Saturday, February 13, 2021
Beaky (Or Julie?) the Greedy Duck
Sunday, February 7, 2021
Light at the End of the Tunnel - Getting Started
Once again, the guild gauntlet has been laid down. This year’s quilting challenge: The Light at the End of the Tunnel. I’m hoping that when I read this in a few years’ time I won’t remember why we needed to visit this particular concept.
It’s now been a year since I’ve seen the other guild members in person, except for “lucky” circumstances - like when we’ve crossed paths in the hospital or at the drug store. Such is the wonder of living in a small city. Like everyone else in my life, they have receded into figures that populate Zoom meetings, FaceTime sessions, or primitive non-video phone calls. It’s a scary fact that the non-family member I’ve seen the most in the last year is the woman who cuts my hair. And right now, even she is out of reach, all stores and so-called non-essential services being closed. Strangely, dog groomers are open. They refuse to cut my hair. These are trying times.
Yes, it’s COVID time. We’re one year into a pandemic. Each dwelling is a private fortress. No non-family member can enter your personal Fortress of Solitude. You can leave, but only at your own peril. Social gatherings, travel, and shopping have fallen into the forbidden zone; fashion has ceased to exist unless you are considering what face mask matches your parka. We have all become major consumers of alcohol – on our hands. For the first time in my privileged life, I am witnessing poorly stocked shelves in grocery stores, something I’d previously thought impossible.
“What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger”. This bit of folk wisdom basically means, meh, wait it out. You’ll adapt. You won’t necessarily be made stronger by adversity, but as time passes the hideous situation you’re facing will seem less onerous, giving you the illusion that you are stronger. And really, you don’t need much more than illusion to get through situations you can’t possibly change.
Different people are coping with the pandemic in different ways. My sister is accessing every written word and podcast on the subject of coronavirus, knowledge being a cushioning sword. My husband is tracking vaccine news at a fevered pace that has me running for the thermometer. He gives hourly reports on the hopeful/shocking/enraging/encouraging statistics as they vacillate like lathered-up horses toiling along in the Kentucky Derby.
So, you can see why Light at the End of the Tunnel became the concept for this year’s quilting challenge. Now there doesn’t have to be an actual tunnel, the idea is to create something that makes you feel joyful, happy or hopeful. Actually, reading over the minutes of the last meeting, I see it is “joyful, happy and hopeful”, but I’m pretty sure in that tall order, “or” should be substituted for “and”. Nailing all three seems more like a lifetime pursuit, not a quilting challenge.
Of course, I am inclined to take things in a literal direction, so I immediately started exploring tunnels. Virtually, of course. I looked at online photos of tunnels, and investigated arches as well, because when seen in a disappearing cascade, they suggest tunnelishness. Concentric rings and the like were also potential creative fodder. All of these photos looked great, but, ugh, what about that ever-present monster, The Copyright Beast? Of sure, you can try to contact the photographer to get permission to do a derivative work, but, HA, just try to find that mythical unicorn-of-a-person after their photo has been sent through the mill of Google and Pinterest postings! Sherlock Holmes would despair of ever pulling the cat of that labyrinthic bag.
Never mind the photos. I drew a picture of a tunnel (okay, it was just a doodle) but could not make myself scale it up into a quilt. It seemed like something that would reactivate my vertigo if it ballooned into anything big enough to be hung on the wall. I didn’t want to quilt anything that would require maintaining an ongoing therapeutic level of Gravol in my bloodstream.
I consulted some photos we had taken of Kettle Valley Steam Railway in British Columbia. This is a tourist site of walking trails through defunct railway tunnels. My photos were so-so. I had been more enamored with the rarity of playing with a flashlight in a tunnel than I was of capturing clever, nested tunnel photos. Nothing quilt-worthy there. Maybe I could do a flashlight in a tunnel...oh wait, I forgot to take a picture of that.
I consulted my artist friend. She’s not a quilter, but when it comes to designing something, your medium of choice doesn’t matter. Through discussions with her, I was yanked out of my blocked tunnel and into thinking about the actual concepts at stake: joy, happiness, hope. I started to think that COVID with its seemingly infinite imposed limitations was perhaps not the first “tunnel” I had encountered.
Every life comes with at least a dollop of adversity, and sometimes it comes with gobs, shovelfuls, or even truckloads of the stuff. It’s part of living, and like the days where you realize you left your wallet at home after pumping the gas, there’s just no getting around it. But sometimes, you can temporarily escape from hardship. Like everything else to do with the pandemic, it will have to be a virtual escape. And while I’ve been known to perform my virtual escape act with tubs of ice cream, I do have to admit that is a fairly risky option if deployed too often. And I have a drawer full of elastic topped pants to prove it.
But…what about…fiction? Haven’t I done a disappearing act into fiction since I first encountered Beaky the Greedy Duck (so, so, SO, much more greedy and imperfect than me!) and Nancy Drew? Didn’t I solve mysteries with Nancy when I lacked a playmate (as close as I got to the “end of the world” in my gloriously simple childhood) or the day I broke the frog flowerpot? Didn’t I fight jungle ants with Tom Stetson when boredom threatened to chew off the edges of my soul? Weren’t Charlie Brown and Snoopy my guiding lights who were not only funny but who seemed perhaps a little less lucky than me, making my own particular tunnel a little shinier? These beacons were the collective fictional souls who had populated my childhood when the real stuff was, well, just too real.
