was one I used to jury for the Arkansas Committee of the National Museum of Women in the Arts .  Since I was juried onto the list by one of the curators at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, I thought it must have some redeeming qualities. But I have since juried it for 3 separate exhibits and it was rejected every time.

I presented my problem to the critique group I belong to and with the exception of 2 people, the suggestions were not helpful and ranged from ” change the color” to ” add some beads and bling”. Neither of those were going to happen. What I did was add more foliage, darken the vines and tendrils with thread and shade the background so the foliage advances in the composition. Here are the before and after shots. You be the judge if I should have left it alone.

painedawes01 red wallPaineDawesTheRedWallFull