Wednesday 23 April 2008

postcards week two

After long deliberation, and with a certain amount of trepidation, I have decided to include here the "what was she thinking?" ones, because I think you can learn as much if not more from failures than successes and I would certainly find it reassuring to dicover that someone else had failures too.

The week two challenge was to use scrim: I have a stash of hand-dyed scrim crying out to be used: I love its texture and its ability to soak up dye; I've also used some of what we in the UK call muslin and those of you in the US and Canada call cheesecloth.

WARNING: some of these are downright ugly/clumsy/amateurish but publishing them is important to me in coming to terms with my hangups about failure.

Sunday and Thursday I played with chenille, a technique I hadn't got around to earlier, the snake being Sunday, the abstract Thursday: my chenille technique improved between the two but everything I'd learnt in Liz Berg's class went out the window (lesson - even speedy projects need a bit of forward planning) in the abstract one:


Can't make up my mind about the Monday and Tuesday ones - broadly I think I haven't got there yet but there are things worth exploring, especially the way it's possible to layer scrim and stitch to get a painterly effect.



Wednesday's effort is cringemakingly embarrassing: a real "what was she thinking of?" moment.
I felt distinctly lacking in ideas that day and could only come up with the idea of contrasting scrim with satin, chucking bits on without care or planning: I didn't even realise how unbalanced the shapes were till I took the photograph. Apologies. I think I've learnt my lesson though.


Friday's piece was speedy, enthusiastic and exciting to do, and came together like a dream: I'm not sure where the dolmen shape comes from though I'm familiar with it coming originally from Oxfordshire/Berkshire which has its share of them. Saturday's piece, which I like a lot less than Friday's is a less successful attempt (it went dead on me) at portraying standing stones from the end of the lane where we once lived - the local legend was that a man his horse and his dog had been turned to stone by a local witch.




Of them, I think there's only one that I'm happy about at this stage (and I shall probably develop strong reservations about that as my standards improve. However even one makes the week worth while, and I learnt far more from week two than from week one when I played safe!

3 comments:

Tanguera said...

The one that is third from the top is quite interesting. Also the bottom one. Maybe develop them further?

Unknown said...

I think they are all great - remember beauty is in the eye of the beholder - those of us who make textile are often forget that when we dislike what we do we a) learn from it but b) more importantly other people will love it!! I am really glad you posted them - the colours are great!! Love them keep going!!

MixPix said...

I think they are all wonderful, and good on you for facing your feelings about failure. I keep all my failures and sometimes rework them into something else, or just look at them to see where I went wrong. Very frequently when I look at them again, I like them anew. Go figure! Me old mum used to say, "The door to success is marked 'Push'". Now I'm going to have a cuppa and read the rest of your blog which I hadn't discovered until just now - a real treat!