Surely, they were quilt worthy. I
wondered if using images of them would awaken the slumbering Copyright Police. It’s a good thing Charles
Schultz wasn’t looking over my shoulder during all those hours when eight-year-old
me was trying to perfect my own Snoopy drawings!
I decided I would have to be willing to just take the insane risk of
having Charles Shultz’s estate sue me for stitching one image of Charlie
Brown. Surely, they would not do this to
me after I’d spent the better part of my allowance on those 40 cent joke books
for years on end, and then sheltered those same books for over fifty years. They would show compassion. It’s pandemic
time! We all have to make sacrifices.
So, I’ve taken Charlie Brown and Snoopy and characters from Frogmorton, and I’ve outline stitched them onto unbleached cotton, and coloured them with Inktense pencils. I have no idea if these squares and the others honoring my favorite fictional characters will ever make it into a finished quilt, or if perhaps they will just end up in a really pretty box sharing space with the dust bunnies under the bed. But, while making these squares, I have indeed experienced joy, happiness, and hopefulness. I’ve also experienced the nostalgia of knowing that every member of my childhood household read these Peanuts joke books. Numerous times. And there it is - the light at not only the end of the tunnel, but at the beginning as well.
Saturday, February 6, 2021
The Tunnel Journey - Looking for the Light at the End of the Tunnel
February 2021 - Books that have inspired the Tunnel Journey
The design of quilts often has curious origins. My current project has involved a lot of reflection on tunnels.
We routinely drive through tunnels without much of a thought. But have you ever noticed that a feeling of relief comes over you when the light at the far end is sighted, and you know for certain that you will make it through? It’s a bit of sparkle that comes unbidden from somewhere deep in our psyche.
We often casually use the expression “the light at the end of the tunnel” without really digging into its meaning. Tunnels are a deep metaphor for trouble in our lives, and how we must strive/endure/cope until that stressful situation comes to some kind of resolution. The current pandemic has been a globally shared tunnel for over a year now. Many exit routes are offered up; at this moment, all are tantalizingly beyond our grasp. But, slowly, we are making our way toward those exits.
Mired in various tunnels over the years, I have often turned to the distraction of fiction and stories. Their characters easily populated my overactive imagination as a child. These fictional friends often allowed me to find a bit of respite while battling my way out of a tunnel - which in my younger days was usually something monumental - like having my skipping rope stolen right out of my hands. Stories were a great place to wait it out, and looking back, I can see many covert lessons in those stories. Morals, values, aspirations, humor – they were all there, carving out new ways of being, tweaking my character as I empathized with the woes of Charlie Brown, shared the lonely triumphs of Superman, saw my own childish anguish diminish as Rudolph’s imperfection was finally recognized as an essential save-the-day asset.
Unknowingly, I have spent a lifetime under the influence of fictional characters who not only held my hand, but handed me the necessary tools I needed to negotiate the unexpected tunnels of life. And as I take a step back to soak in the big picture, I can see what stitches our lives together. It’s the stories. They become the framework for how our lives unfold as they weave in and out of the stories of those we encounter. Some stories intersect for a paragraph, some for a chapter, and some are spread across the encyclopedic volumes that stack up behind us over the decades. Each story has a beginning, and an ending, and if we are really lucky, a lesson or two that will propel us forward.
So, when challenged at our quilt guild to come up with a “light at the end of the tunnel” quilt, I went down a few tunnels, ultimately deciding to yield centre stage to my fictional friends and mentors who have journeyed the unanticipated tunnels with me over the years. The next post details the beginning of this journey.
Sunday, December 13, 2020
Full Moon
I can't help but feel that this quilt is a complete cheat.
One of the many fun parts of belonging to a quilt guild is doing the challenges. Recently, we did an “ugly fabric challenge”. Participants brought in a piece from their stash, something that they considered to be ugly. A draw ensued and each person received their “ugly” fabric, with no restrictions as to how it was to be used, except that it had to be recognizable in the final piece. In other words, no over-dyeing or cutting it up into confetti-sized pieces, or using it on the back. It had to be legit.
Some doozey fabric swatches came in, and since the person who donated each piece was not identified, even the purple fabric that looked so attractive in the 1980’s was game. That one, despite the randomness of the draw, went to the purple-hating quilter. Of course.
The piece I donated was viewed by several quilters as “quite nice” and “not ugly at all”. There was even a comment of “Gee, I really like that one”. I viewed it with fresh eyes and decided that, yes, it was not nearly as unattractive as I had thought. I started to feel a teensy bit sad that I was letting it go. Hadn' I once loved that fabric? Later on while combing through a drawer of fabric at home, I found that I had given away the wrong piece, and the one that was truly ugly was still grinning at me from the drawer.
