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Sunday, July 5, 2009
Of Moss and Muslin... The Birth of a New Art Quilt... Finally!
But then this little lightening bug showed me the way...
I spotted her the other day crawling on a planter. I was taken by how her clay colored head was the same color as the clay pot, and at how vibrant the bright green moss was. This led me to look up and notice the moss growing on the tree trunk...
Which led me to impulsively run in the house grab some plain muslin fabric, soak it with the hose and rub it all over the tree trunk, (reason #325 the neighbors think I am a kook.)
While I was at it I also rubbed in some clay earth and a couple of decaying mushrooms...
After baking the wet and stained fabric in the sun, rinsing it well with the hose, hanging it to dry, and heat setting it with an iron, this is what I had.
And from there I started to quickly cut and sew my new stained fabric with plain muslin...
The colors faded a bit after a final wash in the machine... but I love the subtle shifts, how they melt into each other. I like the quietness of this quilt. It is very much in line with how my life feels currently.
There was never any question in my mind as how it should be quilted.
The understated colors work great with the densely quilted lines.
The backside is plain muslin... I like this, too. Just texture.
Due to the fact that I am unsure of the long term light fastness of the colors, I have decided to not put this one up for sale. I need to do more experimenting and testing before I felt comfortable. This also gives me a good excuse to keep it as I have just the spot in my not too sunny, pale green foyer to hang it!
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Mo and I really and truly appreciate all the continued loving thoughts and wishes shared with us from the last post.
From the bottom of our hearts, we thank you. xo
34 comments:
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This piece is lovely!
ReplyDeleteOh, what a cool piece. I love hearing about what inspired you to make this. I think this is incredible and even better is knowing where the colors came from. Keep going I think this was worth the wait.
ReplyDeleteI love the look of this quilt and I especially love the story of how it came to be. Very cool!
ReplyDeleteTruly creative!! Very inspiring!
ReplyDeleteV, You are a freakin genius!! There is not one thing about your work that doesn't make my skirt fly up! You are an inspiration!
ReplyDeleteI'm impressed that you took that inspiration and created something so quickly.
ReplyDeleteA beautiful piece.
Andi :-)
This is absolutely brilliant. I love the story of its creation, the colors, the quilting, the pattern, oh my. Just brilliant!
ReplyDeleteHugs to Mo...
Great come back!! I love the muted tones.
ReplyDeleteIt looks quite nice in that subtle colour scheme. Also, that's a lovely photo of the beetle.
ReplyDeleteWow, that's amazing. It has that lovely Gee's Bend feel to it as well, and the quilting is perfect!
ReplyDelete.... but you're my kind of kook...
ReplyDeleteNice way to bring nature into your work. Quite literally, too.
I love the story, the process and the result. Absolutely Gorgeous! It has a sense of serenity. You should definitely keep it to remind you of new found inspiration!
ReplyDeleteHugs)
Haha! I'd so love to be a fly on the wall at your neighbour's house while you're running around being a goof-ball! I can imagine the funny remarks they'd be making! "Ted, come look what that mad Vic is doin' to that tree...what is she doing Ted?" "Ummm...er... cleaning the moss off it by the looks of things" says Ted.
ReplyDeleteI love where you find inspiration! And I love even more what you do with your inspiration! Beautiful and brilliant! xo
V,
ReplyDeleteYour quilt is so special, inspirational and very beautiful. I think you have hit a theme here.
Give Mo a kiss on that pretty nose for me. x
Beautiful, I love how you get your inspiration :0)
ReplyDeleteLovely and soothing.
ReplyDeleteThis is the a very special piece. I hope you keep exploring in this vein.
ReplyDeleteLove it! Just think, you are making art and entertaining the neighbors at the same time!
ReplyDeletemo told me to tell you thats a lightening bug,,,,,,,,,
ReplyDeleteDuh!
ReplyDeleteMajor typo on my part, thanks for pointing out my mistake!
whoa! - this is seriously the coolest creative thing I've seen in long time! And lol about the neighbors - that is too funny.
ReplyDeleteWhat an amazing process! The result is beautiful, but the process is just leaving me speechless. How do you keep your eyes so wide open in the world?
ReplyDeleteCool experiment!!
ReplyDeleteIt reminds me how natural colored batik made here in my country-Indonesia. I even never try this method. Congart, Boo...lovely works :)
wow that is absolutely stunning Victoria, I love your process and that you even made the colours yourself. The end result is beautiful
ReplyDelete: )
I just looked at you sight and work for the 1st time. I love it. The dolls are wonderful. Thanks for sharing, Sarah in Houston
ReplyDeletethis is so earthy and beautiful
ReplyDeleteyou truly amaze me...i love how you talk about how this came to be....i'll bet your quite a conversation starter for the neighbors. a good thing!!
ReplyDeleteYour neighbors are the kooks....to be missing out on your genius!
ReplyDeleteLove your inspiration and the final result.
What about setting the natural dye with vinegar?
Thanks Charmaine. I thought about that after I washed it... should have added in some vinegar... will try that next time!
ReplyDeleteHmm, I should be doing something with my natural dyed stuff. Although, I was looking at my neighbour's mountain ash berries yesterday and wondering what they would do to some muslin...
ReplyDeleteLOVE the quilting on this. Such texture.
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ReplyDeleteHow clever you are to think of all that from what you saw. I am hoping that I will do more than just appreciate from now on and that I can find my muse as easily as you seem to.
ReplyDeleteI also send my thoughts to you and Mo we have a special friend here just like Mo and I know exactly how you feel.
www.onlineuniversalwork.com
ReplyDeleteThat is so cool Victoria, creating your own fabric like that! Moss is usually very hard to get off cloths, so it might not fade that fast. I love how subtle the colours are and the simple straight line quilting. That must have taken for ever!
ReplyDelete