Mittwoch, 30. März 2011

My Paintings

A friend asked me about my paintings. Well, I have painted for so many years, and still do this, so I have lots and lots of paintings and collages also - not ONLY quilted things. :-)

Here are some examples:


"J's Flower", 46 cm x 52 cm





"garden dancer", 9 cm x 7 cm






"message", 8 cm x 8 cm





"Pitcher", 70 cm x 80 cm





"Blumen im Regen" (Flowers in the Rain), 80 cm x 80 cm






"... or else expecting rain" (after a Bob Dylan song), 28 cm x 23 cm






"dancing little tree", 7 cm x 9 cm







"some triangles", 43 cm x 45 cm (with selfmade wooden frame)





"Boot" (Boat), 63 cm x 67 cm





"you and me", 21 cm x 21 cm








Dienstag, 29. März 2011

Quilts as Blankets


"If all that matters was keeping warm, we would buy our coverlets, too. The women of my family quilt - they quilted - as a matter of choice, not necessity. We each had our own style, our own favorite colors and patterns, our own unique way of arranging the pieces - even if two of us chose the same pattern and traced the same templates , the quilts we made would be as unique to us as our faces and voices. My mother's quilts say 'home' to me in a way no blanket from a store ever could."
(from: "The New Year's Quilt", by Jennifer Chiaverini)












Montag, 28. März 2011

Finding and Creating


"Life isn't about finding yourself. Life is about creating yourself." 
(George Bernard Shaw)

Well, I think it is both! Sounds paradoxical and impossible, but I'm sure: It's both. 
(sorry, Mr. Shaw!) :-)



Freitag, 25. März 2011

The Art of Peace







(http://server40136.uk2net.com/~wpower/images/product_images/9781585422258.jpg)


I love this beautiful book: "The Art of Peace, Balance over Conflict in Sun-Tzu's The Art Of War" by Philip Dunn.

This poem by the Polish author Leopold Staff is from that book:



THE BRIDGE


I didn’t believe,
Standing on the bank of a river
Which was wide and swift,
That I would cross that bridge
Plaited from thin, fragile reeds
Fastened with bast.
I walked delicately as a butterfly
And heavily as an elephant,
I walked surely as a dancer
And wavered like a blind man.
I didn’t believe that I would cross that bridge,
And now that I am standing on the other side,
I don’t believe I crossed it.

Leopold Staff










Mittwoch, 23. März 2011

Ideas and Inspiration


"Inspiration arrives as a packet of material to be delivered." 
John Updike


I'm so grateful for all the inspiration I drew from these books!

Here I find great ideas for creating a block (and "The Farmer's Wife Sampler Quilt" is a great read also!):



( http://www.blueocean.bz/worm/home/cover_image/0896898288)




(http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61HlMTAiFuL.jpg)

I love these unique quilts, used as pictures or wallhangings. I got my ideas for the little quilts for kids (see "Kid's Corner" on this site) from here:



(http://images.betterworldbooks.com/184/Patchwork-Folk-Art-Bolton-Janet-9781846013225.jpg)


This is where I got ideas for my dolls:



( http://www.naehwelt-machemer.de/public/00002/1000-1227/1000-1227_G.JPG)
I'm not much into embroidery, but whenever I need advice here, I always go to this book by Nikki Tinkler:


(http://bilder.buecher.de/produkte/22/22312/22312126n.jpg)

And I love that one here, although I found out that African American Quilting means much more than represented with these beautiful and now so famous quilts here. African American Quilting is something so special and beautiful, I just wish to learn more about this, and this book here provides many lovely pictures and insights:



(http://www.coverbrowser.com/image/bestsellers-2006/3154-1.jpg)

And then there is this lovely webiste of a quilt shop in Chicago: 

http://www.quiltology.com

Great offers, great stories on this site!
I don't know the shop yet, but when I'll go to Chicago again this summer, me and my dear friend Fran will find out all about it! :-)

Sonntag, 20. März 2011

Spring


"Spring has returned. The earth is like a child that knows poems. " 
Rainer Maria Rilke









Freitag, 18. März 2011

Book and Bookmark

"Water for Elephants" by Sara Gruen: I especially love the last chapters in this wonderful book! And my bookmark is a good companion! 


Donnerstag, 17. März 2011

Turning Points



I cannot talk here about the horribly sad events in Japan, but I know that they mean that we all have reached a turning point.


This site here is about my quilting work, and so I write about a turning point I have experienced while working on this quilt top:


 

I finished this quilt top today. It might not be that obvious, but it started as an experiment with lots of pure improvisation, with squares about the size of my hand, ... using no exact measurements or templates. Some squares consist of lots of little pieces, which are arranged irregularly also. To make ends meet here in the corners of the squares was sometimes too much of a difficult task, so I finally added some well measured pieces as well, squares and strips all the same size, just to reach firm land again!! 

