I've been using the laser cutter lately for a lot of quilts, and after cutting the wooden Christmas ornaments I thought there might be a way to do some small geometric sculptures. Of course having never worked in this media I had no idea how it would go, but I drafter this series of nested parabolas with the idea that I could generate something with graceful 3D curves. Well, that turned out to be quite a bit harder than expected. I sewed the pieces all together there through those holes about halfway down on the left and right and I thought I could just prop it up from there, but of course it kept collapsing. In the picture below it's being held up by being pinned to my work table.
I started stitching through various holes to try to get the shape to hold, here are a couple of pictures in progress. It was very hard to get the individual paraboloids to be spaced evenly. Even the final thing isn't perfect. And then to make matters worse, I actually broke two of them halfway through the stitching. I'm so thankful I was able to glue/clamp the broken pieces back together.
Here's a finished view
Paraboloid #1, c. Shannon Conley, 2020 |
The string is different colors of sparkly Ricky Tims razzle dazzle thread. I bought a bunch of spools of it a few years ago, but then didn't wind up doing much bobbin quilting, so I thought this would be a fun place to use it.
I had fun with this experiment (sort of) and like the end shapes that were created. I have two more wood "sculptures" to share, but I can tell you I don't think I'm going to be changing my primary medium any time soon!
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