Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts

Friday, January 23, 2015

My upcoming workshops

Just a quick post to announce my workshops for this spring. I will be teaching at Luckystone Studio in Glens Falls, NY in February. I will be teaching my one day Scapescarf class....


 on Feb. 6th. Go to the Luckystone Studio page to register. 

Then on February 7th and 8th I will be teaching my Landscape class
Here is my latest landscape using the technique that I will be teaching then.


Then in March I fly to Colorado to teach at the Felter's Rendezvous at Estes Park.  I will be teaching a new class there on how to create imagery with nuno collage. I have been preparing for that class and was inspired to create this piece with many layers of fabrics and embellishments. It still needs a few finishing touches...





Wednesday, December 3, 2014

But what about your blog? Part Two

After the week at the Huyck (see part one of this post) I had a few shows to get pieces ready for. One was for the only craft show that I normally do, Suffield on the Green. Here is a photo of my booth there.


I also submitted work to the '80 Days of Art' show at the West Hartford Art League,


 The 22nd Annual Juried Art Show at the Piedmont Hall in Somers,


 an exhibit put on by the Northeast Feltmakers Guild (which I am a proud member of), 







and the Tobacco Valley Artists Association's 2014 Fall Members Show.


It was really hard to keep track of all the dates for applying, drop off, opening, and pick up for each show. I messed up a few times but not too badly.

I also was busy getting a new felt piece ready for the Granby Land Trust art show. This year the theme was Celebrating Preserved Lands so the choices of where we were to find our inspiration was much broader than usual. I submitted the pastel painting above that was inspired by the Cape Cod National Sea Shore, and a felt piece based on a photo I took at the Parker River Wildlife Refuge. Here is the inspiration photo...


and here is the felt.


My pastel did not get in to the show but the felt did...and it sold to a local art collector. 


After that I had to get some pieces ready to bring to the Wesleyan Potters' Annual Show and Sale


Some of the pieces I already had done but some still needed framing. Some of them I thought we all set I found needed attention, especially those that had been in previous shows. It was stressful getting them there in time but I did it. Here is one of the new felt pieces, which was inspired by one of the photos I took out in Wisconsin while at the Midwest Felting Symposium.


I had also started a pastel rendition of the same photo...but it is still unfinished.  I am really determined to get good at using the pastels for when my hands to get too weak to felt, since pastel benefits from a gentle touch...not to mention that I get tired of using just one medium. I know I am not there yet...


I was invited to do a one day, one table, show and sale by the City of Waterbury public arts council. I asked my daughter if she wanted to do it with me and she agreed. It turned out to be one of the best shows we have ever done and was a whole new market. 


I sold TWO hats! I have only sold one before. I was so glad to have them find an owner...it is sad to have things just sit in a box for years. Sometimes I believe that the things I create really are just waiting for the right person to come along.

During this period I was also able to take a workshop with Cristina Pacciani of CriCri Felt. I only knew of Cristina through Facebook. Through her posts I saw such a talented artist and even more so, a beautiful soul. I really wanted to meet her and when I found out she was going to come over from Amsterdam to teach a workshop in New Hampshire I signed right up. I am so glad I did, and Cristina was exactly as I thought she would be. Unfortunately, I was recovering from a cold and was not really up to doing as much felting as I wanted to. I did not really use a lot of the techniques that she showed in the scarf/wrap that I made in the workshop but I did learn some new things and best of all got to spend time with Cristina and many friends old and new. I did not take any great photos at the workshop. Here is a photo of the scarf; which you can also see on me in the photo above.


I also gave a workshop up at the Adirondack Folk School in Lake Luzerne NY. I taught my 'Scape-scarf' class. I only had three students so it was a lot of fun. They really enjoyed it and did good work.





I stayed at my friend Robin's house and on Sunday I helped her with her booth at the Southern Adirondack Fiber Festival. I was a good girl there and did not really buy anything except for food. However,
in the beginning of November I got to go to the New England Fiber Festival with my friend Joei. Neither of us was going to buy a fleece...we were not even going to look! HA! We each bought one and split another one. Here is the one we split...and Icelandic that had black tips fading to white at the base.


