Kiwi ATCs March 2013

Kiwi seemed to be a hard one for everyone. When we chose the colors this year I immediately saw green for kiwi and that was appropriate for March and St. Patrick’s Day.  But like the color cucumber last year it was hard to not see fruit. With this one you could also see feathers like the bird kiwi. 

I chose colors from the kiwi fruit and included black for the tiny seeds. I decided to do this in paper rather than fabric. I like the results and can see this as a larger fabric piece using surface designed fabric. Try a right click and open the photo in a new tab for a close up view.

I started with heavy pastel paper and paints for the background. The light green is an interference that goes from green to yellow that was applied with a palette knife. The little gold ovals and brown areas were printed with a plastic piece I found in the medicine cabinet that I had no idea what it was to. I took the left over sections of the background after cutting out the cards and painted them over with a gold acrylic ink that was semi-transparent. The original plan was to use my woodburner on the edges but it was pretty stinky so I took the little pieces outside and burned them over a candle.  They have an artifact look that I liked. I added details with black acrylic ink.

The cards have some free form embroidery along 2 edges that doesn’t show up well in the photos. My camera wasn’t cooperating today partly because I mistakenly got the gloss Modge Podge instead of the matte finish.

Problem UFO

This was a real pot stirrer.  Half the people who responded, most privately, thought I should toss this in the trash and move on. A couple suggested I should start over from scratch and redo the piece. Then there were the people who thought I should work through the construction issues and save this at all costs. 

I can’t start over without totally changing everything. I love the choice of fabrics I used and there are no more in my stash. It would also be too much like working from a pattern and it would loose the spontaneity this one has.

Tossing it in the trash isn’t a viable option right now. Once before I had a piece that was real crap. I took that piece and kept working on it. The results were enough of a WOW that it was chosen to be included in a book with 26 international artists. If I had tossed it who knows if another piece would have made it in the book.

I had a lot of positive comments in my SAQA critique group and not one thought it should be thrown away.  I had suggestions for removing the fused pieces and how to disguise the holes.

Did I learn something from this piece? Absolutely…the biggest lesson is that no matter what the bottle of liquid basting, school glue bottle or stick, or any other stick-um says….Don’t leave it set for 3 years before working on it and you may not be able to stitch through it when it dries. The fusible?  I went through my drawer and tossed every bit of it out. Now I will have to order some if I decide to ever use it again.

I will post photos when I get this done. Thank you everyone who took the time to give me your views.

Help me solve a problem with this UFO

 I started this a few years ago in a challenge, photographed it to show unfinished and promptly folded it up into a UFO pile.  I took it to a SAQA state meeting a few months ago and decided by the positive reaction I got that maybe it was time to complete it. The title is “Frog Water Shallows” and it is apx. 24 x40.

Now here are the problems; I used glue stick on the lily pads that has now solidified and I must have used the wrong roll of fusible from my stash since I cannot stitch through it. You can see the holes that don’t heal next to the frog. I pinned tulle over the whole thing and tried again to quilt it. Nope, no, nyet.

I took the whole thing into the bath and soaked it to hopefully get rid of the glue stick. Its drying now. I will try again to quilt through the lily pads. I’m thinking of trying to heat the pieces with the wrong fusible and peel it off. If I do that, I will need to do something different since they will still leave marks.  I know I can paint these images and applique them on the right way.

My question:  [ Right click to open in new window/tab for close ups]

Suggestions for replacing the fused pieces.
Any design comments.
Should I just toss this and call it a learning experience

American Girl Indian clothes DONE!

 
Full look anarkali suit

Here are photos of the Indian clothing I made for my granddaughter, Ms. P. I am pleased with how they turned out. Amazing what you can do with a little upcycling.  And there are 2 sleeves and the back pieces left over for use in art quilting. The china doll who is modeling is a little smaller than the American Girl. I used an original AG pattern and checked measurements I found online. The trick was to stitch, fit and cut the sari top so I didn’t cut any of the beading threads. I felt like my own mini version of that popular runway show. See what others are doing on Off The Wall Friday

Leather Sandals, Elastic Backs

ATCs Sky Color Theme for February BRRRRR

This month’s Arts In The Cards theme of Sky for our color could be interpreted many ways. There can be the requisite blue sky with fluffy clouds, an angry gray sky, colorful sunsets and sunrises and so on.  

I remember as a child waking up to a frosty window over my bed and being fascinated with the slowly lightening sky seen through the frost patterns on the glass. 

I attempted to capture that here. The cards began from a piece of randomly free motion quilted fabric left from another project. It was painted with textile paints and then highlighted with a lavender/silver pigment.  I then randomly embellished with clear glass glitter and silver mirror glitter. Just like frosty windows, no two cards are alike.