Christmas tends to be a time when new things show up in life, usually in form of presents.
I gave myself a small present already before Christmas, however, in the shape of a mini-machine which I intend to take to workshops, for demonstrations on the stand, and basically just as a backup in case of need. Ever since my old Bernina went up in smoke two years ago and I was then told that there wouldn't be a whole lot of spare parts to get in the future I have been hesitant about what to do, because I don't want to lug the big Bernina around to workshops. So when I saw the offer for a small mechanical elna at 180 Euros I couldn't resist! It arrived by mail.
I do admit, the zebra design is not really my style. But who knows, now that I have much more contact with people from Africa, and really like them, perhaps a bit of zebra in my life is an apt addition!
My husband gave me a new music system for Christmas, which we had first intended for the room where the longarm is positioned. But as this is a much better system than the one I have had in my studio for a long time now, we reconsidered, and put it up in the studio. Unfortunately so far we haven't been able to secure radio reception for my favorite radio station (we don't have cable in the house) and need to fiddle a bit about that. The gain of the new system might mean the loss of a source of information that is not heavily Bavarian-scented, as my favorite station is from outside the Bavarian boundaries. We haven't given up hope yet, though.
The removal of the old system leads to a gain in space in the shelves!
Perhaps a bit of sorting might even increase that effect. If there was time...
And due to mis-assorted thinking on my part we lost a pan and pan-scraper. I managed to turn on the wrong burner when I was trying to make my beloved lemon-ginger-tea and didn't notice for far too long, thinking the strange smell was caused by something burning under the pot.
The pan wasn't exactly new and probably would have needed to be replaced in the near future anyway, and the pan scraper wasn't a special thing either. But I do mourn the loss of the lid, solid and heavy glass. However, after the plastic had melted unter it and with all the black spots on it I just don't want to use it anymore in the process of preparing food that we want to eat. Let's hope this is the only loss of this kind in a while and my absent-mindedness not a serious sign to worry about!
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Sunday, December 25, 2016
oops.
Just how
did this happen? I must have written several blog entries during the past
couple of weeks, in my mind at least. And every time I had a chance to do
something creatively (i.e. sit down at the sewing machine, or actually write
that entry) it came down to “sit down at the machine and sew!” That’s what must
have happened.
Not even a
Christmas greeting… but it's too late for that now, next year again...
The weeks
were busy - time before Christmas always is - and I realized a little while ago
that a jurying-job is coming up just after the New Year is on. I have been
nominated as one of the jurors for the German Patchwork Guild’s bi-annual show “T
bis M” (an abbreviation for “from tradition to modern”). Now being jury, of
course, I don’t need to enter before a deadline, but I have been told that
probably jurors will be allowed to hang a piece of their own. And I wanted it
to be a new one. But there haven’t been that many new ones finished recently…
so there is work to do!
And I have
been stitching, finally picking up that quilt in the text messages series which
I started a while ago, red and black, and an hommage to Oskar Pastior, a
Romania-born German poet who wrote a very special kind of poetry that is more
of sound effect oriented than traditional poems.
The quilt had been neglected for so long because - I don’t really know. I used it to demonstrate my technique at the Bernina-stand in Prague almost two years ago. And then, well. It was my ‘refugee crisis overload’, for one thing, and then too much respect for my new machine, which at first was mucking up when I was trying to make it do what I wanted to have done. However, a few weeks ago I sat down had a serious conversation with the machine, started applying all kinds of tidbits and technical hairdos, and now we are both happy.
It’s working, I am stitching. And there is a lot of stitching to be done. But I have made progress. And will now go back to the machine.
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
"Abstract & Geometric" by Martha Sielman
The big surprise of last week arrived in the mail on Thursday: Martha Sielman's newly published book "Abstract & Geometric".
Of course, it wasn't a complete surprise that I am featured in that book, after all, I had written the text and sent the photos. But it was a surprise to see my quilt Play of Lines XXXV on the first page after opening the book:
I had not known at all that would be the case. I am very pleased to be included in such an illustruous selection of artists, and as the only quilter from Germany. And that my quilt was selected as the piece for the frontispiece.
This gives me quite an emotional boost, after I had only recently been turned down from the "Layered Voices" exhibition. And also because this particular quilt has a bit of a story that comes with it. I started it after a friend's comment about the scarcity of green quilts in Germany, as already mentioned in its first appearance on this blog. It was made mostly from scraps, using complementary colour effects, and a simple geometric shape constructed through a variation of Kathy Loomis' thin line technique. I loved making it, outlined the red line figures by machine,
and then I started to hand-stitch with seed stitch around the shapes that appeared as a result of the outlined lines.
Already after only about an eigtht of the quilt finished with the hand-stitching I was seriously questioning whether that had been a good idea indeed, and wondering how long it would take to get it done... or whether it would end as an unfinished object. However, I was determined to make it through, and it was done in relatively short time. Determination is one of my characteristics.