I will also admit that I bought a skein of yarn...another thing I pledged not to buy more of. BUT I did not buy any beads! 

I took some time later that month to make another thing for me. Another wrap. I wanted it to be large enough to be yardage so I could cut and sew a top or something. THAT did not happen. I was using the pine needle technique that I learned from Leiko Uchiyama back in May. I love the look that can be achieved with this technique but I don't have enough patience to do enough of it to make a large piece. Here is part of the layout.




And here is the finished shawl.



It is made with 15.5 micron wool and is so soft and light.

And now that Thanksgiving is over I am working on what I hope will be yardage for a light weight jacket. I am finally using some of those naturally dyed silks that I have been making for years. I love how they look in this photo.




I know they will change a lot once they get socked with some soap and water and agitation when I felt them. Some of these pieces have never even been rinsed. It is all going to be a surprise. But the nice thing about natural dyes is that they seem to always look good together no matter how much they change. And I can always over-dye it if I don't like it!

The End



Monday, September 8, 2014

Midwest Felting Symposium part 3

So much has happened since the symposium that it seems like years ago. I will have to try to go back in my mind archives and see if I can find some memories of what happened.  Since then I have had another week away from home; on a retreat at the Huyck Nature Preserve with nine of my friends interpreting our surroundings in felt. But that event deserves its own post. I am also recovering from doing my one and only craft show this past weekend. So this post will probably not be the best but I will be able to cross it off my list of things to do. The weekend went well, I sold some of my older work which always feels good, and I got to spend a lot of time with my lovely daughter. Here are photos she took of my booth.



That is my wonderful dad who is another of my helpers without whom I would not do even this show. It is so much work!
Time with my daughter has been especially important since her relationship of over 8 years ended while I was out in the Midwest.  At about 2 in the morning on the day of my NoBodys class my phone rang. Talk about scary. Waking up in a hotel room to a call where all you hear is your daughter sobbing so much she can't speak. I thought someone must have died. I finally was able to hear her say 'Tony doesn't love me anymore' and my heart broke and it was AWFUL not to be there to hold her tight. I was hurting too. Tony was like a son to me and it seemed like he always would be a part of our family with or without the actual marriage certificate. There were a few other phone calls in those wee hours of the morning and a lot of tossing and turning as I worried about them and did my own mourning about the loss of a future we has all imagined. Needless to say it was not a good way to start a day that I would be teaching the class I has the most worries about being successful.
I was right to be worried. The class was listed as advanced with a warning that it would involve intense hand work yet two of my students had only felted once before. I had agreed to take one of the students when Holly, one of the organizers, told me that she had a student who really wanted to take my class but did not have not much felting experience. I told Holly to ask her to practice felting over a resist before the class, sadly that did not happen. Luckily I only had 4 students so I told them that I would do my best to help them succeed but that I had to give equal time to all the students and could not give them special attention. I also asked the class to forgive me that I was not quite all there and explained my troubled night. In the end it all was fine, since the students were happy with their creations and most importantly had a lot of fun. In a way the extra challenge was good for me since it helped distract me from worrying about my daughter. Here are the hollow heads that the students made. Only one was considered 'fully' finished. Pun intended.

This is Ramsey with her creation.




She has wonderful plans on how to finish and accessorize this guy. I hope she sends me a photo to share. I loved the bone through the chin idea.

This is Jaclyn who was one of the newbies. She 'got' it right at the start and seemed to just be able to understand how to manipulate the fibers. She also had the hand strength to be able to full the felt and shape it. She was a natural and it was amusing that she only took the class to accompany Joan.


Ah, Joan....my biggest challenge but we had so many laughs. I had to borrow a phrase that Karolina Arvilommi uses in her classes when students need to do more fulling; she simply says "little bit more". She says this so sweetly so that you do not hold it against her when she is asking you to push yourself beyond what you think you can physically handle and you just want to be done. Each time I came to Joan as I made my rotation around the room the conversation went like this:
Joan: How is this?
Me: Little bit more.
Joan: with a shocked expression Really???
It got to be a running joke...so here she is saying "little bit more".

