I am a textile artist and this blog documents my work. I spin, knit, weave and anything else that adds to the unique nature of my work. From one-off yarns and scarves to sculpture, these all make up my practice.
Thursday, 2 July 2020
Wednesday, 1 July 2020
July - Day 1 of 29
I have started my project for the Banyule Artists exhibition: Luminal // a Shared Distance
It's a month where each day I make a remembrance of a death in custody. Some days are precise, I do have dates from 2008 to 2020 courtesy of the Guardian database: Deaths inside
Here is my first:
Not quite the shape I thought I'd do, but it resonates well. I have to think more about the base. It will be circular like a clock.
Sunday, 14 June 2020
What is an Australian vision
We have an indigenous population that looks at the landscape through the lens of 60,000 years and produces suitably powerful art, and the relationship to land is inherent. Even when ties are broken, you would think genetic memory plays a part in any artistic response.
I am often drawn to English landscapes and do feel a comfortable resonance, whilst loving the Australian as well. My response to the Australian landscape has to come from outside the family and not from the guidance of past generations. This feels like a disconnect.
Modern and traditional indigenous art can speak to all of us and shows us a way of looking at our country. Hopefully, this art resonates, intrigues, challenges and we can be inspired and influenced by what we see. But it cannot be the way, as non-indigenous Australians, that we make art and show our view the country.
It's a difficult challenge. There have been non-indigenous artists that have shown the Australian landscape in a new way that seems to draw on all sorts of influences. My favourite two are Fred Williams and John Olsen.
Fred Williams, Hillside 1966 - Gallery of New South Wales |
John Olsen, Sun and Paella 1978 - Olsen Gallery |
At my core I'm a weaver. I want to find a way that this influences other aspects of my art. I continue to try and find my own voice.
Saturday, 6 June 2020
Experimental Spinning in isolation
As the Handweavers & Spinners Guild of Victoria has closed because of COVID-19 we have held our meetings virtually with a combination of WhatsApp and Zoom. It's hard to figure out how best to use them. I suspect many of the features are there, just have to find them.
For information on Border Leicesters see: https://www.thespinningloft.com/sheep-o-pedia/border-leic... and https://www.borderleicester.com.au/why-borders
I found a good video on tailspinning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xv24qJaEhpk
For core spinning yarn by Ninja Chickens- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KhRGnWdJeOc's
One good outcome is that I seem inclined to finish the different yarns we've done so far.
This is the bead yarn that seems to be a leftover from the last time we covered beads. The beads are dalmation beads and I put them on the single as it was spun. I've got some black alpaca that I'll spin and combine with this one.
We were supposed to look at Border Leicester, however, we weren't able to obtain some in time. I found some English Leicester and decided to do some tail spinning. I've only done it once before and this time it was more successful.
I found a good video on tailspinning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xv24qJaEhpk
The last one I've completed so far, we were blending all sorts of bits and pieces. I had wool, alpaca, threads and core spun around some 4 ply yarn which worked quite well.
This month we were playing with compost yarn that uses fabric and buttons. Lots of feathers were on the agenda for others in our virtual Experimental Group.
Friday, 5 June 2020
I need a pair of mittens
4th June, 2020
I decided yesterday afternoon to knit me a pair of mittens.
Well, it wasn't quite that sudden. I had decided that the pair of mittens that I had knit with yarn from Hawaii should be reknit and teamed with some hard wearing handspun yarn. The mittens had developed a hole which I didn't want to repair, as the mittens were quite flimsy.
However, between Round 6 and Round 7 of Sock Madness I had about 2 days. I'm no longer in the competition but was interested in knitting the socks with the beads which turn out to be the Round 7 socks. (192 beads is tantalising!) So I needed something quick.
I decided yesterday afternoon to knit me a pair of mittens.
Well, it wasn't quite that sudden. I had decided that the pair of mittens that I had knit with yarn from Hawaii should be reknit and teamed with some hard wearing handspun yarn. The mittens had developed a hole which I didn't want to repair, as the mittens were quite flimsy.
However, between Round 6 and Round 7 of Sock Madness I had about 2 days. I'm no longer in the competition but was interested in knitting the socks with the beads which turn out to be the Round 7 socks. (192 beads is tantalising!) So I needed something quick.
I used my favourite basic pattern book: Winter Warmers from Patons. (Book 483) It has lots of hats, scarves and mittens in different weight yarns and it is an essential item in my pattern collection.
This is them...
Happy and warm.
This is them...
Happy and warm.
So enjoyable, I did some more. Now I have a pair for the beach and one for the city.
Thursday, 4 June 2020
The Round the World Trip blanket
I'm trying to do a series of posts that catch up with this year. The first post is all about my trip blanket. I finally finished it in January, way after our return in September.
The idea was to get a ball of yarn everywhere we stayed. This didn't always work out, but in the major cities where we stayed, I managed to find a yarn shop and often some yarn that was from the local area. I used the 10 stitch blanket pattern as I could do the yarns in order, which sometimes gave odd results, but that was the point for me, to keep it in order. See: https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/ten-stitch-blanket
These are the shops I managed to find yarn:
Bellingham - Northwest Yarns, 1401 Commercial St., Bellingham
Haines - Dalton City Yarn, 312 Main St., Haines
Anchorage - Wooly Mammoth Alaska, 416 G Street, Anchorage
Talkeetna – The Patchwork Moose, 22262 Talkeetna Spur Road, Talkeetna, Alaska
I don't think I took a picture of the tiny bit of Quviut yarn I bought here!
Cordova - The NetLoft, 140 Adams Avenue, Cordova
New York - Purl Soho, 459 Broome St., New York
Boston - Newbury Yarns, Old South Meeting House, 2 Milk Street, Boston
Helsinki - Fiinaneule, Simonkatu 12, Helsinki
Edinburgh - McAree Brothers, 19 Howe Street, Edinburgh
Belfast – The Wicker Man, 18 High Street, Belfast
A great Irish Craft souvenir shop, well worth a visit. Even has yarn!
Cambridge - Sew, Knit, Craft, King St., Cambridge
Stow-on-the-Wold - Bourton Basket, The Old Forge, Moore Road, Bourton-on-the-Water
Maidstone - Hobbycraft Maidstone, St Peters Wharf, St Peter’s St., Maidstone
Faversham – The Yarn Dispensary, 6 Market Pl, Faversham, United Kingdom
Vienna – Meidlinger Knopfkonig, Meidlinger Hauptstrasse 32, 1120 Wien, Austria
Many birds migrate through Cordova, it is Alaska, and they created an exhibition of knitted birds and continues to get submissions from around the world. Have a look at this: https://thenetloftak.com/pages/copper-river-delta-birds-by-hand
Asking at a local cafe, it was admitted that they didn't know a women who didn't knit. If only it were true everywhere.
Oh, and here is the blanket...
Friday, 10 January 2020
Finished 'Secure' Sculpture
I have been working on this piece all last year. It's taken all year to work and resolve golf balls, clay, yarn, fence pailings and nylon wire into a finished piece.
I've called it 'Secure' asking the question in our Security obsessed century, whether security is an illusion.
It's now been entered into the brand new 'Australian Textile Art Award' and I wait to see if it has been accepted.
I've called it 'Secure' asking the question in our Security obsessed century, whether security is an illusion.
It's now been entered into the brand new 'Australian Textile Art Award' and I wait to see if it has been accepted.
However, I still think that there is a further iteration of this work to come!
UPDATE: It was accepted into the exhibition. However, due to COVID-19 all we were able to do was have a very small opening ceremony. Even in June, it's still sitting at the Embroiderer's Guild waiting to be seen.
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