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Showing posts with label quilts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quilts. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Petit Fours

You may remember this quartet of quilts from an earlier post:
Inspired by a comment from a friend I decided to call them "Petit Fours" Which I happen to think is dreadfully funnny, just wish I had thought of it.
And here are the Petit Fours as a part of my Featured Artist display with some hand dyed scarves and some of my glazed glass.

They are:
Petit Four 1, 2, 3 and 4
Hand dyed cotton
Fused and Machine Quilted
6.5 x 6.5 framed to 15 x 15
$169 each

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Community Bazaar

Photos from the holiday show. My booth had painted art glass and hand made soap:
Dichroic glass pendants:
Hand dyed silk scarves, cut velvet scarves and cut satin scarves blowing in the wind:
Some quilts around the edges
And lots and lots of sunshine! Yay for sunshine, otherwise the cold would have gotten me!
It was a good day, lots of people came through and a few friends dropped by to say hi. Our local paper sent a reporter and he quoted the most mundane thing I said and they ran photos of board looking venders. Oh well. We set up at 7 am and went home at about 4:30 pm, it was a long cold day but worth it. I went home and curled up under lots of blankets, happy to be in out of the cold!

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Framed Mini Quilts

While shopping the other day I came across a number of ready made frames and decided to pick up a few and experiment with some of my mini art quilts. So take a look and tell me which ones you like the best.
This is a large floating frame with no glass. It is 17x17 and the quilt is 6x6 inches. $185 I love how much dimension is in this kind of framing.
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This is a small quilt behind glass, and also under a double mat in a chocolate brown frame. It's 13.5 x 13.5 inches. $69
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This one is similar, a 17.5 x 14.5 inch frame with a long narrow quilt in it. This one is mounted over the mat board so that the edges of the quilt still show. $84
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This is a table top 8x10 shadow box frame, it has no hardware to hang it on the wall. $45
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This one is a traditional shadow box frame. 12x12 and rather deep. I like how the photograph turned out but this quilt is not for sale. I added some crystals and glass to the surface of this quilt. As you can see, it has found a good place in my home.
For more information on the mini quilt series, and better photographs of these quilts before framing, they live here.

Which framing options do you like best?

Monday, May 4, 2009

Oh, You're an Artist? What Media?

I’ve been hearing that question a lot lately and sometimes I’m not certain how to respond. I’ve worked in a wide variety of media over the years and naming every one of them doesn’t seem like the answer that fits the situation in most cases. I’ll generally say something like “well, today it was jewelry” or “I’m currently working in textiles and soap making.” I also hear people making a distinction between arts and crafts, considering soap making to be a craft and drawing or painting to be an art. Plus I sometimes hear people make the assumption that to be an artist means that I paint pictures. Well, I’m here to set the record straight. Or at least my little part of the record.Over the years I wrestled with myself, learning early on that art was considered a luxury by most people, the kind of thing one does if one has leftover time and resources. I believed at the time that I’d always make a living some other way, that art would be/could only ever be my hobby. But something changed all that. I remember the first time I came home to my identity as an artist. I was a student in college, I had three years of a Social Work degree and I’d just been denied entrance into the Social Work department at my college. I hated the classes and dreaded most of the professors, my grades were horrible, but I was learning stuff that was impacting my life anyway. (When I showed up.) Their rejection sent me reeling, I was young and ultra-idealistic and I wanted to make a difference in the world. And it seemed that my friends thought this is how one could go about that – by helping people as a Social Worker. It was a turning point for me, one of several. Now college was on my dime and I went off to Art School. I finished my education with excellent grades and a group of professors that I enjoyed. I had come home to my identity as an artist.Faced with real life on outside the hallowed halls of education, I got jobs. “Real jobs.” And I hated most of them. I’m rather creative and I tended to be bored out of my mind with a new job after only three months. My creativity was becoming a liability and there were very few jobs that I kept for any real length of time. I worked for liars, thieves and crazy people mostly. And in my thirties I found myself in the wilderness of Virginia, betrayed by my spiritual parents, suffering some huge personal losses and in one of the darkest depressions of my entire life. And something amazing happened.
"Lady Liberty" Watercolor
I had a dream in the night. I was in a room rimmed with doors and each door led to a different reality. There was one door that led to a well worn path that was hanging on by only one hinge. There were other doors that were solid and unyielding. I knew in the dream that something was about to happen, that I needed to prepare. I knew I had to close the doors to prepare. And so I went around that room pulling those doors shut. Some clicked closed easily, and the one door that led to the garden was so worn that I had to finagle it closed with a bit of stray wire. I left that room through one door and into other dreamscapes that evening.

