I have kept nearly all scrappy offcuts and tidyings of my hand dyed and printed fabrics. Over time, I have joined these into what is a rather large ball. I added some other bits and pieces to create a colourful bowl. I love how the transitions of colour are so random and spin outas is from the sun. Serindipity at its best. I'll continue working back into this by hand to add marks and other embroidery. From a fairly quick and easy project, it has become a slow stich, comforting project.
Scaling up an image of the Brisbane River to develop the substrate for a new art quilt. Each square needs to be 6cm x 6cm to make a finished size of 5 cm square. I created a "to scale" model of the finished quilt on drafting paper. I printed an image of the river (attribution below) and then scaled it up to get a fairly accurate flow across the quilt. The substrate rightly tells the background story. It is the foundation on which the main elements or features reside. So it isn't the "hero" of the piece - it needs to be recognised and visible without overwhelming the piece. I can now easily identify which squares hold a section of the river and start to experiment on piecing, applique, fusing, printing, and painting to learn which gives the best outcome for the substrate. (Brisbane River original image: Magpie Shooter; edited version Paulguard at en.wikipedia https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/indix.php?curid=9724127) My foundation piece might well end u...
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