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Archive for the ‘Exhibiting’ Category

Zoot pieces, workshops and displaying pieces

Saturday, October 6th, 2007

Just a quick “business-y” note:

I’ll be…yippeeee!!!!!….. heading off to a workshop at ProChem in Fall River, Mass., next week. I’m taking the second week of Color Mixing for Dyers with Carol Soderlund. I head down on Monday (and hope to stop at the new Ikea near Boston en route), about a 6 hour drive if I were to go non-stop (not!). I have blogposts set to publish while I’m gone….

The next set of posts will be closeups of the pieces at Zoot Coffee House (see earlier post dated October 3rd). If anyone is interested in purchasing one, just drop me an e-mail either through a comment here or via the contact me link on my website (look up at the top menu bar for the hotlink). I’m not sure if I’ll have internet while in Fall River, so if you don’t hear from me until I get home next weekend, it means no Wi-Fi!

Finally, Dianne in Annapolis had a great question: how exactly do I mount those pieces on the canvas? Perfect for a tutorial. PLUS, I had mounted the pieces I made for the two “On the Edge” articles in Quilting Arts Magazine (about finishing the edges of quilts) and wanted to blog about display alternatives. So, when I get back, I promise to show a couple of ways to do this. I really gotta convince a publisher to let me do edge finishes and display alternatives as a book, or else self-publish! Too many ideas, never enough time. Anyway, keep popping back in for more good stuff –with pictures– starting tomorrow!

You’re invited to Zoot!

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007

Zoot you say?  That’s the wonderful coffee house here in downtown Camden (hours and directions at the end of the post) where my friend Jan P. and I just hung a show of textile art / art quilts for the month of October.  Here’s a picture of the little thing I made for Zondra (actually, I think it is Sondra?), the owner, and the customer side of the latte bar:

Zondra’s Zoot

Zoot definitely has the best coffee on the mid-Coast of Maine, even better than Starbucks! Every month Zondra has a new exhibit, and Jan and I are thrilled to be this month’s show!  I made a number of new, smaller (and therefore affordable for Christmas gift giving, including to yourself!) pieces which I’ll be sharing here and on my website over the next few days. I’m happy to ship, too (hint hint!).

Jan and her photographer-husband have a newly launched website, From Photos to Fiber.  They sell his photographs and Jan is working on commissioned pieces of people’s family members, pets and buildings.  Check out the quilt of Ollie, their rapscallion dog…far left in the next photo.

Here’s a view of the left side of the main space, a sunny area with big picture windows facing Elm Street:

Front area

Here’s Jan in front of three of my pieces, which are on the short wall facing the front door:

Jan by my stuff, front wall

Here’s the back area, with two of my pieces on the left, Jan’s three on the right, and our hanging stuff and jackets on the chairs and tables!

Back corner

Here’s a closeup with one of Jan’s “house portraits” on the left, and a Trio of small tea pieces and my “Tea” on the center and right.  Tea, MIL’s house

I’ll be posting my new pieces, including prices, both on my website and here over the next week or ten days.  Hope you like!

Directions and hours:

Open  6:30-5, M-Sat,  and 7-5 on Sunday

On Elm Street in downtown Camden, between the Rite Aid and Town Offices, opposite the village green.  If you are driving north on Route 1, the old Atlantic Coast Highway, it runs right through town (Elm Street turns into Main Street turns into High Street, all within 4 blocks!); Zoot would be on your left a block or so past the flashing stoplight at the First Congregational Church (intersection  of Union and Elm).

My favorite is a double latte, and love the croissants, lunchtime savories and pie!

The State of my Studio

Sunday, September 30th, 2007

Well, if the President as head of the executive branch can give a State of the Union address, and since as quilters we are ALWAYS a bit curious (OK, almost voyeuristic) about other quilters’ studios, I thought I’d let you see what I’ve been up to this past week.

I have done a TON of paperwork on the book, writing to get permissions to use quotes, and so on, so seriously needed some creative time. Plus, Jan and Dwight P. (Jan is a friend and quilter, Dwight is her hubby and photographer) and I are having a small show at Zoot, the cool coffee house in town. That means I figured I needed to make some pieces for there that are not expensive (as in might actually sell and generate some much-needed income). When I finish one thing I tend to need to have a tidy attack and clear the surfaces so I can function. Then stuff piles up as I work. I guess I’ve been working. Here is the work table:

Main worktable

Here is the overflow (Gramma’s toaster table, immortalized in my Flying Toast quilt):

Gramma’s table

Here is the sewing machine cabinet:

Sewing table

And the doorknob:

Doorknob

Yes, busy. I have one more 6×6 piece to fuse up and quilt, then I need to paint all the canvases, mount all the pieces, add hanging sleeves to the ones that will not be mounted, add hanging apparatus, label them, take photos, re-size the photos for use on the website, price them (duh!), and be ready to sell them! I’ll blog them here and on my website galleries (think I’ll make a “small works” gallery for most of the ones mounted on canvas which I can then delete once the pieces have mostly sold). Even though they will be for sale at the coffee house, I’m definitely open to purchases that require shipping [grin!].

The Frayed Edges Artists’ Reception, Camden Public Library

Sunday, August 12th, 2007

On a glorious Saturday afternoon in Maine, we had our artists’ reception at the Camden Public Library. The room was colorful, even more so because of the gorgeous flowers Kate brought, some from her garden (sigh…someday I will have a garden that has SUN).