"The Homestead by Morning Light" Watercolor plus Colored Pencils
The following day I sat at my desk (I was working as an art salesperson in a high end gallery that dealt in antique artwork) I began to explore what this amazing vibrant dream meant to me. I believe that dreams are parables, and sometimes meaning can be found there that applies to life. And I found in that dream the story of my life. I had tried many different things and nothing held my attention though I always went home to the same hobby. I had a visitation that day with God. There was an amazing presence in that room, it was a very rich spiritual environment that day. And my Creator began to show me a few things that I hadn’t really understood up until that time."Dogwood" (my first art quilt) hand dyed fabrics, sheers, beads and ribbon.
I pulled out paper and began to write down the labels on all the doors of my life, all the opportunities I’d had and all the things I wanted to do someday. And when I finally sat back and looked at the list, God gave me a gift of clarity. I saw on that page a person who had tried every door in the room but never gotten very far down any path. I realized that it was time to close all the other doors and walk through the one marked “artist.” And it hit home. My Creator had made me to be an artist. And while others may consider it a luxury or something only ever worthy of being a hobby, it was and is my calling.
"Floral Pearl Necklace" sorry the photo is so washed out.
People who have had a brush with death talk about their lives passing before their eyes. Well, I had my theology passing before mine. All the Bible verses I’d studied looking for meaning were now parading through my head. And some things clicked into place like nothing I’ve seen before. I could write volumes of the “download” that occurred in that place that day (I will write that book!) but this isn’t the place. I can only say that that day I became aware of a sense of calling and the infilling of the Holy Spirit. I recognized that I had skill, ability and knowledge that had been given or orchestrated by God. I was an artist, it was a revelation. That is my open door, and that is what my dream taught me. I realized that day that it didn’t matter what media I worked in, what mattered was that I released and reflected the beauty of God into the earth. And that can be done in a million different ways."Healing Hands" created for John Dufour with prints made for the Dufour family.
So I work in a variety of media, some folks will consider some of them art and some craft. I tend to believe that anything that an artist does is art, that craft is for those with hobbies. Not to suggest that everything I create is worth sharing – no! I have quite a bit of reject projects in storage, just ask my ex-husband! "The Winter Rose" pen and ink drawing for a program cover.
I’ve sold artwork or won awards in the following art media: In art school I concentrated mainly on painting and Interior Design in addition to a wide variety of media that I explored there. Jewelry design - beading in particular. My biggest award to date was in jewelry design and I’ve had work on the back cover of beading magazines and in catalogs. "Autumn" Mixed media college, cinnamon, pumpkin seeds, paper towel, buttons, photos, glazes, etc.
I won a “Best in Show” award for a piece that was mixed media collage with glazes and found objects.
"Iris" Watercolor layered with Colored Pencils
I’ve also won awards for a piece that was a combination of watercolor layered with colored pencils and another piece that was a pencil drawing. "Iris" a pencil portrait inspired by meeting Jeff Chapmen-Crane
Another award came for my hand painted art glass (not molten glass work but creating a finish on reclaimed glass.) Let’s see… polymer clay, mostly to make beads and jewelry components. Uh… painting in acrylics, oils and watercolors. Drawing in pencil, pen & ink and colored pencils. Recently I’ve revived an interest in quilting, launching into hand dying fabrics in cotton, linen and silk and very soon I’ll be trying marbling some fabric. I’m looking forward to that. I’ve done some banners and art instillations with fabric in a congregation I attended in the 90’s that was very open to experiencing God through the arts. I’ve designed a few homes and designed quite a few renovation projects and done all my own Interior Design work. I’ve toyed with metal clay, print making, ceramics, enamels, wire working, and metal working.
"HOPE" a quilt inspired by the work of Melody Johnson
I do all my own product photography and dabble in other kinds of photography. I’ve worked for quite some time as a professional cake designer and I’ve toyed with gourmet chocolate. Oh, and a florist, I did that also for a few years. And that’s all I can think of at the moment.
"Tiara" custem order for Prom inspired by the work of Bekki Fahrer.
Product Photography by Charles Garratt
Oh, I write poetry and other stuff. I have co-written and directed an impressionistic drama, and I periodically perform music – vocal and piano. I dabble in guitar and I’ve written a few songs. So clearly I’ll try anything that is creative. Oh, I almost forgot to mention that I’m the Soap Lady at the local farmer’s market. I love creating new kinds of soap that marry the visual elements of color and texture with the sense of smell. I consider it an artistic treat to include fragrance in my work. That laundry list sounds like I’m bragging but I know that the gift to create didn’t come from me, I am only its steward. And that only by Grace. So ask me again what media I work in and I’ll respond with what I’m doing at the moment. Tomorrow it might be something else altogether. I’m an artist and honestly the media really doesn’t matter - at least not to me. I was designed to create, to release God’s beauty in the earth. And so with a huge helping of God’s grace… ever onward. I am Carmen Rose. I am an artist. And I am grateful.

