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IQA Festival Houston, 2006–part 2B, Journal Quilts

November 10th, 2006

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I was browsing my on-line friend Janis’s on-line photo albums of Houston this morning, and she was kind enough to share this photo of the journal quilt area….and this is only one of four sides, and there were quilts all along the outsides of three of the “walls”. This shot really gives a good feel for how many, many, many journal quilts there are, how beautifully displayed things are at Festival, including the lighting which is so well done. Thanks for sharing, Janis!

IQA Festival Houston, 2006–part 2, Journal Quilts

November 9th, 2006

I joined the QuiltArt list in late 2002, just as everyone who participated in the journal quilts that first year was sending in their journals for display in Houston. I promptly signed up the next year, in January, to participate, and have been part of it ever since. This past year, Karey Bresenhan, one of the founders of IQA and Festival (and a lot of other great stuff) put together a book called Creative Quilting: The Journal Quilt Project.

The book, by the way, can be ordered online from Quilting Arts Magazine, which is also the publisher. As usual for their magazine and books, the photography is what quilt photography ought to be! First I’ll show you a little bit of the journal exhibit this year, then share the book.

Here I am standing next to my journals…it was so cool, the first time I walked up there were two women both taking pictures of my journals….how cool is that?!

And here are my friend Marie’s journals this year, about her many cats:

I totally LOVED the green silk border on this one:

I’m honored to have not one or two but five journals in this book, including my very first ever. The January 2003 journal is extra special because I asked both Karey and my oldest son Joshua for the “OK” (and received it!) to use a piece of Joshua’s second grade art as the basis for my first journal. I was surprised when we were given the chance to edit our text for the book to realize that a mere three years ago I was using paint and metallic threads on a quilt for the first time…what a long way I’ve come in such a short time! You should have seen Joshua’s eyes light up when I opened the book first to “his” page and he said “that’s that’s that’s my thing!”

And even better, it made the introductory pages…look at the thumbnails on the bottom right, and that’s it on the left side!

A while back the editor, Patricia Bolton, told me I had made the opening of the section of the Flowers, Plants and Trees Chapter (the book is divided into 1-Series, 2-Stories, 3-Flowers, Plants and Trees, 4-Animals and Insects, 5-Landscapes and Special Places, 6-Faces and Figures, and 7-Abstract). Well, it was even better than that…turn the page from the divider to Chapter 3 and this is what you see….all three of these are my journal quilts! The large one is from January 2004, the others are the January and February 2006 journals:

Finally, I have a self-portrait in Chapter 6, Faces:

This quiltlet was also from 2004; I used Photoshop Elements to turn a photo (snapped with a so-so camera by holding it at arms’ length and clicking!) into a black and white, then re-colored with thread.

And the story wouldn’t be complete without Marie. She and I began the journal journey together, and they even hung our two series next to each other in 2003. She submitted the first two photos for 2006 not realizing they were also being considered for the book…not only did they both make it, but they both got full-page spreads, AND the one of Odie was the one and only journal quilt (out of about 1800!) that was included in the show catalog!!!! Way to go Marie!

Just to give you an idea of the scope of the exhibit, here is one shot of the display this year:

There were something like 200 series of journals…in this photo you can see only nine of those 200…..drat, wish I’d taken the wwwiiiiddddeeeee angle view photo!

There will apparently be just one more year for the journal quilt exhibit, and Karey has said it will be different than these first five years. We have no idea what she has up her sleeve, but I’m sure it will be good. Karey always has great ideas, and I’ll just have to wait until after the New Year to find out “what’s next.”

Elation and the Twilight Zone

November 8th, 2006

Here’s the elation part: OK, I’m about to pop so I’m gonna share it here! Karey Bresenhan and her cousin Nancy O’Bryant are two of the four founders of Festival (also known as Mecca to quilters, and located in Houston), along with their late mothers. One of their enviable jobs is to purchase quilts for the International Quilt Festival Collection. I am honored and humbled that they have selected The Tide is Hire to be in that collection!

Elated doesn’t begin to cover it….how about rocketing past Saturn with Neptune rapidly coming into view? This is the first (and I will certainly work hard to assure it is not the last) major sale for me, and I am so thrilled that Karey and Nancy thought so highly of my work. I will strive to live up to their confidence in me, and am itching to get back to the studio. I can still scarcely believe that my work will join that of so many famous quilters, but I’ve even printed out the e-mail so I can keep checking it to make sure the words haven’t changed LOL!

