This piece was finished a few months ago, but was awaiting a show before I posted it here.
As with most tapestries I didn't like it when I took it off the loom, but now I'm quite happy with it.
Enjoy!
Emergence IV
15 x 46 inches
hand-dyed wool tapestry
Friday, July 29, 2011
Thursday, July 28, 2011
And after the conference relaxation...
I was exhausted after teaching for three days. I had no idea I would be so worn out. Undoubtedly it has something to do with extroverting myself for four days straight. Fortunately I had the foresight to purchase Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge rail tickets for Monday after the conference and Emily and I had a fantastic time riding the train and exploring some more of western Colorado.
There is a weaving shop in Silverton called Weathertop Wovens. They don't allow photos in the shop, but here is the storefront. In the past when I've visited they have both spent a lot of time explaining how they create their garments. They are great people to visit. They use multi-colored warps mostly in cotton to weave fabric which they then sew into ruanas and jackets. (Does the name come from The Lord of the Rings? I didn't think to ask them while there this time.)
This is perhaps one of the funniest signs I have ever seen. It was in front of a house in Silverton--a town where only the main street is paved, most of the town leaves for all but 3 months of the year, and the people who live there year round are tougher than nails. I suspect this sign belongs to one of the tough ones. (Silverton also gets a LOT of summer-time tourist traffic and I suspect people get sick of tourists parking in front of their houses.)
On our way home we drove through Bayfield, CO. I had asked the woman at Yarn (an amazing little yarn shop where I have spent some money in past months!) in Durango if there were any other yarn shops in the area and she mentioned one in Bayfield. We ran across this one which has one of the most clever names for a knit shop that I have ever seen... considering that the shop is on Pearl Street.
There is a weaving shop in Silverton called Weathertop Wovens. They don't allow photos in the shop, but here is the storefront. In the past when I've visited they have both spent a lot of time explaining how they create their garments. They are great people to visit. They use multi-colored warps mostly in cotton to weave fabric which they then sew into ruanas and jackets. (Does the name come from The Lord of the Rings? I didn't think to ask them while there this time.)
This is perhaps one of the funniest signs I have ever seen. It was in front of a house in Silverton--a town where only the main street is paved, most of the town leaves for all but 3 months of the year, and the people who live there year round are tougher than nails. I suspect this sign belongs to one of the tough ones. (Silverton also gets a LOT of summer-time tourist traffic and I suspect people get sick of tourists parking in front of their houses.)
On our way home we drove through Bayfield, CO. I had asked the woman at Yarn (an amazing little yarn shop where I have spent some money in past months!) in Durango if there were any other yarn shops in the area and she mentioned one in Bayfield. We ran across this one which has one of the most clever names for a knit shop that I have ever seen... considering that the shop is on Pearl Street.
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Color Gradation for Tapestry
I taught a new class at Intermountain Weaver's Conference in Durango last weekend. The conference was July 21-24 at Fort Lewis College. I greatly enjoyed teaching this class. I had wonderful students and we learned a lot about structural techniques for mixing color in tapestry as well as a little bit of color theory.
Prepping an example for the class...
Dyed yarn. We had many discussions about where to get tapestry yarn. I dye my own because it is so difficult to find gradations to purchase commercially (and because I like dyeing). For people who don't want to dye their own yarn, finding more than a couple values in one hue is difficult!
Pick and pick on doubled warps...
We had two rigid heddle looms in the class. I never would have advocated using this loom for tapestry, but I have to admit that the tension was significantly better than I expected it to be.
One student designed this great transparency exercise with two circles (this is the back--due to the Mirrix warp wrapping around, I couldn't photograph the front of this example).
We went over to see the Fiber Celebrated show and look at a couple pieces I had there.
Fort Lewis College is a great place for a fiber conference. The vendor hall was marvelous, the IWC board members kept the whole thing running smoothly, and the cafeteria actually did make me gluten-free food.
The juried show Fiber Celebrated 2011 also opened during the conference. You can see my blog post about that show HERE.
There was also a non-juried show at the conference and I've posted some photos of that HERE.
Prepping an example for the class...
Dyed yarn. We had many discussions about where to get tapestry yarn. I dye my own because it is so difficult to find gradations to purchase commercially (and because I like dyeing). For people who don't want to dye their own yarn, finding more than a couple values in one hue is difficult!
Some student examples...
Use of blocks to grade color.
Pick and pick on doubled warps...
We had two rigid heddle looms in the class. I never would have advocated using this loom for tapestry, but I have to admit that the tension was significantly better than I expected it to be.
We also had a couple Archie Brennan style looms in the class which get a great tension although they can be difficult to get a shed on. One student had modified her loom with a shedding mechanism, though she still had to use a shedding stick due to the narrow width of her top copper pipe (not this loom).
There was one table loom made by Mountain Loom Company. I was surprised that this loom held an excellent tension which has not been my experience with table looms. There was a Wolf Pup and the rest of the looms were Mirrix.
We went over to see the Fiber Celebrated show and look at a couple pieces I had there.
Fort Lewis College is a great place for a fiber conference. The vendor hall was marvelous, the IWC board members kept the whole thing running smoothly, and the cafeteria actually did make me gluten-free food.
The juried show Fiber Celebrated 2011 also opened during the conference. You can see my blog post about that show HERE.
