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Friday, February 27, 2015

Gloria Patri: Finished

I'm so excited to have finished my "Gloria Patri" quilt.  In case you haven't seen the in progress posts, they're here.  Mike took photos for me over two days this week, and then yesterday evening I finished sewing on the pockets.  I'm so grateful that he took the pictures  (some of them are here in the post)- I hate doing it, but even more importantly, I can only get good pictures with natural light in my studio which means I can't take them during the week (when I'm at work during the day).  I had some show deadlines this week, so it was nice that he was able to take them.
Gloria Patri, Shannon Conley, c. 2015 35 x 31

Looking at it, I think of the feeling of walking in a meditation garden or labyrinth.  The artist statement reads:  There is no top and no bottom, only the center.  How to regain equilibrium when the center is lost?  Slow, repetitive, meditative, stitching; slow repetitive, meditative prayer.









 




Probably all that busyness and color wouldn't be calming for many people, but it does the trick for me!  This project didn't go quite as smoothly as I'd hoped, but the outcome is what I had in my mind from the outset, so I guess that's as good a definition of success as anything.

Even though this is a text quilt (which would ordinarily have a right-side-up), one of my goals from the beginning was for it to be reversible.  Thus the central ambigram and the dual spiraling arms.  You can see what I mean- here it is one way,

Gloria Patri, Shannon Conley, c. 2015 35 x 31

And here it is rotated 180 degrees.

Gloria Patri, Shannon Conley, c. 2015 35 x 31

To keep with the right-side-up theme, I made the label reversible, sewed it in the center, and added two pockets.





I'm linking up with Nina-Marie, TGIFF, and LAFF over at Richard and Tanya's.

Monday, February 23, 2015

Seed Packets V1


My mom and I usually like to try some new (to us) technique or small project over the holiday break.  For one thing, it's fun for us to experiment together, and for another, it's always nice to have a small project to be working on that's no pressure and not for a deadline.  This year we highlighted two things to try.  The first was an Esterita Austin technique that we saw in Quilting Arts.

Basically you take a drawing and put it underneath parchment paper (so you can see your drawing), then paint the parchment paper.


Then you put organza backed with misty fuse on top of the paint and iron it. The paint transfers to the organza basically giving you a painted, fusible applique shape.  Since mom and I have an upcoming SAQA New Mexico showcase requesting 16x16 "Seed Packet" quilts, we decided to do plants.  She picked the lilies (below) and I did a teddy bear cholla (above).


Mom decided to do a confetti background for hers, but I decided to just quilt mine normally.





I don't have finished shots of Mom's, but here it was in progress:



And here are some final (sort of) shots of mine:






Both of us thought they were looking pretty flat.  Mom stitched a bunch of stamens onto her flowers, beaded the centers, and then made some extra 3D flowers (out of white vinyl) to stitch on the front.  It is about 100x more dimensional now, but alas I don't have a picture.  It's in the upcoming Dallas quilt show so I'll try to get a picture.  I didn't do anything nearly as cool with mine, but I did go ahead and add some beading to the centers which I think helps some (sorry for the crummy phone pictures, I had to snap them quickly before sending this off).




I actually think my favorite part of this quilt is that awesome background fabric coupled with the ombre piping and purple binding. 


Friday, February 20, 2015

Gloria Patri: The Pain(t)

Well, I finished quilting my Gloria Patri quilt late last week.  I thought the quilting designs looked neat up close, but when I stood back and looked at the whole thing, it left me feeling underwhelmed, deflated, blah.  After some discussion with my mom and a lot of thought, I came to articulate that what was really bothering me was how washed out it felt.  Nothing like the deep saturated colors found in an illumination.



So, after countless hours and a million stops and starts with the quilting, I decided to paint it all.  Yep.  Big sigh.  I got out all the different fabric paints I have and identified twenty different colors to fill in the quilting, and for the last week have been painstakingly working on it.  It's extremely slow going since I'm trying to stay in the lines.  A bit challenging as well because the funny texture of this fabric makes it really hard to get into the crevices.





Here are a couple of in progress pictures though and it's already feeling much more how I imagined it.  Not sure how the whole thing will turn out, but the deadline for the shows I want to enter is fast approaching so I'm going to be hard at it until it's finished.  Just keep your fingers crossed that I don't set my hand down in wet paint or spill it or anything like that.






I guess the moral of the story is that thread is not really enough- maybe I'll screen print the designs next time or applique them or something.

Linking up with the fabulous Nina-Marie as always!

Monday, February 16, 2015

New Hand Project

My mom has this fun book called New Crewel: The Motif Collection, by Katherine Shaughnessy, which is filled with fun and fresh feeling crewel embroidery motifs.  She (my mom) started embroidering some of them onto wool felt charm squares and recently when I was stranded without a hand project, she gave me a few and I've started embroidering them too.  The wool felt is so lovely to work with, it's easy to stitch and feels great in your hands.  I'm not sure what we're going to do with these blocks- maybe someday the two of us will stitch them together into something, but for now it's just fun to work on something small and cute.  We're using all different types of thread-  a lot of wool crewel thread, but also perle cotton, and even some regular six strand floss.

Mom started this one and I finished it.  Joint effort!


Mom did this one- I'm in awe of all those french knots, and love the texture.  Feels like barnacles on a rock.


Mom did this one- he looks a bit like a neuron to me.





Friday, February 6, 2015

Progress on the Gloria Patri

When I left off on this the last time, I'd finished printing my spiral-shaped Gloria Patri and was thinking about the quilting.  The first thing I did was to quilt around all the letters using white thread.  You can't see the quilting from the front but it stabilized the quilt and made the lettters puff a bit.  Here's the back where you can see all the quilting around the letters.


Then I browsed through one of my favorite sources for quilting ideas, especially for this kind of quilt, A Treasury of Hours by Fanny Fay-Sallois.  It's full of selections from many different historical books of hours.  


This time, the border designs on a picture of Matthew the Evangelist from the Rivoire Book of Hours caught my fancy.  Inspired by that leafy but bold pattern, I started quilting.  





The quilting spirals out with the text, in the middle the stems are blue and the flowers are red, as they spiral out the colors shift through several different shades of turquoise/blue green and pink/lavender to finally land on green stems with purple flowers.  There are multiple shades of thread in each section and the quilting took forever because there were so many stops and starts.  But it was very meditative, and not unenjoyable.  Unfortunately the texture in the bengaline fabric is almost like very small corduroy wales, and this makes the quilting look weirdly pixely or jerky in some places which made me very unhappy.  Also, because the background is white and the quilting is contrasting,  all the little mistakes show, but I guess that's part of the process!





For some reason the tension was really bad in some places going around the letters, so some of that will have to be ripped out and replaced, and then I need to finish the background quilting outside the spiral.  But I've made lots of progress so yay!

Linking up with the great Nina-Marie today.

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Cultural Red


I'm so excited to have just found out that two of my quilts, The Yucca and the Moth and Do You See What I See, have been accepted into the new SAQA NM show, Cultural Red.  This show will be hanging at the Capitol Rotunda Art Gallery at the NM Capitol building in Santa Fe, NM from April 17-August 17.  If any of you are in or around Santa Fe, I'd encourage you to stop by and see it, it should be a great show.

The cool cochineal bug quilt on the bottom left is my mom Vicki's (so cool).

Do You See What I See

The Yucca and the Moth

Also, I've designed a website for my quilts.  In addition to galleries of quilts, it has a list of upcoming shows.  It was fun to build- I'm not sure I won't still change it around some, but I think it's good enough to be going on with.  Check it out at Shannonconleyartquilts.com or by clicking the website link in my tab.