 
Finally here is Dominique. Dominique was talked into taking my class (she did not really like my NoBodys) but she wanted to learn as many shaping techniques as possible. In the end she said she was so happy she did take the class. Dominique had just taken a class with Pamela MacGregor; a master of shaping and making hard felt. I was intimidated to teach 3D felt making to a student who had just taken one of her classes. Dominique had a bit of trouble sticking to one concept and started a few different pieces, but she worked after class hours and had a new piece started when I came to class on the second day. Her piece was inspired by the missing Nigerian school girls. She wants to add 200 spikes at the top of the figure to represent each young girl. It was my pleasure to have her in class and especially to have her share her thoughts about feltmaking and life in general. 
Fiber artists are some of the nicest people I have know and feltmakers are the best. Students may come in the door as strangers but it is not long before they seem like old friends.


My final class was back in my comfort zone teaching the one day 'ScapeScarf' class. It went really well and was a great way to end my week. Six lovely ladies created six lovely scarfs. Two of the women used my Springtime themed scarf as inspiration. 
Here is Carol's.



Sue used the same scarf for inspiration yet each woman created a piece that was truly their own. That is one of the cool things about felt. No two pieces are exactly alike.
Here is Sue.




Sharon had her own image idea that she wanted to render. Her finished piece came out just the way she described the scene to me. 




Janet wanted to render a beach scene reminiscent of the Outer Banks. I think her scarf really gives that impression. 




Betty was also thinking Spring when she made her beautiful Cherry tree scarf. I love the idea of a nice warm winter scarf showing colorful warm times of the year.




Carol had in mind a sunset. She used such beautiful colors and her use of one of my yarns was fantastic. I love when students use my materials in a way that had not occurred to me. I always learn so much when I teach.



And now it is time to do some unpacking...and cleaning...and....




Sunday, August 17, 2014

The Midwest Felting Symposium Part 2: My Classes

It has taken me a bit longer than I expected to get back to writing about the Symposium. It has been a strange week. I was very affected by Robin Williams' suicide and all the discussions about depression, etc. as well as being shocked and saddened at the loss of such a brilliant man. I somehow always felt like I knew him personally, as though he could have been a member of my own crazy family. I also got bad news that one of my sisters was in a horseback riding accident while she was away on vacation. She has a compound fracture to her shoulder which required surgery and then later found out that she broke her sacrum as well. She is still in the hospital and far from her home near here so I can not do anything to help or see her in person. So to keep my mind off these less than pleasant subjects I wound up felting this scene from my trip.


What I was supposed to be doing was cleaning up this mess in my "studio". Everything was in disarray because of having to pack all my colors in spacebags for the trip.



I also had a lot of gardening to do since I had not had much time out there before the trip and there was the added chore of harvesting.

And I won't go into all the other day to day stuff the should have been getting done. I will get right on those things when I finish writing this. (Yeah, right). 

The first class I taught was my landscape class. This time it was a 3 day class and that worked out so much better than doing only 2 days. It was much more relaxed and I was able to add more information and take more time with demonstrating and giving individual attention. To me that is key with this class. It was a joy to teach this fun and talented group of women and I think their pieces came out great.
Here are photos of each student's piece after the layout, wet felting, and then one as they left the class. Many students plan to do a bit more embellishing. First here are photos of the inspiration photos they used.








Here is Sheryl's piece.



And at the end of class





Here is Hedy's piece.




And at the end of class.


Here is Suzanne's piece.





And at the end of class. Suzanne plans on adding beads and shells, etc.. I hope she sends me a photo!




Here is Bonnie's piece.





And at the end of class.




Here is Trine's piece.





At the end of class.




Here is Diane's piece.


 
At the end of class.




And here is Kathleen's piece. Kathleen liked her piece so much after wet felting that she did not want to do any needle felting on it. Many students have photos they really want to use as a reference but that might not  the best to practice all the things I want to teach them. In those cases I encourage them to work with another photo as a practice piece. I then give them advice on how to approach the next piece. This was the case with Kathleen's first photo choice so since she finished early I suggested that she do a sample of color combinations for her next piece.
Here is her first piece.






One of the nice things about having the extra time was that the students got to talk about their pieces, and what they learned, with each other more than usual. 






After that I got to take a break for a day...and now I will take a beak from this blog writing for the day. Stay tuned for the third installment.