Archive for the ‘Fiberart For A Cause’ Category

Foto/Fiber 2012 Fiber BONUSES and More by Léonie Hartley-Hoover

 Léonie Hartley-Hoover has taken a thematic approach for her Fiber BONUSES for Foto/Fiber 2012.  The BONUS detail below is from Ocean View and includes beautiful batiks and hand-dyed fabric, hand-dyed thread, one medium and one large quality ocean-themed lampwork bead ($30 value) and more.  Read more about this BONUS on Léonie’s blog.

 

Léonie’s second Fiber BONUS is Raz-Ma-Taz.  It includes batiks and hand dyes, wool roving, silk sari ribblon, overdyed cotton flow, and a lampwork bead (valued at $30) by German artist Karen Hruza. More details here.

 

Léonie has also created an artwork specifically for the drawings to be held among the 90 Patrons of Foto/Fiber 2012.  Love You to the Moon and Back is 9 inches x 9 inches and shown below. It is a hand-beaded art quilt on silk base. The focal face bead is by  Kristie Brigham, Lancaster, PA.  The haiku in lower right corner:
Remembering you… The fireflies of this marsh Seem like sparks That rise From my body’s longing. Izumi Shikibu

See more details from this artwork here.

All patrons of Foto/Fiber 2012 are eligible to win this artwork. You will be entered once for each Photo/Bonus for which you donate.

 

Foto/Fiber 2012 opens on February 15.  Information about the photos, the fiber, and all the drawings is here.

 

 

07

02 2012

In the Studio with Gail Myrhorodsky

 

 Gail Myrhorodsky

Gail Myrhorodsky creates unique hand-painted art cloth in wonderfully saturated colors as well as fiber art using her own fabric. Creating art fabric is a very time consuming process as the fabric is first washed and prepped for dyeing and then individually painted.  After dye or paint has set, all fabrics are rinsed thoroughly (some over 10 times) to remove excess dyes. Then all the fabric is washed in very hot water and Synthropol, and rinsed several more times. Many of the bright and darkly intense pieces undergo a hot wash with Retayne as well, which helps prevent bleeding. Then they are dried in a hot dryer and steam pressed. Gail’s silk and cotton fabrics are available for purchase through her GailForces studio as well as at quilt events.

1.  How do you find/make time to be in your studio?

After work, dinner and clean-up, it’s time for my art. No questions asked. Even if it’s only for an hour, I make the time to do something I love.

 

2.  Describe your studio in five words.
Way too small for stash!

3.  If you could pick only one thing from your studio to represent your art practice, what would it be?
Organization – or lack of it thereof. My studio is actually the upstairs apartment of our 2-family home. The fabric room (bedroom) is overflowing with my hand-dyed fabrics. The kitchen has the storage of all the paints, stamps, stencils, bleaching agents and all theother tools for surface design except dyeing.  The dining room is my work space – several “my height” cutting/work tables, my sewing machine, serger and embellisher, iron and design wall. When any of these rooms starts to overflow, it’s time to re-organize.  One cannot create if one cannot find the supplies!

 

Gail is donating three fiber-licious BONUSES to Foto/Fiber 2012.
All three start with a fat quarter of hand-dyed cotton and then Gail is choosing coordinating items from among this list:
Coordinating dyed cotton, yarns, dyed threads and dyed cheesecloth andcotton batt, personally made clay embellishment, beads, dyed vintage doily, dyed silk and wool fibers, yarns, dyed threads, a super inchie, fun foam sculpted, embellishment, glue on petal jewels, sample of Misty Fuse, fat quarter hand-dyed and stamped, stenciled and painted,, metallic netting (gold & black), Angelina, beads, and more.

4. What is the best/worst space you have ever had as a studio?
My worst was a bookcase-separated corner of a living room. The best is my current setup – an apartment with plenty of storage shelves and cabinets.

5.  What would make a “dream studio” for you?
I would love a studio on the first floor with lots of windows and about 3 times the floor space. I could also use some extra space to store and use my spinning wheel.

 

6.  What would you advise someone setting up a studio for the first time?
I would advise to plan carefully for the work space for the type of work you enjoy doing. Have plenty of storage and as much “spread out” floor space as you can manage.

7.  Any unique features/studio pets you would like to share?
It’s not unique, but one of the smartest things I did was raise the main work table to my height so I don’t have to lean over all the time.I’m 5’8″, which isn’t all that tall anymore, but raising the table has saved me lots of pain.  I’m a pretty functional/practical kind of person, so Ialways think of the usefulness of my work tools before aesthetics.

 

06

02 2012

In the Studio with Karen Musgrave

Karen Musgrave

Karen Musgrave is a quiltmaker, mask maker, teacher, speaker, writer, publicist and curator who works to provide a connection between American quiltmaking and other cultures. Her work has been exhibited internationally and is in many private collections. Her projects include curating an exhibition of the African American quilts from Gee’s Bend, Alabama, alongside quilts from the Republics of Georgia, Armenia and Kazakhstan. In 2006, she organized, curated,and wrote the catalogue for an exhibition of American art quilts and Krygyz patchwork.  Since July 2008, she has lead the quilt group Las puntadas del alma at the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago. She served on the national board of the Alliance for American Quilts as development chair, was involved for more than ten years with its oral history project Quilters’ S.O.S. – Save Our Stories and curated their highly successful quilt contest and touring exhibit Put a Roof Over Our Head. She served on the board of the Kentucky Quilt Project, Inc. and was elected to the board of the Naperville Art League in June, 2010.

Karen is donating three Fiber BONUSES to Foto/Fiber 2012.  One which includes three 1/4 yard pieces of silk made in the Soviet Union, purchased in Osh, Kyrgyzstan, and an ATC,  ”Memories of Kyrgyzstan” can be seen here on Karen’s blog.

