What a title for a talk! When I saw this advertised in the programme of the Gardening Club I knew I had to pop along and see what it was all about. Turns out to be a playdate with fungi.
This lovely lady is Sue Shanks (whom I work with on an occassionaly basis - ecologist by training and now an environmental educator. We both work at a Wildlife centre)
And she bought with her loads of different mushrooms - the fruiting bodies of fungi. These are Fly Agaric - the most common for fairy tales and pretty cards. They are also hallucinogenic and make Reindeer high as a kite when they eat them - hence the stories of flying reindeer.
Once we had been given the basic identification skills (well as much as you can in 20 minutes) we got to work with the speicimens. The underside gills are just beautiful to me and the part I was fascinated by in the Fascinating Fungi workhshops.
This one was a bit ripe and stinky! We even had a free maggot. The spine was very knobbly too.
Sue showed us spore prints - you take them by removing the stalk and lying the mushroom cap gill side down on a piece of paper. Leave it overnight in a warm room and this is what you get. I have just got to try this out for myself. I can feel myself itching to stitch this.
With white spores it pays to use a coloured paper.
This one had tubes instead of gills - giving it a very spongey texture. The bottom smelt like earth but the top smelt of cats pee. Apparently smell is a key diagnostic feature.....Hummmmm
After a while it looked like mushroom carnage!
The pink veining round the top of this one was very pretty. Its quite a chunky little thing.
The milk caps - if you damage the gills they produce milk - orange milk in this case. I thought the caps were just pretty in themselves. My fascination with gills again.
Lots of the samples came complete with soil, twigs, moss etc. They were mini works of art in their own right. Yet another thing added to my "one day" list - to make more 3D mushrooms and make them more realistic.
Who thought so many varieties could be found in a short distance round Wolverhampton? This is just a very small selection of the ones Sue bought. Events like this spark my creativity and really make me want to get creating- even if I could never compete with Mother Nature.
Sunday, October 27, 2019
Saturday, October 26, 2019
Making a Japanese Spine Bound Book - the hard way
I have been a member of Bilston Craft Group for a couple of years now and evey now and then we have a workshop with a bought in tutor, instead of one of us teaching. This month we were making Japanese Spine Bound Books.
I meant to take pictures as I was going along but it took so much concentration that I didnt even think about it. So I am afraid all you get is the final work.
We started with a piece of mountcard and some leave, which we glued onto said mount card to make a printing plate. Then we brayered black acrylic paint over the leaves and pressed the printing plate onto the fabric. I rubbed the back of my fabric with my hands to get a good impression. Because acrylic is fast drying by the time I had done the basic covers the fabric was ready to stitch.
We made the covers by cutting the front one and inserting a masking tape "spine" (so the front will bend. Next time I will do the same to the back) then we drilled holes through both covers and the pages (I think I would do this a bit at a time). The important bit here is to hold everything together with several elastic bands so it cant move!
I enjoyed sewing the fabric,a quiet hour out from the hectic concentration of making the basic book. I seem to be in a fairly minimalist phrase at the moment (VERY unusual for me) and decided just to stitch one leaf and some seed stitch (in the same colour as the fabric) around it. This adds texture without being "shouty" if you know what I mean? There is just one bead. That was added for my friend who was with me - she was about to send for an ambulance as I wasn't doing bright colours, mega bling and loads of stitch. Well we all fancy a change every now and then.
The trickiest part was wrapping the fabric round the hard covers and sticking it down. Just about everyone else had a fairly random pattern on their fabric but I needed my main leaf to be top right third. If there is a hard way I will find it! So it took me a long time and a lot of fiddling to get it right. I have decided that next time I would use spray glue not double sided sticky tape to fasten the fabric because it should be easier to line up.
The finishing touch was to thread the ribbon through. I was feeling very impressed with myself until I got to the end, Pulled the ribbon tight....and it snapped 😒. By this time I was getting a bit tired and if I am honest a little cross. So after a bit of under the breath swearing I employed my key skill - improvisation - and wrapped the ribbon round to the back and glued it down. Thank goodness for multipurpose glue. It has saved my bacon on more than one occassion.
Can you see the mistake in the finished book? The masking tape spine has collapsed making the front cover shorter than the back. I am going to colour in the edges of the paper (more improvisation) and then no-one but you will know that it was a mistake.
The whole session reminded me how much I love book making, and of course the first version of any book is always the hardest but stitched covers really appeal to me. I would love to make more of these and as I have some mount card and paper precut next time I get a free day I am good to go. As I want to practice on my home made printing press this seems like a good way of combining two things.
I meant to take pictures as I was going along but it took so much concentration that I didnt even think about it. So I am afraid all you get is the final work.
We started with a piece of mountcard and some leave, which we glued onto said mount card to make a printing plate. Then we brayered black acrylic paint over the leaves and pressed the printing plate onto the fabric. I rubbed the back of my fabric with my hands to get a good impression. Because acrylic is fast drying by the time I had done the basic covers the fabric was ready to stitch.