There was also a non-juried show at the conference and I've posted some photos of that HERE.
Lastly, I was a little surprised to see the advertising for the Swedish singles yarn that James Koehler used as it seemed to imply that the proceeds somehow had something to do with James... In reality the vendor was just trying to sell an overstock that James left behind.
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Intermountain Creations
The non-juried show at Intermountain Weavers Conference is called Intermountain Creations. This year the instructor's show Intermountain Spirit was intermixed with the Creations show.
I thought there were many wonderful pieces in this show and I shot a few photos of some of them. There were, of course many pieces I didn't include here, some due to impossible lighting and some because I was focusing on what struck me at the moment.
Evelyn Campbell lives near me and was a student of James Koehler's. She is something of a hero to me perhaps just due to her her vitality, ability to engage vibrantly with the world, and the hope that I can maintain those things in my own life as I get older.
I thought there were many wonderful pieces in this show and I shot a few photos of some of them. There were, of course many pieces I didn't include here, some due to impossible lighting and some because I was focusing on what struck me at the moment.
Evelyn Campbell lives near me and was a student of James Koehler's. She is something of a hero to me perhaps just due to her her vitality, ability to engage vibrantly with the world, and the hope that I can maintain those things in my own life as I get older.
Kandinsky Slalom Evelyn Campbell wool tapestry |
Sagrado Familia near Black Mesa Evelyn Campbell wool tapestry |
Nancy took my Color Gradation for Tapestry class this year and had two delightful tapestries in the show. I loved the effect of the floating bars in the dark brown parts of this tapestry as well as her use of demi-duites and pick and pick. (Great piece to study for the class Nancy!)
Chiapas Windows II Nancy Wohlenberg |
This piece was one of my favorites. I loved her use of a doubled warp so that she could go from 6 to 12 ends per inch in different parts of the tapestry. She was experimenting with pearl cotton as weft here and it worked extremely well in this small-size tapestry. She did a great job of color gradation also even using pick and pick to grade some of the background imperceptibly.
Earth and Sky Pot Nancy Wohlenberg |
Cindy also took my class (and was another student of James'). This tapestry was my favorite in this show. The flatness of the color effects were really attractive as well as the black outlining of the sailboat.
Serendipity Cindy Dworzak |
Serendipity, detail Cindy Dworzak |
There were many pieces in techniques other than tapestry in this show. This woven shawl caught my eye.
Night Sea Scarf Gaylene Garlitz tencel warp, cotton weft, 16 harness weave |
I enjoyed the detail of this mixed media piece.
Mycelial Matrix, detail Rain Klepper |
And I was happy that Emergence IV got to hang out in a show for a few days before heading to Weaving Southwest for the summer sale season.
Emergence IV Rebecca Mezoff |
Fiber Celebrated 2011
I had two pieces in Fiber Celebrated 2011 which opened at the Intermountain Weaver's Conference at Fort Lewis College in Durango this past weekend. The show is at the Center of Southwest Studies main gallery. Juanita Girardin was the juror for this show. She actually lives in the same small New Mexico town that I do. Her comments at the opening convocation of the conference resonated with me as she spoke at length about using good craftsmanship.
Both pieces have a great deal of subtle color gradation. Here are the two that were accepted to the show:
Emergence III; 9 x 44 inches; hand-dyed wool tapestry |
(Barn burned down) Now I can see the moon; 5.75 x 16.75 inches; hand-dyed wool tapestry |
Yep, that is what they really looked like. They might as well have been in a closet the light was so bad. I asked. They said they couldn't do anything about it. Two years ago this show was in another part of the gallery and it was very well lit. It didn't fare so well this year, though some things looked better than others.
So I pulled my pieces off the wall to show to my class. We were learning about color gradation and it was impossible to see the color changes where the pieces were hanging.
Despite my disappointment with the hanging of my own pieces, there were other tapestries in the show which were better lit.
Canyon Sunset Carolyn Van Sant cotton |
left to right: Asa III by Buff Palm; Turquoise Study by Bettye Sullivan; Midnight by Alex G. Sullivan; Lights by Buff Palm |
Asa III by Buff Palm, detail |
Mary Cost's piece suffered from the same lack of lighting that mine did.
Grand Slam Mary Cost |
Kathy Spoering's piece was wonderful and the class spent a fair bit of time discussing her color mixing techniques as well as how the eye perceives something like the bright red under the dog's neck (which does not look bright red unless your face is right in the tapestry). An enchanting piece for which she received the Northern Colorado Weaver's Guild award.
August or "The Dog Days of Summer" Kathy Spoering wool and cotton |
Elizabeth Buckley's piece, Dialogues Through the Veil is beautiful and it was an important center of discussion for the tapestry class on hatching and color use techniques I was teaching at the conference. This piece won the American Tapestry Alliance award which is definitely deserved.
Dialogues Through the Veil Elizabeth Buckley wool, cotton, embroidery floss, silk, cotton seine |
I love the use of hatching and the shiny effect from the silk and embroidery floss as well as the implied figures throughout the piece and the leaps of imagination it inspires.
Dialogues Through the Veil, detail |
Dialogues Through the Veil, detail |
I felt like the show was much smaller than it was last year. I focused on the tapestry pieces, but there were many other fantastic fiber works in this show including some amazing three-dimensional pieces. If you get a chance to see it, definitely stop by.
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