Friday, January 16, 2009

The Fabulous Frogs (for one of my tadpoles)

I haven’t gotten as much piecing done around here lately. I was so tired last evening that I feel asleep on the sofa so I got up and went to bed at 8:30 pm, so unlike me! Then I slept clear through until my usual time of around 7 am, so that is pretty strange. Some of my other work is taking more out of me than I would have thought I suppose.

It’s cold here. CRAZY cold! Like it takes an extra ten minutes to get out to work just to get the hat, coat and gloves all done up tight. Eww! Then when the wind hits it's time to get a MOVE ON! Hubby made a fire in the fireplace which is wonderful and cozy. There is nothing better than a fire on a cold cold day! I’m still wishing for snow, I’m sure that will come soon enough. I don't want a little snow, cause getting down off our hill is scary in a little snow. I want a BIG snow, enough to keep me on my hill all day long!

Something is wrong with one of my dogs, so I’m really keeping an eye on her. Border Collies don’t move slowly unless something is wrong, and she’s been very slow this morning and favoring a front paw. I hope that laying in a patch of sunshine and having a string of lovely naps is what she needs to heal up good and strong! I hate it when anything is wrong with either of my BC girls! Say a prayer for my poochy if you're the praying kind. Thanks!



(dyed and read to mark, the white pattern from the white on white fabric still shows)

In between the usual stuff I’ve been working at my “peace, joy and hoppiness” frog quilt. Yesterday I pulled out some white on white prints and lightly dyed them by hand. I Used PEBEO Setacolor thinned down and applied with paint brushes. (I am a HUGE PEBEO fan!!) Then I came along with my fabric markers to bring out some details. (Marvy Uchida) I have these and I use them, but I've also got my eye on these fabric markers from PEBEO! Anyway, then I went through again with some gold gutta for detailing, another PEBEO product. It adds something that you catch when you're close up that is pretty extra special!
I played with the layout, seeing how the pieces seemed to want to go together.
I followed the pattern of the fabric for the detail on "PEACE" and it looks great upclose. It is not nearly this washed out in person. That's a camera flash issue.


A few days ago I pieced the letters “JOY.” I started with the J and expected to make them all pretty normal and equal in size. But then when I was in the middle of the O I decided it needed something. Later on I’ll add some buttons to that one. And when I laid them out on the table the Y just begged to be tall and skinny. So there they are, some funky letters. I made “hoppiness” and "peace" the right sizes to fit into the design and then added a few strips around the edges to get it to the size I wanted. I’ve got lots of other blocks made so it will be interesting to see how it all fits together.

These letters have spots and coloration that matches the frogs in the commercial fabric. It begs to be looked at closely.

A tiny bit of the gold gutta detailing shows in this photo. (Mostly if you already know where to look!)


It is fun to see it take shape! I talked to my mother-in-law about hand quilting this one for me. I hope to get at least a few stitches in there from my husband's grandmothers as well, though they are both advancing in years and don't quilt much anymore. It is a family tradition that each new addition to the family gets a quilt with hand quilting by the grandmas. It is a good tradition and I hope that my children are able to appreciate these quilts as symbols that they are connected to a loving family, adopted by many more than just their dad and me.
Now I've got some more work to do. It will be fun to see how this piece fits together with the other blocks sitting on my table. I think that will be an interesting puzzle! It's funny, I decided against making a sketch for this piece and it has made the process more open to unexpected twists and turns. That works for me. As far as I'm concerned it's all about the process! The end product is important, but it's not everything! Not even close.

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AND...

The Lovely Barbara Stroup mailed me the cutest doggy fabric EVER for this project! And her doodles on the envelope were SO fun! That's Me, Carmen (Love her writing!) and three new rosebuds! I LOVE that! And BUTTONS! All tied in a beautiful ribbon! Seriously, I've been itching to do something with buttons so I did a little dance when I saw these beautiful bright buttons! I LOVE this and I'm already thinking about how to use the adorable poochys! :) Thanks Barbara!!! And check out her work! She's doing some really fun things with houses! I'm loving this process of finding new artists who create really cool work! YAY! Thank you so much Barbara!
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