1.  How do you find/make time to be in your studio?
I have always believed that time is a created thing. We do what we think is important. I am fortunate that I no longer have to “make/find” time to be in my studio. It’s simply something I do everyday.

2.  Describe your studio in five words.

Stimulating, messy, memory-filled, packed, fun.

3.  If you could pick only one thing from your studio to represent your art practice, what would it be?  

I think it would have to be my female Buddha mask. It shows my commitment to women, my interest in other cultures, my love of texture and applique and embracing fun!

4. What is the best/worst space you have ever had as a studio? 

In the basement of my first house, on a small table between the washer and dryer. Fortunately, the one light bulb in the place was over the table! I remain amazed at much much I got done. I worked in between loads of laundry.

5.  What would make a “dream studio” for you?
A space surrounded by nature.

6.  What would you advise someone setting up a studio for the first time?

Don’t worry about having all the bells and whistles. There is no right or wrong way. Just what works for you. Play attention to how you work so you can figure out how to facilitate the best environment for you. Think zones.

7.  Any unique features/studio pets you would like to share? 

My chocolate lab Meg was the best feature in my studio for more than ten years. She loved fabric! She would dig around in my scrap bin, find a piece she liked and carry it around. When the doorbell would ring, she would run into my studio, grab a piece of fabric and give it to the person who walked in. It always made people smile. Unfortunately, she died of liver cancer. My black cat E.G. does not like her picture taken (must take after me). When she sees the camera, she runs the other way!

8.  Any new exhibits or projects we should know about?


My book, Quilts in the Attic: Uncovering the Hidden Stories of the Quilts We Love, (Voyageur Press) is out.  I will be teaching at the Abruzzo School of Creative Art in Italy from August 22-29th.

04

02 2012

In the Studio with Suzanne Silk

Suzanne Silk

 I welcome Suzanne Silk as one of the new artists of the Fiberart For A Cause family.  Suzanne is a surface designer, fiber-artist, photographer, print-maker, and painter.  Visit her website by clicking on her name above to be immersed in the beauty of silk transformed by the human hand.

Suzanne shared the following about her studio:

I created my “dream” studio as a live/work space. The main room is designed with custom cabinetry across one-wall, affording me the best possible answer for contemporary loft living + art-making, as well as for my private clients appointments. At the far side is a digital work station + office area which serves all my needs.

The brilliance of light for night + day work was paramount to me, as was the availability of great storage space. I use a variety of mediums in mixed-media surface design, such as: Hot wax-resist for the “Rozome”, textile dyes (reactive + acid dyes), pigment paints for silkscreening + devore and much more. I make my own silk-screens + these are housed vertically under an 18 foot padded “print-table top”. Metallic foils are ironed on as a final touch to each piece, as is machine quilting if desired. Behind “closed doors” reveals a specially designed space for my Koala sewing cabinet. It houses 2 Bernina machines + rolls out for additional surface. One never has enough surfaces to spread-out on!

Suzanne’s BONUS is going to be amazing.  Here are three photos of detail from her multi-layered surface design work on silk:

 

 

 

**Share the news about Foto/Fiber 2012, a fundraiser for the American Cancer Society, and be entered to win a copy of Cate Prato’s, Inside the Creative Studio, or a $25 gift certificate to Fiber On A Whim, or a pack each of TAP and ExtravOrganza, also from Fiber On A Whim.

03

02 2012

In the Studio with Diane Doran


Diane Doran

Diane Doran uses machine piecing, appliqué and digital imagery to create complex, heavily quilted contemporary quilts.  Her quilts have been exhibited nationally and won awards at many of the major shows. A background in engineering has led her to use computer generated images and designs for much of her work work.  She shares her techniques in a DVD for Interweave, has appeared numerous times on Quilting Arts TV, and is a columnist for Machine Quilting Unlimited. Visit her Ooh! Pretty Colors blog, which I love for the name alone, today for photos of her completed postcards and the specific fabrics she will be including in her Foto/Fiber 2012 Fiber BONUSES.

1.  How do you find/make time to be in your studio?
I have to make time to be in my studio. Deadlines are usually the best way to get me there!

2.  If you could pick only one thing from your studio to represent your art practice, what would it be?

One of the in-process pieces hanging on my design wall behind my sewing machine.

3. What is the best/worst space you have ever had as a studio?

The best and worst space I’ve ever had is my current one. It’s in the basement and has no windows. Before I installed new lighting it was very difficult to work, and also difficult to organize my supplies without moving lights around. With good lighting I’m now able to easily see what I’m doing, and take photographs for the design work I do, articles I write, and of course my finished work. Regrettably it’s still cluttered!

 

Diane is donating three Fiber BONUSES to Foto/Fiber 2012.  You may assume that these feathered friends will be transformed in to fiber art postcards by Diane.

 

4.  What would make a “dream studio” for you?
I would love to have a larger space with windows, a sink, a surface design area, and computer. My current studio has a wonderful setup for sewing and quilting, but all other aspects of my work are done in other areas of the house.

5.  What would you advise someone setting up a studio for the first time?
The three things that I think are essential to a studio space are good lighting, storage that works for your needs, and a sewing surface that is large enough to handle the size work you do. Two of the best investments I’ve made for my studio are a Koala sewing table and daylight fluorescent lighting.

6.  Any exhibits or projects we should know about? 

My instructional DVD for Interweave, Digital Collage for Quilt Design from Start to Finish.

******Share the news about Foto/Fiber 2012, a fundraiser for the American Cancer Society, and be entered to win a copy of Cate Prato’s book, Inside the Creative Studio, a $25 gift certificate from Fiber On A Whim, or a package each of TAP and ExtravOrganza also from Fiber On A Whim.

 

 

 

02

02 2012