Sunday 6 December 2020

growth and green

I have been adding some green growth to my layers test piece. The river brings growth, and we harnessed that growth for our own purposes back in those Mesopotamian days to extraordinary effect. In the distance, space marked out for a fragment of royal inscription. I was amused, when picking up my test cuneiform stitching to judge the size of that space, to find myself turning it the right way up - which tells me the stitching has, at least, taught me a bit about how to view cuneiform :-)


Then there is this, one of many reels of, for the most part unusable thread, having aged to fragility, that I have inherited from mother, grandmother, aunt and probably great grandmother. This was probably produced in wartime, a delightfully informative website tells me.


isn't the green delicious


I'm using it in a piece we did with Cas Holmes, a delightful teacher and artist, whose work I have admired for many years. The workshop, run over two sessions, focused on how we could blend momigami, "very squashed" paper, and textile scraps, in a piece with both hand and machine stitch. It was so enjoyable, in particular because she was teaching us via Zoom sessions, which bring their own challenges. The first was in part about preparation of the papers we had selected, by crumpling and kneading them in our hands until they loss their stiffness and became more fabric like - this is the momigami element. She encouraged us to layer these with scraps of fabric, pinning them to a calico backing, then stitching them loosely down using expressive stitches that worked with the underlying strata. In the second session she showed us how she uses machine stitch over the initial stitch layer, painting into the fabric with thread, creating texture and highlights, turning the piece over to stitch from the back to add elements of less purposeful stitch. Throughout both sessions she also talked to us about the design process, using her own work to show us examples of how the layers come together. Here she is talking about her piece "In Great Grandmothers' Shadow".

So far, I have got to here, a sort of landscape, with sort of buildings, and a ground layer to divide the space. 

As you'll see I've not reached the machining stage yet, and the paper element of this is so fragile that I suspect it will disintegrate once I start. For Cas that is a good thing; something she uses in her work and I can see its potential. But for this bit of stitching, I'm not so sure - which probably means I really should, and learn from moving beyond my inhibitions. For now I have just done hand stitching, and am happy with the result, though I feel it needs a bit more. I enjoyed the tactile nature of the paper, the difference in sound both as the needle and thread pass through, and the sound and feel as you handle it, skin rubbing against different fibres. I may well explore more, another way of layering.

I hope your stitching week has been good?

5 comments:

  1. Love that reel of green thread !
    Ohhhhh momigami papers : a delight !!! (and the paper is so strong then !)

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    1. Hi Els, of course, you did this workshop with Cas in August didn't you, and your little collaged landscape is so beautiful. I found myself quite outside my comfort zone which is usually considered a Good Thing :-)
      Myrtle was my Mum's nickname when she first started work after moving to Sussex, which makes me smile. It was also the name of my previous car - being bright green!

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  2. Yes, we learn odd things through our stitching. There was a time when I could almost read Morse Code.... I'm intrigued by everything here. I would have doubts about machine stitching too, but that may be because my old treadle machine is out of balance and a pain to stitch with!

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    1. Hi Rachel, you use Morse in your signature of pieces don't you?
      I think I still feel machine stitching would be wrong, though I do have my Aunt's lovely old Bernina if I change my mind, it never lets me down. I am still a bit of a coward with machine embroidery though - having stitched my finger twice now, but Christine of Studio 11 is taking us in hand with that for the Poetry of Stich course we are Zooming with her.
      I followed a trail down a rabbit hole after an en passant comment you made on Episode 37 and found myself watching your husband juggle - he's rather good isn't he ;-)

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  3. thank you for your recent comment on Hertstitch - you clearly went further with a 2 day course, i saw your comments on Facebook - but i have followed you here and find that you have been doing Poetry in Stitch with Christine Chester .... i am about to start that online in January and would be interested to hear your thoughts on it - i can be contacted through hertstitch@gmail.com

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