Friday, July 3, 2015

Quilt of Valor Pattern

Starry Night for Josh has been the QAL for Alycia's Quilts of Valor

I'm just a little tardy posting this step by step QAL.  Hopefully, you'll enjoy sewing up this delightful pattern and present it to a
Soldier, so he/she won't be forgotten and be rewarded for his/her service;

Thank you Alycia for your dedicated service to our military and their families!  I love your patterns!

Step Two
 
 
Final layout!
check out Allegiance Mystery Quilt for another Quilt of Valor pattern

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Spinners Delight

Soon, it will be time for Tour de Fleece challenge!
Does your guild need a challenge?
Or do you just need to challenge yourself
when you are spinning?
 
 
Here is a sample board of spinners' delights!
Each spinner took a photo, famous art work, object, etc.
and spun to achieve their inspiration of the photo

 

I think this would be such a great time to think about
placing that photo in front of the spinners and
see what they can come up with.

Let's spin to our delight!

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Sculpture of Live--Linda!

What a treat to see this exhibit at Denver Art Museum before it's deadline!
This is work of John DeAndrea and it is so real
it looks Live!
 
 
Linda is asleep--such a natural pose and so lifelike..

Such soft features--you just want to reach out and touch!

This is his most recent sculpture--"Nude with Black Drape"--oil-painted bronze


The features of the face are remarkable

This one is so different from his solo pieces--
polychromed bronze, polychromed vinyl, clothing, plaster, hair and wood

A self portrait of the artist
What a Pity Linda is only shown on rare occasions--so happy I was able to view her
and John DeAndrea's works

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

The Art of Bark Cloth

I so have enjoyed my visits to the Denver Art Museum lately--not only for their fine art collections but for the textile exhibits that have been featured this summer.
This exhibit was fascinating to me!
There are textiles--even if you need to find them in tree bark!
 
Bark cloth is a versatile material that was once common in Asia, Africa, Indonesia, and the Pacific; mainly comes from mulberry or tapa tree.

Of course, we think of using bark cloth as floor or wall coverings

But, for many natives of the islands, it was used for their clothing items

What really got me was how lively the colors were
 

Design work was usually stamps or rubbings from carvings


intricate designs to look like lace


Tapa can be decorated by rubbing, stamping, stenciling, smoking (Fiji: "masi Kuvui") or dyeing. The patterns of Tongan, Samoan, and Fijian tapa usually form a grid of squares, each of which contains geometric patterns with repeated motifs such as fish and plants, for example four stylized leaves forming a diagonal cross. Traditional dyes are usually black and rust-brown, although other colours are known.
In former times the cloth was primarily used for clothing, but now cotton and other textiles have replaced it. The major problem with tapa clothing is that the tissue loses its strength when wet and falls apart

Nowadays tapa is often worn on formal occasions such as weddings. Another use is as a blanket at night or for room dividers. It is highly prized for its decorative value and is often found hung on the walls as decoration.
In Tonga a family is considered poor, no matter how much money they have, if they do not have any tapa in stock at home to donate at life events like marriages, funerals and so forth. If the tapa was donated to them by a chief or even the royal family, it is more valuable. It has been used in ceremonial masks in Papua New Guinea and the Cook Islands (Mangian masks). It was used to wrap sacred objects, e.g., "God staffs" in the Cook Islands
This is a copy of a carving that could be used for rubbings

"ele is one of the uses of color--check out the info

  Yes, we can find useful ways to achieve clothing from many different native plants and trees.

Monday, June 29, 2015

HatALong!

Just yesterday we were writing about HAPs and patterns by Gudrun Johnston.
Then I found these delightful hat patterns
that are being used for a HATALONG!
I'm loving Gudrun's patterns!
 
Fringe Association is where you can find this HAT ALONG and this delightful hat pattern.

I do believe I have some lovely blue in worsted weight that will be perfect!

Hermaness Worsted is the name
It's never to early or late to make a hat....................

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Hap?

A Pattern popped up on my Ravelry page the other day when I was searching for shawl patterns.

HAP--what is a HAP?  Sounded interesting and required more investigative work on my part--

Shetland Trader blog was a good source of information about this Shetland knitted shawl.  The blog is authored by Gudrun Johnston and she has many HAP patterns to be found on Ravelry--just type in HAP and you'll find more than you bargained for!

 Years ago I took a lace spinning and knitting workshop with Margaret Stove-- guess I just wasn't in the right place to get the knack of all that lace stuff.  But, now, as I knit lace, It's all making sense to me.

I noticed that Gudrun uses cards to do her stripe sequences for her HAP knitting.
Ribbels wrapping technique
 


This is not much different than what weavers do to make their warps--so it seems to me that all crafts meet in the middle.  To the right is Karen I's wrappings for her next woven shawl.

Will you begin a HAP?  I think I will!
Below are several websites that you can browse for the history on HAPS--quite fascinating to me!

http://www.heirloom-knitting.co.uk/hap_shawls_book/hap_shawls_first_pages.pdf
http://www.knitbritish.net/haps/
https://jamiesonandsmith.wordpress.com/2015/04/06/shetland-haps/
http://www.heirloom-knitting.co.uk/hap_shawls_book/hap_shawls_first_pages.pdf
http://www.theshetlandtrader.com/
https://www.pinterest.com/latknitter/shetland-hap-shawls/
http://www.heirloom-knitting.co.uk/heirloom_knitting.html




Saturday, June 27, 2015

Do You Inkle?

 
Do you have passion to inkle loom?
 
 
One of our WOW study group members, Karen, loves to inkle!
She made this lovely tote with inkle bands.

and this spool of tape for the gift basket for our state conference.
 
The other day as I was roaming the web--sure do find many interesting features out there in that wide world of information--I came across a blog about inkle weaving.
There is even a cool video and
some great ideas on how to use an inkle band.
check it out
I never thought there were so many uses of this small woven band.  Now, I wish I'd kept my inkle loom--oh, wait--it's most likely in the attic.............................
 

It's Time--

 It’s time to think about greeting cards I’ll send out this year.  Most years, if I’m not feeling pressed, I’ll create my own cards.  One ye...