But when it was finished, finally, I wasn't sure about it at all. Yes, I loved it, but I had no clue what kind of impact it would have on people. As much as I loved it, it just seemed too simple. Nothing spectacular. But when I put it up for the first time to decorate my stall at some market just after it was finished I received quite a surprise, because never before had I had so many admiring comments about a quilt of mine as I did at that market. Everybody was looking at it, and sometimes it felt like the quilt was completely stealing the show and distracting people from the fabrics I was trying to sell.
I am glad it has now found a prominent place of display, and I had no influence on that, besides the fact that I decided to include this particular quilt in the selection of photos I sent to Martha Sielman to be included in the book.
I'd been thinking about trying my hand at a blue-orange version of this particular design. This might actually be the kick-off to get started on that idea.
The book is available through the SAQA store. And it would make a wonderful gift for a quilting friend.
title page of Martha Sielman's new book |
Of course, it wasn't a complete surprise that I am featured in that book, after all, I had written the text and sent the photos. But it was a surprise to see my quilt Play of Lines XXXV on the first page after opening the book:
I had not known at all that would be the case. I am very pleased to be included in such an illustruous selection of artists, and as the only quilter from Germany. And that my quilt was selected as the piece for the frontispiece.
This gives me quite an emotional boost, after I had only recently been turned down from the "Layered Voices" exhibition. And also because this particular quilt has a bit of a story that comes with it. I started it after a friend's comment about the scarcity of green quilts in Germany, as already mentioned in its first appearance on this blog. It was made mostly from scraps, using complementary colour effects, and a simple geometric shape constructed through a variation of Kathy Loomis' thin line technique. I loved making it, outlined the red line figures by machine,
and then I started to hand-stitch with seed stitch around the shapes that appeared as a result of the outlined lines.
Already after only about an eigtht of the quilt finished with the hand-stitching I was seriously questioning whether that had been a good idea indeed, and wondering how long it would take to get it done... or whether it would end as an unfinished object. However, I was determined to make it through, and it was done in relatively short time. Determination is one of my characteristics.
But when it was finished, finally, I wasn't sure about it at all. Yes, I loved it, but I had no clue what kind of impact it would have on people. As much as I loved it, it just seemed too simple. Nothing spectacular. But when I put it up for the first time to decorate my stall at some market just after it was finished I received quite a surprise, because never before had I had so many admiring comments about a quilt of mine as I did at that market. Everybody was looking at it, and sometimes it felt like the quilt was completely stealing the show and distracting people from the fabrics I was trying to sell.
I am glad it has now found a prominent place of display, and I had no influence on that, besides the fact that I decided to include this particular quilt in the selection of photos I sent to Martha Sielman to be included in the book.
I'd been thinking about trying my hand at a blue-orange version of this particular design. This might actually be the kick-off to get started on that idea.
The book is available through the SAQA store. And it would make a wonderful gift for a quilting friend.
Sunday, December 11, 2016
Munich, twice
Sometimes it takes months before I get a chance to go to Munich. Last week I got to go twice.
On Tuesday, I went to take down the International Threads' exhibition at Quilt et Textilkunst Gallery. Barbara was working, so I had to do it alone - with a little help from Christine Köhne for the four larger quilts that were up over the stairway. But taking down an exhibition is always so much faster than putting it up. Yet taking down an exhibition without Barbara is a lot less fun than putting it up with her... In any case, I had the chance to get another shot of Shapes 26 where the reflecting effect is actually visible - when there are no real lights around.
And then I found myself outside the store and gallery again, with a complete exhibition packed into two moving boxes, and pushing it back to the station.
Of course, the train was late, and I got back an hour later than could have been.
And then on Thursday another trip to Munich. This time together with my German class of refugees: the entire class went to visit the Bavarian Parliament, the Landtag, where we had been invited by a local representative to follow the debate of a new law for integration. Not only did we get to listen to the first few hours of the debate (which in the end lasted until five thirty in the morning before the final vote), but we were also shown around the building and met with some other politicians.
I had never been to the Landtag before, so it was an interesting and new experience for me, too.
Earlier in the week I had sent out the November selection of the fabric club. However, I have not taken a photo of the color range yet, so all I can show here is the stack of packages before shipping.
Hopefully tomorrow I will be able to post a photo of the color range.
On Tuesday, I went to take down the International Threads' exhibition at Quilt et Textilkunst Gallery. Barbara was working, so I had to do it alone - with a little help from Christine Köhne for the four larger quilts that were up over the stairway. But taking down an exhibition is always so much faster than putting it up. Yet taking down an exhibition without Barbara is a lot less fun than putting it up with her... In any case, I had the chance to get another shot of Shapes 26 where the reflecting effect is actually visible - when there are no real lights around.
