31 March, 2015

21 Digital Designs: Fun facts

2015-03-31T11:35:28-05:00Everything Else, Gallery Exhibitions, Spoonflower & Fabric Design|Comments Off on 21 Digital Designs: Fun facts

PrintI just created this poster for my display at the ACC show which is coming up in just a little over a week! These are all of the designs I will have at the show in the form of skirts or scarves.  There are a few favorites there that are designs I developed over the last 3 years or so and many many new designs created in these last 6 months of my new art-making focus.

I thought it would be fun to tell you some fun facts about this collection of designs.

  • Three are collaborations with my mom.  She is an awesome photographer and she knows what I love.  She taunts me with these irresistible photo textures and I can’t help but design something. It is super fun to collaborate with her.
  • Five at least are collaborations with my husband.  Also an awesome photographer.  Sometimes he snaps photos and puts them in a folder marked “Textures” and waits for me to find them.  Sometimes we take photos together and I spot things and say “Get that!”.
  • The original photos/scans that were used to create these designs were taken in Mt St Michel and Giverny, France; London,England; San Antonio, TX; Hill City and Rapid City, SD; Minneapolis, MN; Orlando, FL.
  • There are 2 kinds of lace, 2 kinds of leaves, 2 kinds of ice, 2 hand fans.  Two images were taken at the Hennepin History Museum.  There are two images that are each used in two different designs: a pile of video cables (thanks Jay!) and a collage of painted newspaper.
  • There are designs made from junk mail, painted paper and scanned maple leaves.  The painted paper collection has batik made with elmer’s glue and a rubber eraser, painted sheet music, crumpled brown paper and masking tape.

I had these same images printed onto custom playing cards, so I have a card for each design that will be attached to the tag for each piece.  I wanted that to be a part of the piece – the story about where the design came from.  And I got an extra deck of cards for people to just look through.  For me these designs are about wearable art.  I am not a fashion designer or into conceptual fashion.  I love basic pieces that show off the surface design and allow you to wear the art. You get to be a part of it. There’s a great quote by Oscar Wilde: “One should either be a work of art, or wear a work of art.”  Exactly.

26 March, 2015

Inspired by your space?

2015-06-16T17:16:58-05:00An Artist's Life, Everything Else|4 Comments

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Finding inspiration isn’t a problem for me.  In fact, it’s almost the opposite.  I am compelled to create things and I am never lacking for ideas.  Sometimes it is difficult to actually finish something because I always have a better idea in the middle of what I am doing.  My mom will attest to this.  She tells stories of elaborate schemes presented to her in order to get her to take my sister and I to the local hobby store. No one was bored at my house.

There’s an expectation, or perhaps a social media inspired trend, that I am feeling right now that when you are an artist that you do a lot to find inspiration.  You create a mood board or a journal or you collect things that inspire you.  You put things in your space to provide inspiration.  In fact, you have a specific inspiring space where you do your work.  And you post photos of your inspiring space to help inspire others.  And you pin photos of other people’s inspiring spaces.

Abby, a blogger who I follow, just posted something the other day about a comment left on a photo she posted of her laptop at the kitchen table:

This question really struck me. I started to wonder what people might be imagining it looks like here at my house when I’m writing or sewing or podcasting or working on my business. Do they think it looks somehow different than this? Sexier than my kitchen table? And if they do, why?

What makes us want to imagine artists in beautiful light-filled loft studios surrounded by a rainbow of paint tubes where even the drop cloth is color-filled and brilliant? Or writers sitting in bustling coffee shops sipping espresso and effortlessly dashing off inspired tomes?

In fact, this has been somewhat of a recurring theme for me lately.  In an art group I belong to, we had a discussion about journaling.  One of the artists is in a mentoring program that does not require, but strongly recommends, that you keep a journal of your experience.  She wasn’t sure where to start or how she could do it without it becoming something she felt obligated to do, rather than inspired by.  Another group meeting recently had an activity where we were each asked to bring our sketchbooks and talk about our process.   A friend stopped me at an art show and was disappointed when I said I didn’t have a studio that I work in.  (I get asked this a lot)

I actually find all of those things the opposite of inspiring.  I don’t like to have other people’s work in my space.  I have art all over my house,  but nothing specifically there to “be inspiring”, just things that I love.  I don’t want to have a photo clipped from a magazine that I can copy.  I don’t keep a sketchbook or a journal.  In fact it was very awkward for me at this meeting with the sketchbook activity – I felt as though I had to defend myself for not having one.  I keep a notebook of notes, but it’s all math and technical notes.  I write down RGB and hex codes for colors.  I write out the math for determining how much ease and the size of the facing on my wrap skirt. It’s practical and it’s information I know I might need again.  I also keep meeting notes in there and stuff I write down while on phone calls.  It’s not very inspiring.  I like working in my house and being able to scratch my dogs and go make tea or a piece of toast when I feel like it.  Sometimes I work in my sewing room, but it’s small and so sometimes I spread out all over the dining room table.  There’s a card table set up in the dining room right now too because I am working on a big project and I feel like I need the space.  Sometimes I spend the whole day at the computer, which is on a big messy desk cluttered with coffee mugs, earrings and camera equipment. And I am not talking business chores on the computer, it’s a part of my art process and one that I love.  But not exactly inspiring either (at least to anyone else.)  Believe me, erasing pixels is exactly as exciting as watching paint dry.

I think about the artists who I know and love and none of them have Pinteresty workspaces or processes.  My friend Donna works with buckets of frozen rhubarb leaves and stews made from a whole lot of other things that most people would compost.  There is nothing romantic or pretty about that.  (I imagine some of them smell bad, too.)  Another friend’s studio is a mish-mash of storage space, staging area and place to make a mess.  She doesn’t want the mess at her house, so the studio is the place to make the mess and it invites you to do it.  I work in the dining room or at the kitchen table or on the back porch or sometimes all in my head.  I may or may not be wearing a matched pair of socks while I do it.

