a peek into my studio on creativebug!

shelves and card catalog in studio

my sewing desk and the juki

computer desk and art books

worktable & design wall

fabric stacks

card catalog

inspiration board

inspiration board

 a little peek into my sewing/quilting/making studio was featured on creativebug yesterday!  some of the photos above are in the feature, some were not.  a whole glorious mess of photos (these and more) of my studio can be found over at flickr.  enjoy! 

 (p.s. the pastelly giant star quilt is one i'm working on here and there.  it's features some "found" fabrics i got from etsy seller, whimsiedots, who sells a lot of vintage, recycled/found fabrics and supplies as well as creations of her own.  i love buying her big boxes of random scraps!  I'm trying to stretch myself and use fabric and colors i don't always use.  i'll probably give it to a special person for a gift later this year.)

sarah nishiura's quilts @ the hyde park art center

sarah nishiura @ hyde park art center show--abstracting the seam

sarah nishiura @ hyde park art center show--abstracting the seam

sarah nishiura @ hyde park art center show--abstracting the seam

sarah nishiura @ hyde park art center show--abstracting the seam

sarah nishiura @ hyde park art center show--abstracting the seam

sarah nishiura @ hyde park art center show--abstracting the seam

sarah nishiura @ hyde park art center show--abstracting the seam

sarah nishiura @ hyde park art center show--abstracting the seam

seen above: chicago-based artist/quilter sarah nishiura​'s quilts, which are currently featured in a show at the hyde park art center called abstracting the seam.  

​i went to the show this past weekend with pete and the poppy in tow, and was really impressed.  the show features the work of other artists, in various mediums, more information about the show and it's artists can be found here.  the show is on until september 15th, so if you're in chicago or passing through and like quilts (and other stripes of contemporary art) i recommend dropping by for a look.

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i've only recently discovered sarah's work, in the past year, after hearing her speak at one of the chicago modern quilt guild's monthly meetings.  she is/was (originally) a painter.  

she uses primarily secondhand textiles (like men's shirts) to make her quilts; the variation of colors and texture these factors give her finished pieces a tremendous amount of hand and visual depth.  most of the fabric used within is solid or monochromatic, but if you look closely you'll see that she periodically and thoughtfully slices in little slivers of patterned fabric.  i wanna say her quilts are more about the solids than the pattern fabric, but that's not really true.  the juxtaposition and proportion of the solids and the patterned bits or sections is so perfectly balanced.  when i heard her speak at the CMQG meeting she mentioned that she exclusively hand quilts them; i think the labor intensive process adds a charm to the quilts, and adds a vintage, handcrafted look that i feel adds to their overall aesthetic and perhaps monetary value.  

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other related thoughts (aka, why sarah's work resonates with me):​

​-sometimes i think i prefer hand quilting to machine quilting though both have their pros (and cons).  i'm still trying to articulate why i feel this way.  which do you prefer?  does anyone else feel like sometimes machine quilting is too "machined"?  hand quilting often times has more of a subtileness, maybe?  in general i guess i like things simple or minimal too, when it comes to quilting (by hand or by machine).

​-i really like the idea of not using so much "designer" fabric with really idiosyncratic designs...in opposition to the whole movement of people making quilts with said fabrics.  the results, to my eye, become more about the designer of said fabric than the quilter making them.  i know, that's what some people like, and that's great.  quilt/make whatever the hell you want.  but i like a mix of fabrics:  some new stuff that's pleasing, mixed with anonymous and found/repurposed fabrics, and solids of whatever manufacturer.  the jumble of it all pleases me and feels more "me".  if that makes any sort of sense.

a smattering of spring creativity

fabric I batiked in Malka dubrawsky's class #quiltcon

shoo fly blocks with my batik & screened fabrics

improv made fabric

patchy triangles

what I worked on at the CMQG spring retreat (in progress)

learning how to hand quilt!

playing around with offcuts

made fabric medallion, in progress

hello there!  it's spring!

...hell, it's just about summer, though you wouldn't really know it until recently here in chicago, as it's been unusually cold all the way through most of may.​  so weird.

​anyhoo!  here's ​another photo dump here of what i've been putzing around with in the studio all season...

​from top to bottom:

-batiks i made in malka dubrawsky's batik class @ quiltcon 2013 (back in february!)​

-taking some of the aforementioned batiks and a hand silkscreened piece of fabric i had laying around and shoo-flying them to what i think is nice effect.  :)

-taking old bedsheet scraps and bits of found fabric and making "made fabric" (a la victoria findlay wolfe)

-taking said "made fabric" and cutting triangles out of it, to be made into a queen size quilt (alternate triangles will likely be cut from white recycled men's oxford shirts in varying ​textures and weaves)

-more made fabric around an orphan block from another quilt top i finished earlier this spring...i made most of what's seen here at the chicago modern quilt guild's spring 2013 retreat up in racine, wisconsin.

-i took a one day workshop on hand quilting at lillstreet with chicago area artist/quilter sarah nishiura.  this was my class sample.  i even came home that night and worked on it more/practiced!  i think i'm in serious love with hand quilting.  XOXO!  i'm even hand quilting a quilt right now...slowly, slowly, slowly but surely, with perle cotton and big stitches.  a great pastime to partake in, especially when it's CHILLY.  (reference my notes about chicago's crazy cold weather above, ha!)

-some teeny tiny HST's, just having fun.​

​-and more play with made fabric and that orphan block i was playing with at the spring CMQG retreat...no idea if it's all going to go together but it's been fun just "making".  might take the "made fabric" and put it into use in another quilt.  still thinking.  sometimes you have to sit on something a while and eventually it all becomes clear, creatively.  that's how it works for me, anyway.  :)

​***

​how's your spring been?