Friday, March 9, 2012

Tint Your Stitch!

Recently, I was asked about my use of pastel colored pencils (pastel chalks in pencil form) to change the color of some of the threads I've stitched.  In other words, I will add color to the stitched work to change it.  This is not a new idea, nor a particularly original idea on my part.  But in needlepoint, perhaps it is unconventional and unheard of for many stitchers.

We creators of needle art are so fortunate to have thousands of different threads at our disposal; thousands of colors, and hundreds of textures and thread types.  We have cottons, silks, linens, wools, synthetics, and metallics..even wires.  We have single plies, multi plies; smooth, crinkly, shiny, matt.  We have overdyed, and we have neon brights.  We have every hue and texture on the planet at our disposal.  So WHY, you ask, would I even want to add color to my stitches?

Because it is fun.  Because it is easy.  (I'm a lazy stitcher!)  Because it is artistic.  Because it expands the possibilities for creating the look I want, and better yet, for a look I don't even know is possible!

Just remember...when you are confined to a grid upon which to create your stitches, and use a manufactured thread, the look of your stitches is 'confined' as well.  Often, I have found this to be too restrictive for my artistic nature.  I want my work to have a more fluid quality to it, in that I want to control the look of the stitch.  The stitch does not control me!  (Wow!  I like how that sounds!  Makes me feel powerful, ya know?)  And it is very satisfying to bring the work to a level that stitching alone cannot do.

I'm still laughing many years later, about a comment I overheard someone make in my tradeshow booth.  Two women were viewing a model that I stitched with all white threads, and then painted the whole thing AFTER it was stitched.  One woman muttered under her breath to her friend, "Hasn't she ever heard of DMC?"  Well! She completely missed the point!  And I would double dare her to get the same effect with thread alone, and that is not dismissing how much I love DMC threads either!

Here is a portion of the piece being discussed.  



Bear in mind, this oak leaf was stitched with all white DMC floss, and generously wetted down and painted after being stitched.   Here are some simple directions:

Use watered down acrylic paints (available at any craft store), mixed with a little Textile Medium, an additive for paint, to keep the paint soft after it dries.  (Also available at the craft store).  Wet the entire canvas generously with a sponge, and then go to town with the paint and a brush.  Don't be timid!  The canvas is still mounted on stretcher bars for this...and it will remain on the stretcher bars for the entire time you are working on the project.  When you are painting, put a layer of paper towels underneath to absorb the water.  Paint, paint, paint!  Broad stokes.  Let the paint flow.  Tip the canvas different directions to let the paint 'run' in the background.

Next, lay the canvas outside to dry in the sun.  Another way is to lay it in the bathroom sink and go at it with a hair blow dryer.  You can also lay it on the floor (paper towels beneath) and dry with the hair dryer that way too.  When it is good and dry, you are ready to stitch some more.  In the above piece,
additional overdyed threads by Caron were added in the veins and background after it was dry.

So, my question to this woman now would be:  How would you have achieved the same subtle shading and color gradations without a break, in the long straight line of upright stitches?  And what about that really great bleeding of color in the background that resulted from this technique?  Sure, it could have been a painted canvas with those markings in the background, and sure, you could have used different stitches on the leaf to create shading, but that isn't the way I wanted to do it.  I wanted to create the leaf with a fusion of thread and paint, enjoying the creative joy of discovery resulting from the process.  And I will add, that when my students have stitched and painted this same leaf design,  no two have ever been alike, and every single one has been uniquely beautiful, bearing the individual 'hand' of the person who created it!  This sets it apart from other painted canvas projects, where students end up with the exact same results (if they follow the directions explicitly).

Ok...that is only one way to tint a thread!  Another less dramatic, but no less beautiful way to 'tint your stitch,' is illustrated to perfection by esteemed needlepoint canvas artist,  Melissa Shirley. www.melissashirleydesigns.com  Melissa graciously shared a portion of her stitch guide instructions along with this photo of her Indian Maiden.  Her stitch tinting method involves using colored pastels (chalks).   Here is Melissa's stunning piece, and her description follows.