And then I found myself outside the store and gallery again, with a complete exhibition packed into two moving boxes, and pushing it back to the station.
Of course, the train was late, and I got back an hour later than could have been.
And then on Thursday another trip to Munich. This time together with my German class of refugees: the entire class went to visit the Bavarian Parliament, the Landtag, where we had been invited by a local representative to follow the debate of a new law for integration. Not only did we get to listen to the first few hours of the debate (which in the end lasted until five thirty in the morning before the final vote), but we were also shown around the building and met with some other politicians.
I had never been to the Landtag before, so it was an interesting and new experience for me, too.
Earlier in the week I had sent out the November selection of the fabric club. However, I have not taken a photo of the color range yet, so all I can show here is the stack of packages before shipping.
Hopefully tomorrow I will be able to post a photo of the color range.
Monday, December 5, 2016
Special Sale on justcolours.de
In the final stages of preparation for shipping the November selection of the fabric club, and I am also just updating the website for a special sale of my fabrics on December 6th, to celebrate the 6th anniversary of my little business for hand-dyed fabrics.
Any order that arrives in my mailbox via the website on December 6th will receive a 6% discount on regular yardage. If your order exceeds € 60, the discount will be at least € 6,-, and for orders over € 100,- it will be shipped for free. So take your chance to celebrate with me!
Any order that arrives in my mailbox via the website on December 6th will receive a 6% discount on regular yardage. If your order exceeds € 60, the discount will be at least € 6,-, and for orders over € 100,- it will be shipped for free. So take your chance to celebrate with me!
Thursday, December 1, 2016
Reflection of the Day 2016 - November
Sunday, November 27, 2016
November, and what could have been....
It is
November, and that is never a really good month for me. Until this past week
this year’s November-weather hadn’t been as terrible as it can be, we actually
had days of sunshine, some cold, some not too cold, and some were even
beautiful and sunny. Perhaps after a bit of early morning fog, just by the
river.
Then this
past week was terrible and very depressing, but today is nice again, any
half glimpse of sunshine is so welcome!
I just wish I could live in a country that has a different weather
scheme.
Actually,
for a few days during the week before last and last week it looked as if this
dream might come true.
My husband suddenly
started talking about an open position in Bogotá, Columbia, and whether I could
possibly consider living there. We started a bit of internet research about the
city, the conditions, school options for my son, and a basketball club and
began to like the idea. I thought through how much of a change it would mean,
all the things I would have to give up, and what it would mean to embark on
such an adventure, moving to another country. At least I would have had a
head-start on my husband as I have already been studying Spanish. Can’t say
that I am anywhere near fluid, basically it is still in the stages where I
always feel the incompetence, especially in listening und understanding when my
teacher talks to me - she has by now changed into normal conversational speed,
and she is not a small talker. And I should study my vocabulary on a more
regular basis… But it’s good enough to say, yes, that’s an adventure I can
face, and I wouldn’t have to start from scratch.
So there
was the smell of adventure in the air, a possibility for a total change. Until
my husband talked to the organizers of the whole thing, found out about conditions
that applied first to his own application, and the necessary preliminaries, and
to me, and everything fell to pieces. It
would have been virtually impossible to get a work permit for me, not even
to talk about the things on his side. And although I would have been willing to
give up all the things here for an adventure and new experience, I am not
willing to do that to be damned to inactivity in terms of working/earning
money. And we would have needed a second income to supplement what he would be
making, as additional costs would apply. So that was that. Not possible, and a
bit of a disappointment, too. Not that Columbia had been on the top of my personal
list of countries I could well imagine living in before this discussion, in
fact, it had not even been listed. But it was a teaser, very welcome, enticing. Now
November is even grayer than before, if there is such a thing as a comparative
of gray!
During the
week I finished writing my article for the Patchwork Professional magazine and
sent it off half an hour ago.
I also started getting ready for the possibility of snow, and soaked some pieces of fabric in soda ash. After all, the article in the magazine is on how to make good use of special effect fabrics like snow-dyed fabrics, I might as well be prepared and have new ones on offer.
I also started getting ready for the possibility of snow, and soaked some pieces of fabric in soda ash. After all, the article in the magazine is on how to make good use of special effect fabrics like snow-dyed fabrics, I might as well be prepared and have new ones on offer.
Not much sewing went on, as I was also dyeing the
next selection of the fabric club ‘on the side’. Now I have four of the six
colours sitting in the basement, waiting to be ironed.
One of the least liked
parts of the whole process, I admit. I’ll just have to split it up a bit - iron
one section, start dyeing colours no. 5 and 6, iron the next one… A busy rest
of the Sunday still ahead of me. And by the time I finish writing this, the sky has clouded up again, no more glimpses of sunshine. Might just as well hide in the basement!
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