I produced one vertical strip after the other, and as you can possibly see: the turning point was after I finished the vertical strip in the middle. That strip exhausted me so much that I knew I had to change the concept. The two vertical strips following to the left hand side then are arranged in a much more regular way.
Maybe some of you think I should have ploughed straight through, my first strips didn't look that wrong and with great effort I could have done two more. But no. I often think that this rule here is a good one for me : if I wish to be successful, I don't exhaust myself . If I am exhausted I know I'm on a road which leads to a spiral, pointing downward ultimately. I learned to stop and to let it rest (very hard for me to do sometimes). I'll come back later and change something, very often I have a fresh, different idea then. 
"Produce as many ideas as possible. Try to produce unlikely ideas." says Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. I can do that best when feeling powerful, not exhausted!
Now I'm happy with my quilt top here, even if it looks a bit .... unusual, but I am glad I didn't give it up altogether. 
Next things to do: I'll put the top here onto the batting (thin wool) and the reverse side (light cotton), thread that together roughly and then quilt the three layers. I also have a lovely yellow strip for the border. 
I will love that piece, as I love all my quilts. I think I made 13 quilts by now (Literary Quilts not included). Each quilt reflects something personal, and whenever I give any quilts away, my best wishes go with them. I like to give quilts away as much as I like to keep some for myself!








Dienstag, 15. März 2011

Pockets of Happiness


"The thought has cheered me, and I'd like to hang on to that. Must protect my little pockets of happiness." says the old man in the lovely book "Water for Elephants" by Sara Gruen, thank you so much, Fran, for recommending it to me! I love it.


Pockets of happiness are now more important than ever.
Now, here is my second quilting project I'm working on at the moment : one of my  pockets of happiness .





It's a piece that grows only very slowly, but in a lovely way: the pieces are about the size of a stamp (or half the size of a stamp sometimes). I don't have any plans with it, I just add one piece after the other as it comes and we'll see when it will be finished. Also, it's a great way to use remnants. I'm sparing with my fabrics, so: what's even too small to be used here is going to a stack of tiny remnants with which I fill my stuffed animals and dolls.


Here is another "pocket of happiness": flowers. I took a picture of a blooming hyacinth and my camera (a simple one) refused to take a sharp picture, but I like it anyway, the picture looks a bit like a painting... :-)






And then, my breakfast is a "pocket of happiness", I love my daily oatmeal and fresh fruit!! Delicious! With a darjeeling tea, a bit milk.... hmmmm! (This picture was taken in Madison, Wisconsin, last summer.)









Montag, 14. März 2011

I Started Out On A New Quilt



Despite all the sadness in the world, I began to work on a new quilt.

I will cover a huge red cloth with lots and lots of appliquéd leaves and flowers.









Samstag, 12. März 2011

Donnerstag, 10. März 2011

How I Once Planned A Quilt


I finished a new quilt today.



This is the way it went: 

 I started out to make a light summer quilt with only light fabrics and a beautiful pattern of diamonds (diamond = a square which is set on top, this often stands for "protection" in African American quilts). I planned to have them all neatly arranged one next to the other. Nice bright border around. I made all the calculations for dimensions. It seemed to be plain and easy to do.
The part with which I started is now the middle part of my quilt.
To the bright fabrics I swiftly added some dark red and brown fabrics. It looked too cool to me without them (even in a summer quilt). Checked cloth looks cozy to me, so I found myself using it often here, too. 
Then I felt like abandoning the original pattern altogether and I moved on freely with some pieces arranging here, some pieces arranging there, all around the first three diamonds. Then I felt like giving all this a firm, strong border in warm dark red (to hold it all together a bit).  But once this border was attached I began to improvise with pieces again (which is not that easy to do). 
I used lovely antique, embroidered cloth as well. I have inherited a stack of that.
Then I was thinking about complementary colors, and - to answer the red part -  I added some green (after having put green in and out before). Green, however, reminds me of a friend who plays an important "complementary" role in my life, so I am glad: the green is worked in. Twice, a bigger and a smaller piece. 



Then I added a tiny piece of bright fabric with a floral design, reminding me of a friend who worked on her fabulous quilt  sometimes directly next to me; she used this fabric in her quilt. 


Then my sisters returned from a trip to France, and presented me on my birthday with linen from a market in the Provence, and I added it promptly here.
Then I attached a checked border all around, with some fabric I had purchased only recently for a quite different purpose (Christmas bags for the family), but I saw it fit right here now.
I planned to quilt the whole piece with regular diagonal lines at first, but then I quilted squares, diamonds, zigzag and meander lines, and not only with bright yarn, as I originally had intended: I found lovely red yarn at a department store in Berlin, so I used that, too. (not in the picture)


Finally,  I added another border (but only at three sides). I luckily received a checked cotton remnant in red and beige on my sister's birthday party (together with a huge sack of other remnants, from a nice lady who runs a Bed & Breakfast, just because we talked about quilts...) , now it makes a lovely part of my outer border here.
I started to make this quilt in August 2010 and since then I had laid it down to rest for some time in between very often.
In the end now I'm happy with the result!  I never would have been able to plan something like that!!
It is still a quilt for the summer, it is thin and weighs next to nothing, so I achieved my initial goal, but that is all that remained of my original ideas.