And in another bit of disbelief…or…..

entering the Twilight Zone:

I am now, officially as of 9:17 p.m. EST, the mother of a teenager. Yep, that’s my thirteen year old boy! Love him to bits, too! His first words this morning were “that’s the coolest balloon I’ve ever seen” (well, after “I don’t feel good can I stay home today” because he was actually running a bit of a fever):

And he was thrilled with his gifts from the three of us: three classic rock CD’s including Pink Floyd’s The Wall, Led Zeppelin IV, and a Van Halen CD that Eli knew Joshua wanted. Way cool! And this evening, we celebrated the fact that he doesn’t feel sick any more with his favorite thing for his birthday: pumpkin pie!

And here he is, risking lighting his head on fire with all that hair hanging over the candles:

And Paul decided to have a little pie under his whipped cream!

With all its ups and downs, I wouldn’t trade a nanosecond of the past thirteen years with Joshua and then Eli. They make life wonderful!

IQA Festival Houston, 2006–part 1

November 8th, 2006

This year has been a good one…in addition to the dyeing workshop with Carol Soderlund, I got to attend Festival with Marie, my bestest buddy who still lives in Washington state. Here we are on preview night at her Garden of “A” quilt, a combination of blocks from the Dear Jane and Dear Hannah books by Brenda Papadakis. Marie designed the original setting on this huge quilt, and it was juried into the “In Full Bloom” exhibit, her first time ever being juried into Houston. I’m thrilled beyond belief and so proud of her. The first time we went to Houston, 3 years ago, was when we did our first journal quilts and I got juried in for the first time. It’s fun to take turns!

As always, Festival was HUGE, inspiring, overwhelming, led to sore feet and back, and the determination to try harder and do better than ever. For this first post, I’ve shared Marie’s first quilt in Houston already, and here is my quilt The Tide is Hire in the Viking Exhibit,

As a dyed-in-the-cloth art quilter, but with roots firmly planted in traditional quilting, I was surprised that my all-time favorite quilt of the show was La Avena Romantica, by M. Mizuno of Japan.

and here is the “blurb” sheet on this quilt:

Usually I am drawn to bright, clear colors and loose, free style. But I just loved this highly structured, muted piece. The tiny grains on the barley stalks are individually appliqued…each one the size of a pencil eraser! The white circles around the sheaf of barley are embroidered, and it looked like the whole piece was made of fine woolens (though the information says it is all cotton). Here are two details shots:

In the coming days I’ll share more of my favorite things from Festival, including the awesome journal quilts and book. In the meantime, if you’d like to see more, click on the ruby slippers at the Quilts, Inc., website here or click here to go directly to Festival coverage. I’m proud that both my Viking entry and one of my journal quilts are featured on the webcast. To see the Viking entry, click on the link at the top of the page for Husqvarna Viking Gallery (it’s alphabetical order so I’m on the last screen), and for the February 2006 journal quilt click on the Journal Quilts 2006 link–on the second page of images.

Journal quilts–July, August and September

November 7th, 2006

The color series continued throughout the summer. For my July Journal, I took a picture of my son playing his guitar. I used my favorite method: size picture on the computer screen and trace! Although his left hand seems distorted it atualy looked just like that in the photo. This is an analogous warm scheme: orange-red-warm tan on black. It is bound with cloth on the sides, and the edges top and bottom are finished with a couched black chenille yarn.

The August journal is my favorite of the entire series. When we were in Sarasota after our Disney cruise, visiting Paul’s aunt and uncle, the hotel we were in had an outdoor pond with koi. The one with the fluttery fins and tail enchanted me. I swapped pond-scum green of the pond for the complement of red-orange: turquoise! ZING! I love the way this turned out so much, using the fused sheers and the layered background, that I want to make a huge, oversized quilt with koi….larger than life size…what revelling in joyful color!

The last journal, for September, is the “Y” trees. This is a shaded (darkened) secondary triadic colors: purple-green-orange. The fabricds are my hand-dyeds except for the two smaller trunks and the orange slivers. Since there was a lighter, sun-doing-down spot on the sky, I highlighted / backlit the trees from that side with the orange. Then I “ghosted” in more trees in the intermediate spaces. This journal is a study for a larger quilt, and both are based on…ge this! The backs of the chairs in the Lumiere Dining Room on the Disney Cruise Ship Magic! Very art deco, turned into landscape…. almost a cathedral of the Nightwood……the branches of the trees like the flying buttresses on Gothic Cathedrals….