Do I burst your bubble by admitting this? Are you sad that I don’t have a secret artistic sketchbook to show you?  Do you want me to have a studio and a pretty Pinterest-worthy wall?  (I am curious now.)  Do you have a sketchbook of inspiration?  Does it work for you?  Or do you do it because that’s what artists do?

 

 

24 March, 2015

Hennepin History Museum #MuseumWeek

2015-03-24T10:12:39-05:00Gallery Exhibitions, Sewing & Design, Spoonflower & Fabric Design|1 Comment

hhm

It ‘s #MuseumWeek on Twitter this week and that seemed like a great excuse to talk about my favorite museum in the  Twin Cities: Hennepin History Museum.  Museum Week is a fun celebration of museums behind the scenes.  Yesterday the theme was “behind the scenes secrets” and today the theme is “souvenirs”.  And I have some great souvenirs from HHM!

I visited the museum a few weeks ago and brought along my camera.  HHM is housed in a turn-of-the-century mansion that is full of beautiful details.  When I was there taking photos, an exhibition of hand fans had just opened to coincide with a “Fireside Chat“, an afternoon lecture by a local fan collector.  HHM holds these chats every other week and they feature local authors and history experts talking about everything from beekeeping to baseball.

hhm-2

I was really enamoured with this painted feather fan.  It is made from white goose feathers which are painted with a floral spray and tipped with peacock plumes.  Since I have been designing skirts non-stop the last few months, I looked at this and saw a skirt (naturally).  My wrap skirt design is a 3/4 circle, which is a tough shape to work from, but a fan is already a 1/3 circle shape.  It was a natural fit!

BatHHM

IMG_3262I love those peacock feathers around the hem!  The museum staff was so excited that I was making things inspired by the collection that they invited me to have this skirt on display along with the fans.  It was neat for me to see the two side-by-side and you can see them too if you stop by.

I also took some photos of the woodwork details in the Fireside Room.  This helix patterned trim is featured throughout the room.

hhm-3And that also inspired a design.  I haven’t stitched up the sample of this one yet, but you can see the sketch.  I used this bit of woodwork trim to make radiating stripes from the waist to hem.  I also designed a basic stripe based on this woodwork pattern, which I will hopefully be printing to make silk scarves for the HHM shop a little later in the spring.

helix

 

One visit and two pretty awesome designs!  I feel like I found buried treasure.  I can’t wait to go back and see what else I find.

I had never actually heard of Hennepin History Museum before a year or so ago, even though it has been around since the 50s.   My friend Cedar is their new Executive Director and I think she has some pretty awesome ideas and the enthusiasm to bring their knowledge and collections more into the community.  In fact, I joined the Board of Directors in January, so I can help her out with that project. If you are in the Twin Cities area, I hope you will stop by and visit or come for a Fireside Chat.

 

 

6 March, 2015

Inspiration from anywhere

2015-03-06T14:15:20-06:00Sewing & Design, Spoonflower & Fabric Design|Comments Off on Inspiration from anywhere

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My niece drew this picture of a sewing machine for me.  Her message “Don’t miss the sniff” is to let me know that not only is there a scratch and sniff sticker there, but she drew it using smelly markers.  Important stuff when you are 4.  I am in love with this picture.

“Kid art” is a really hard thing to translate into fabric design.  And honestly, I look at pretty much everything anymore and think “How can I make fabric out of this?”  So I wanted to capture this fabulous drawing in fabric.

via gofugyourself.celebuzz.com

via gofugyourself.com

The new fall line for Dolce & Gabbana offers this.  Which I honestly think is hideous.  If you click that photo it will take you to a whole slide show of their runway show, which has a whole collection of “kid art” prints.  They all look like they are printed on shiny satin besides, which also doesn’t make any sense.  Formal crayon wear? Ugh.

So instead of trying to go with a literal interpretation, I decided to use Mia’s drawing as inspiration instead.

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So, I drew the sewing machine and all of the other doo-dads and shapes in Illustrator, making it into a vector design so I could rearrange, resize and so on to make a repeat.  This one is about 18″ because I wanted it to be big and bold.  I wanted some textures to overlay on designs like this, so a few weeks ago, I spent an afternoon making fibery textures.  This one is perfect for this design.  I also used Mia’s drawing for the color inspiration.  I think my version has enough pink in it for her to approve.

I don’t see this is a clothing fabric (although she would probably wear it) so I decided to think of it like a craft/quilting fabric instead, which meant I wanted to have a collection of coordinating prints to go along with it.  Solids with the same fibery texture, “cheerios” and little banner flags so far.  I think I need one more.  Any ideas?

coordinates

 

I know it is sewing machines (and you do now too), but I think this also could look like tribal/tiki/monster as I can see a few faces in there.  And that also works for me.

 

4 March, 2015

A post starring my own handwriting

2015-03-04T19:46:10-06:00Everything Else, Tutorials|Comments Off on A post starring my own handwriting

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I had a sort of annoying day.  And so when I saw a Facebook article on Craft about making a font from your handwriting for free, I clicked it.  That sounds fun.  I am sure there is a gimmick.  Or it won’t work.  But it would be a fun little project.

It totally works.  And it’s fun.  And it was fast.  I might seriously have to do this with a class some day. I didn’t overthink it, I just wrote.  I might do another one now and do something fancy.

The lovely Christine has written up a tutorial on how to do it here.  Or you can just go to the website and figure it out.  It’s that easy.  MyScriptFont.com, you are genius.

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