 



Using a short bristled, artist’s paint brush called a “bright” and a quality set of soft pastels, you can rub the brush on the pastel and apply shading colors directly onto the stitching. This technique was
 used on the following areas of the Indian Maid.   TIP-If you use this technique, practice on a separate piece of practice stitching. It’s best to start with less pigment and add more if needed.


Maid’s cheeks and fawn's ears-warm coral pink                                                   
Folds of the blouse and skirt - warm grey
Golden detail at the bottom of the skirt-rusty orange
Centers of the top corner flowers-rusty orange
Bushes-dark greens
Tree trunks-charcoal grey
Tree foliage-dark greens
Fawn chest-dark brown
Bird-rusty orange
Foreground-dark brown

I hope this entry inspires you to go outside your comfort zone of prescribed stitches and threads, to transform them in a way you have not considered before.    Be brave!  Remember...there are no mistakes in creativity...only discovery!



Wednesday, February 8, 2012

What's Inside....



A recent Facebook posting of a piece I'm teaching this weekend to the Saguaro Stitcher's ANG guild in Scottsdale, The Bougainvillea Wall, prompted inquiry into what was behind the blue door.


 For humans and cats, curiosity can either kill ya, or thrill ya!  Maybe both.  There is always a blue door that beckons... 

                                                        a closed gate that compels....
 
                                                               a lid to open......
 
                                                  a curtained window that intrigues....




So, take a peek, or step on in~


The walkway is lined with flowers; the fountain sparkles in the sun.  I suppose you want to go inside the house now for a cup of tea!  Sorry!  You're not invited!  (at least not yet!)


But there's one place you will always be invited, a place that you should always explore... every nook and cranny...every hiding place...



                                                             Your Own Heart!

There, you are always welcome to observe, to learn, to grow....never stop!  See Inside!  Stay Curious!





Friday, January 27, 2012

All That Glitters Is Not Gold....

All that glitters is not gold.  No, it is not!  It is silver, red, black, light green, dark green, lime, pink, yellow, purple, orange, and turquoise...with more colors to come!   It twists, turns, flattens, fattens, and couches!  It also stitches, plunges, and scrunches.  It is a cross between a Chinese finger torture device and a slinky!  And it is Wonderful!



I'm talking about *SPARKLES*!  Sundance Designs newest embellishment metallic tubing, used for creating fun and beautiful effects on your canvas.  Available now in 12 colors, I've already used it on numerous of my new designs which debuted at the January TNNA market.  I could not stop myself, I found it so addictive.   And I have not finished exploring all the different ways to use it.

Here are just a few.  The first is Sweetie Pie, and I stitched her hair with it, enlarging the canvas hole first, of course.  (Tip:  Always  use a Wooden laying tool for enlarging your canvas hole.  It is the only tool that will not split the threads!)  You can pinch the end of the tube and thread it in a large needle, OR you can wrap the ends with scotch tape to make it like a shoe lace.


Here is a beautiful, scrolling border that was couched down by just catching the outer edges.  It is super easy to create thick and thin lines.



Next, is a flat border.  It is perfectly flat because I IRONED it with a hot iron!  Again, it is couched, just catching the edges with a matching thread.





Here, in the next photo, I cut small pieces of it, and spread them open a bit, without allowing them to come completely apart.  I layed them in place and randomly added a few stitches on top to hold them.  It made the most realistic fire!  Ouch!  Don't get burned!


The last example is only the first of many future experiments.  I threaded a white cord though it to enable it to coil without crimping.  Imagine what you could do by adding ribbons, contrasting colors, big beads, etc.  No rules allowed with this stuff!  And the frog's legs could not have been simpler. 
They emerge from the back of the canvas and are couched at his ankles!


This product is brand new to the market.  I hope you have the opportunity to play with it as I have.  Please tell your local needlework shop to order it.  It is not expensive but the possibilities for creating fantastic results are priceless!




Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Winter Musings...

I'm very late in posting a new blog entry.  Since Halloween, I have been on the go...designing, stitching, teaching, thinking, working, sewing, designing, stitching, wrapping, shopping, cooking, cleaning, reading, designing, stitching....it goes on and on...you know the drill!

So, here I am, 5 days before Christmas, and although I have new designs that I am very excited about, I am saving them for the January TNNA Needlework Market.  I feel bad seeing orange leaves and halloween landscapes still posted on my blog, so I decided to share a few winter images and thoughts.

Here are photos of winter scenes where I live. We typically get snow several times a season..but so far, none this year.  I've accompanied these photos with notes I wrote in 2000 when I was enrolled in a creative writing class.  I share these 'winter musings' with you and hope you find inspiration in your surroundings too.

                                                        The Garden in White

"Eight to ten inches of piled on white.  It is melting now, a little, but when I woke this morning, the world was a magical place.  The backyard fence was transformed into a netting of exquisite lacework; darning patterns, open stitches in neat rowed conformity.
  


The oak and cedar trees were laden with white as well.   No lace there among their branches; only large balled clumps, deliberately placed, as if this tree, this limb, were designated storage for the stuff.


Now birds are beginning to move about.  I saw a tiny lone bird this morning, hopping underneath the lawn chair, under the eves of the porch.   It was as if lost and not knowing where to find companionship.  Now black crows are darting in and out of trees, their blackness a magnificent contrast to the pristine white.

I measured an 8" depth with my ruler this morning. I ventured outside into the cold crispness in my bathrobe and open toed sandals.  Had to measure!  If I were a child, I would be romping about in it, but I am perfectly happy to just gaze now and take in all this beauty.


The water is still running over the rocks in the pond Ron built last summer.  The $200 pump is doing it's job, circulating water from horse trough pond, up through the rusty pump, down over the mini mountain of boulders; a cycle that delights birds and even a snake that we know of.  There are seven goldfish in the pond, cozy I hope, under their blanket of waterlilies and water hyacinth.

Today, I will relax and enjoy this white world for as long as it lasts.  We are without electricity for the time being.  Oh well...laundry has to wait.  What shall I occupy myself with first?  My book, or my stitching?"
                                                              ~The End~

I don't remember what I chose to do...but as much as I love to read, I love to stitch more.  I bet I chose stitching!  What would you do, on a snow bound day?

Happy Holidays...and whatever you do to celebrate, I wish you happiness and joy!

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Is Halloween still here?

Today I took a walk out into the  Coronado National Forest adjacent to my home.  It is November, according to the calendar, but I had to wonder!  Everywhere I looked today, I saw evidence of October's  seasonal celebration:  Halloween! 

Did you know that Halloween designs are the best selling canvases in the needlepoint world?  Yes!  I think it is a tribute to our desire to have fun and forget the cares of the world!  There are lots of reasons for celebration, but this is the only one I know of, where children and adults alike can dress up in crazy costumes and just have crazy fun!  There isn't a serious side to this event, as far as I can tell, unlike most other holidays. 

Here is what I encountered on my hike:
Does the blue sky get more gorgeous than this?   The grasses are brittle and dry as bones!

    
I was warned, several times!


My shoe laces were untied one time too many on the trail by this guy! Mr. Cat Claw!  One has to side step his nasty swipes!

There were sharp dangerous things all around!


And wispy, ghosty things!


A charred black skeleton and orange decorations!

Oh my gosh!  Here is a skull!



More orange decor! 





This reeks of a witch to me!  A cauldron of sorts?  Lime green acid brew?
An ingredient for that Witch's brew, or is this something she brewed up?

The only wildlife I saw today were these coal black grasshoppers!

With Blood Red underwings!


And what creature was this?  Coatimundi?  Racoon? Creature from outer space?



Whew!  I'm home now!  As far as I'm concerned, Halloween is over for another year! 
Now I'm working on Christmas!
But you'll have to wait awhile to see it!



Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!
PS...I'm teaching "Summer" this weekend at BeStitched in Scottsdale!  Check it out here!

Monday, September 19, 2011

Have Needlepoint, Will Travel!

Last year, about this time, I was in Florida having a grand time visiting my daughter and her family.  Florida in Fall is Fabulous!  This year, I'm going to be traveling as well, but I'll be going to Austin, TX, which I've heard, is pretty fabulous too!

Fortunately, all those wildfires are now over, and I hope the smoke in the air is gone for good!  My heart goes out to all the people whose homes were lost in that terrible tragedy.  It is hard for me to even imagine the devastation and loss.

I'm going to focus on bringing some stitching joy to Austin, and The NeedleWorks, where I'll be teaching my little fall fashion icon, Pumpkin Spice.  There are so many wonderful threads, techniques, beads, colors, and embellishments to use on this piece.  I am excited to share what I have learned in designing and stitching it.

The class will be held on Oct. 1st and 2nd, and from what I've heard, the shop is nothing short of a  stitching paradise...warm, welcoming, inspiring in every way.  The owner, Colleen Church, designed it to be that way, from scratch!  I can hardly wait to get there, and hope to see you there too!


When I look at this piece, I can't help but remember my little grandson who was so captivated by the project.  I had brought it with me to stitch (one cannot leave stitching home alone!), and this child has loved 'punkins' since he was a baby.  I mean, he LOVES them!  He was by my side every moment I brought it out, helping me pull the needle through the canvas, putting a bead on when needed, helping me select the colors.   He was the best helper!


 He was so enthralled with the idea of stitching his own punkin, that I helped him do just that!  He painted his own canvas, and learned to stitch his very own piece!  I blogged about this before, but I'm posting some of the photos again because ....I Can!





 That year, we went to TWO punkin patches to find the perfect punkins to decorate the house with.  I was in punkin heaven myself!  Never have I seen so many beautiful pumpkins and so many varieties!  Arizona just does not seem to get such a bounty to choose from. 


Well, no matter......whether we ever see such a gorgeous variety of punkin produce or not in Arizona, Miss Pumpkin Spice has enough gorgeous variety and color in her own right!  She will grace my home with fall flavor...maybe I'll even catch a wiff of cooler air when I look at her.  And  of course, she will always hold my precious memories....

Monday, September 12, 2011

Summer Flowers

Teaching "Summer Flowers" at BeStitched this weekend in Scottsdale, AZ was a highlight of my summer!  Yes..I'm still counting September as Summer, although technically, it ushers Fall.  My husband told me that the temps dropped down into the 50's at our house Saturday night, while I was gone!

I think all of my students, as well as myself, were very happy with the experience we collectively shared at BeStitched.  I'm now referring to the shop as the "SPA Stitching Store" because those BeStitched ladies know how to pamper!  My oh My!  We were all indulged with little gifts, gourmet lunches, snacks, drinks, superior customer service, and a beautiful ambiance that included stunning fresh flower arrangements, bright natural lighting, plush seating, and charming, colorful decor.



My class was great!  The women who attended were eager and willing to learn new techniques,  seeming to enjoy themselves and the project.  I appreciated their positive attitudes and positive feedbacks!  There are few activites more satisfying than spending a day with friends, stitching, learning, AND being catered to, as Lisa and Jeannine were prone to do! 



Have you ever been served an upside down scrumptious cupcake?  As Jeannine remarked, "More Frosting!"



I'm sharing two videos that were filmed during my class presentation.  These are tips for techniques that can be utilized by any stitcher.  The first one shown here deals with an easy way to enlarge a canvas hole without breaking the threads.





 Click the link below for advice on how to choose the right decorative paper to create a custom mat for your needlework (or any artwork, I might add!).

  http://youtu.be/mPyOin8JUok

Next on the docket:  Teaching "Pumpkin Spice" at NeedleWorks in Austin, TX!  Check back next week for a new blog post on that project.  By then, summer will definitely be over, and fall will have arrived!  At least in my mind!