I was hoping to receive something I could really get my teeth into. But when my name was drawn I got a lovely piece of fabric. How could anyone ever view it as “ugly”? However, while it was not exactly ugly, it did not easily lend itself to the creation of an art quilt. Doing a landscape scene and using it for a shrub or two seemed inadequate. I couldn't come up with an idea of what type of block quilt I might use it in. So, it was ultimately very challenging, and I could not come up with a single idea. As the pandemic descended upon us, and guild meetings ceased, my thoughts turned elsewhere and the ugly fabric challenge was completely forgotten.
Months later the guild reconnected via Zoom. There was no ducking it, the ugly fabric challenge was still on the agenda. With a deadline! I had to dig down through the piles of UFO’s (Unfinished Objects) and USO’s (Unstarted Objects) that weighed down my quilt table and spilled over onto the floor. The pandemic and all of its uncertainties had not been conducive to creative quilting. But it sure had been conducive to creating a giant mess as I tried to come up with something I could work on (other than masks!) that would pull me out of a grinding feeling of despair. Eventually, a pregnancy (not mine!) came along to save me, and a baby quilt was needed. As I completed this simple project, I noticed the yellow fabric had befriended the so-called “ugly” fabric in the pile. It made me think of a rising moon with its pale yet inviting yellow tone.
The baby quilt that "saved" me. |
It’s never a good idea to argue with fabric. And while I felt like I was cheating by having a non-ugly “ugly fabric”, the piece was defiant enough to give me a good challenge. Mission accomplished!
The Owl's Tree
This quilt ended up with exactly zero of the pieces it started out with. It redefined the term “fall”, as pieces fell from favour and were eliminated from the quilt.
I once had a snowman panel printed with pictures. No two pictures were the same size. I cut the various snowman pictures out, trying numerous unsatisfactory configurations until my crowning achievement was a Ziploc bag of frayed snowmen parts. The arranging and rearranging of these shards played out over many sessions and lasted for years. At the end of it I had a single postcard quilt and a bag of bits that continues to make me groan with despair every time I come across it.
Fabric panels can have a further frustrating challenge. They’re are often printed with barely half an inch between the individual pictures. It’s also common to have a different colour border printed around each picture. Being fabric, a certain degree of wonkiness invariably creeps in during the printing process. The squares are never quite square enough to cut out without a bit of compulsory weeping. That elusive one quarter inch that is needed to cut out and sew the pictures onto the mandatory sashing strips can be impossible to find.
None of the picture fabric from the Harvest panel ended up in the quilt, despite my best efforts with sashing. The pieces were ultimately torn out and sacrificed in a desperate attempt to throw a life line to the central owl/tree block. That block came from a pattern in the Piecemaker’s Quilt Calendar from 1997, proving yet again my father’s sage advice that if you keep something for twenty years, you will use it. However, I would have to say that did not always ring true. The giant stone millwheel he brought home from the dump exceeded the twenty-year-use-clause, but was ultimately just too big to cart back to the dump. At least it made a good conversation piece, propped against the house. For the first five years.
To finish the owl quilt, I used another panel, the Autumn Dream Big Leaf Panel from Hoffman.
The owl reappeared and settled into his tree and sighed, glad to be done with it all.
This piece was rescued from the original Harvest quilt panel. |
Saturday, May 2, 2020
My Mother's Cats
Wednesday, April 8, 2020
Almost Midnight
Photo of "Santa Cloths" quilt in pattern book. |
Thursday, June 6, 2019
Julie's Tree of Life
Arrival of Fabrics |
First Leaves |
Harmonizing Leaves |
Design Wall |
Strips for Tree Planning |
I taped up my highly technical and expensive design wall (the white fuzzy back on a $2 plastic table cloth). I rough cut some strips from unwanted brown fabric and laid out a prototype for a leaning tree trunk with a bunch of branches.
Leaves. Will it Work? |
Dyed Sky |
I started adding leaves, keeping families grouped together. The leaves did indeed begin to dictate the design. I could tell that all those good wishes and beautiful stories would indeed blend into a tree of life for which I was the sole connecting link.
Eventually, I knew I would end up with this crazy colorful treetop. I had no idea what would be on the quilt where the treetop ended, other than a leaning tree trunk. More stalling and creative foot shuffling ensued. How could I ever balance out something so top heavy? I tried to focus on what such a tree would have beneath it. Well, obviously…a garden!
Uh oh. Once again, there was no picture of this garden anywhere in my brain. I bided my time, dyeing all the background sky fabrics, and assembling them, adding the finished leaves onto the tree branches.
Dyed Sky Fabrics |
No fully formed garden grew in my mind.
A Tree of Life would most certainly have a path below it, so I arranged the garden on either side of the path. I came across a frog in my stash. I have made enough frog quilts that others automatically associate me with frogs. My tiny central character was born. After that, it was mere weeks of arranging and top stitching until the garden had sprung up to grace the pathway and the green hills that I’d dyed for the background.
The quilt was now 65 inches tall, a colossal size compared with my other art quilts. It weighed about as much as newly birthed elephant, and quilting it on my regular sewing machine (not a longarm) took the stamina of a Sisyphus and the muscles on a Popeye. I used rayon and metallic thread as much as possible to pump up the sparkle quotient.