Thos flowers Kate also had the brilliant idea to put out some “Quilt Show” signs to alert passersby, and it worked! Unfortunately, I didn’t get pics of those, but I can tell you Kate made up the “flags” at home, then she and Kathy cut out the fused letters and ironed them on while camping at Mount Battie here in Camden, using the electricity in the bathroom. Now that’s dedication!Kathy, Hannah, front end of room

Just above, you can see Hannah, her oldest daughter, Kathy, a friend of Kathy’s and the “kitchen” end of the room (the kitchenette is behind the folding doors), with our refreshments table in the center with Kate’s beautiful batik cloth. Our grid piece is on the right.

Here is my dear friend Betty Johnson who came with her daughter Karen Martin. Both are mainstays in the Coastal Quilters, and I’m so glad they are both there. Betty is an amazing art quilter with an unerring eye, and Karen does the most perfect piecing I think I’ve ever seen…lots of detailed paper piecing too! Gorgeous! Betty is looking at our 5×5 / Five Artists, Five Views piece where each of us interpreted the same photo (each column), and where each row shows a single artist’s variation on the five photos. Betty looking at quilts

Betty also surprised me with this little “Inchie and three quarters”… I had bid on her small art quilt at our Coastal Quilters fundraiser but got outbid, but she remembered and made me a “congrats” on the show and my Quilting Arts article with her bunny fabric (I have a thing for bunnies). I may make this into a pin or necklace!

Betty’s Inchie and three quarters

Here’s a closer look at the items in the display case and above it (from left to right on the wall, Kathy’s birches, Sarah’s Autumn on the Village Green, and Kate’s interpretation of http://www.esteritaaustin.com/s pattern of a stone-flanked doorway):

Display case area

Here is another view, this time of the corner opposite the kitchenette, with my Koi on the far wall (the wall you see as you look through the doors into the Picker Room) and Deborah’s “Anthony Avenue” anchoring the wall on the right.

Hannah, Kathy and friend far end of room

I am still trying to catch up on lost sleep from all those hospital nights, but life is good. The show was fun, there are many wonderful comments in our guest show book (another one of Kate’s grand ideas!), Joshua is eating more, and getting more like his usual (sometimes teen-attitude) self, which means he is healing, his skin grafts look better (ok, less bad!) every day, and nighttime temps are ever-so-slightly beginning to drop. The first green acorns are already dotting the driveway, and school starts in 24 days. Not that I’m counting… GRIN! Now, to get to work on the book….

The Frayed Edges Show Opens!

Saturday, August 4th, 2007

The Frayed Edges Show at the Camden Public Library (Maine) is up and open for public viewing! And, thanks to sending out press releases, we have coverage in print and online from The Village Soup (Knox County edition) and The Camden Herald, which has a picture, too! The show is in the Jean Picker Room, on the lower level. If you enter from Atlantic street, pass the check-out desk and bear left past the “new books” and card catalog computers to the room. Here’s the view as you walk into the Picker Room, which holds a new show of various art media every month; the director for these programs popped in as we were hanging, and said again that his favorites are the quilt shows…yeah!

Right wall and far wall On Thursday morning, which was sunny, warm and sticky, Kate Cutko brought up her pieces and Hannah’s from the Bowdoinham area. Deborah has shipped hers from Dallas, and Kathy–who lives in China Village–had dropped hers off at my house earlier in the week since she had to work that day. Thank heavens Kate was there, as I was all butterfingers from so many nights and days at the hospital…I think she hung two pieces for every one I managed to get up! AND, we got all but one piece displayed! Then we trotted over to Rockport Blueprint, because she realized we ought to have a guest book, and bought one!

The day began with a wondrous gathering…the first time we were able to assemble our “grid” pieces! This was an idea I had to have each of us provide a photo, then all five of us interpret the photo in something small…the pieces are all 7 inches tall. The verticals are 5″ wide by 7″ tall, the horizontals are 10″ wide by 7″ tall (size was dicated by the space available between the chair rail and maximum upper viewing level!). They are arranged so that each artist has a row for their work, and each column is five variations of one photo. Then Kathy made a great poster (and labels for all our pieces) with the five original photos from which we drew our inspiration. Here’s Kate setting them out:First layout of grid pieces

As you walk into the Picker room, you can see the grid on the center of the left wall:right wall

This shot is from the grid, around the corner to the far wall (with all our junk on the table…the room looks better when we’re not in the middle of setting up…grin!), with my Koi quilt:

Right wall and far wallThen, turn the corner to the right wall, which has a collage of various works by four of us, Deborah’s “Anthony Avenue” piece anchoring that wall, two cool pieces (Kate’s nest on top, Deborah’s Encrusted Cairn on the bottom), Kathy’s pink flowers/trees/wonderfulness, then Hannah’s two pieces, and my Flying Toast about Gramma’s kitchen.left wall 2

Here’s the corner next to the doors, with Flying Toast again and a small piece which I forgot to tell Kathy about (actually forgot I had it!) called Essence of Summer Rose, a mixed media…quilt on painted canvas.

Left corner by doorJust to the left of the doors is a large display case with our group round-robin books, some of Deborah’s small pieces (we’re going to work on the display of those!), will add some of Kate’s Adoption Day cards (her website is here), and a few more items. Our binder with information about the show, a picture of all of us,the Winter 2006 Quilting Arts article about us, and artists’ statements is on to, along with the guest book and our cards. Above the case is Kathy’s birches and my Autumn on the Village Green.Cabinet wall

MANY of these pieces are for sale…if you are interested in any of them, just drop me a line and I’ll get back to you! Because Joshua is still in the hospital, it may take a couple of days, but I promise I’ll return e-mails as soon as I can.  More about Joshua soon.

We hope you’ll be able to come visit, and if you do please leave us a note in the guestbook on the display case.  AND if you’d like to be on our mailing list, or on my newsletter, please leave an e-mail address!