We made the covers by cutting the front one and inserting a masking tape "spine" (so the front will bend. Next time I will do the same to the back) then we drilled holes through both covers and the pages (I think I would do this a bit at a time). The important bit here is to hold everything together with several elastic bands so it cant move!
I enjoyed sewing the fabric,a quiet hour out from the hectic concentration of making the basic book. I seem to be in a fairly minimalist phrase at the moment (VERY unusual for me) and decided just to stitch one leaf and some seed stitch (in the same colour as the fabric) around it. This adds texture without being "shouty" if you know what I mean? There is just one bead. That was added for my friend who was with me - she was about to send for an ambulance as I wasn't doing bright colours, mega bling and loads of stitch. Well we all fancy a change every now and then.
The trickiest part was wrapping the fabric round the hard covers and sticking it down. Just about everyone else had a fairly random pattern on their fabric but I needed my main leaf to be top right third. If there is a hard way I will find it! So it took me a long time and a lot of fiddling to get it right. I have decided that next time I would use spray glue not double sided sticky tape to fasten the fabric because it should be easier to line up.
The finishing touch was to thread the ribbon through. I was feeling very impressed with myself until I got to the end, Pulled the ribbon tight....and it snapped 😒. By this time I was getting a bit tired and if I am honest a little cross. So after a bit of under the breath swearing I employed my key skill - improvisation - and wrapped the ribbon round to the back and glued it down. Thank goodness for multipurpose glue. It has saved my bacon on more than one occassion.
Can you see the mistake in the finished book? The masking tape spine has collapsed making the front cover shorter than the back. I am going to colour in the edges of the paper (more improvisation) and then no-one but you will know that it was a mistake.
The whole session reminded me how much I love book making, and of course the first version of any book is always the hardest but stitched covers really appeal to me. I would love to make more of these and as I have some mount card and paper precut next time I get a free day I am good to go. As I want to practice on my home made printing press this seems like a good way of combining two things.
Wednesday, October 23, 2019
The Pros and Cons of hosting an Open Studio
Back after a long break.....
Sorry to say the Blog has been somewhat neglected over the summer. This year with the Bee project, Fascinating Fungi and more I have struggled to get the sewing done, and blogging about it has gone by the board. Things should calm down a little now so I am going to try harder to get on here more regularly.
The weekend just gone was Wolverhampton Society of Artists Open Studio this weekend. They open it up for all artists in the area not just those in the Society so myself and my 3 friends that make up Sisters of Stitch (SOS) decided we would dip our toes in the water, so to speak, and exhibit.
The first issue is always going to be where to exhibit? We could have hired a stand in the local centre (where a lot of artists have studios anyway) but that would have only given us 2 small display boards for the 4 of us plus an additional charge on top on the entry fee. Given that I have a large home studio anyway (lucky lucky me!) the sensible solution seemed obvious - use my studio. The downside - it was cluttered beyond belief, I have 2 dogs who would love to cuddle every person arriving, and a family who didn't really want their home invaded for a whole weekend. After a debate we decided we could build a temporary blockade so that people could only get into the first room in the house - my studio - and the family/dogs etc could be safely left to their weekend in the rest of the house. The clutter could move into the spare room - well behind the barricade.
Next was the tricky issue of sales.
| The sales table |
We had made lots of work in the past two years and plenty of it was good enough to sell but would that look too commercial / greedy? Our primary aim was to showcase our work so we didn't want selling to be a distraction. In the end we prices on items we didn't mind rehoming and not on our favourite pieces that we weren't ready to part with.
There is a whole minefield around pricing - not to undersell yourself for the hours of making and skill building but not to outprice the market. We must have got it about right because we did a good steady trade but not the feeding frenzy it would have been if we had priced too low.
| Anne's Sea themed corner |
| More nature pieces in the other corner |
We have done a couple of joint projects in the 2 years we have been meeting. It was lovely to put them out on display too. The orange dress in the background was my contribution to a joint project in another group Connect in Threads. I loved making it and couldnt resist giving it another airing. I have been asked why I dont make it wearable but it is 2 sizes too big for me, not constructed properly for dress making and would take WAY too much effort to do. So it just hangs and looks pretty.
| the joint projects of 2018/2019 |
Overall it was a lot of hard work. The first time you do anything like this you have to plan it all out and prepare and you are never quite sure what to expect. we had to work out the logistics of how to get things up on display boards we had never used before and how we would manage the health and safety aspects.
We sat and had a little review at the end; concluding that it was worth it for the chance to talk about our textile obession with all the lovely people who showed up; for the way it made us finish our WIPS (work in progress) and for the unexpected benefit of getting a review of all we have been up to in the last 2 years.
Now I have to put my studio back together again. I liked it clean and tidy with empty surfaces. Maybe it will motivate to decide what I really need to keep out of the mountain in the spare room.....
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