Category Archives: About Art

Quilt and Stitch… Some Ideas, Part 2

As a follow-up on last week’s Quilt and Stitch post One, about my approach to mark-making on textiles, a.k.a. quilting, here is another set of closeups shots to illustrate my fascination with line repeats.
Quilt stitch sample. Photo © Andrée Fredette

Above, two sets of very different line repeats: a curvy grouping at the bottom, contrasted with very angular paired lines around the “sun”, which are punctuated by little “seeds” of zig-zag-in-place, just because I imagined it might be interesting (smile).

The photo above is a real close-up, those stitching lines are about an 1/8″ apart, and the fabric is hand-dyed pima cotton, with a very tight weave. The sunburst effect on the hand-dye was achieved with tightly knotted elastics, a technique from the sixties… But resist dyeing, or tie-dye, is a subject for another day.

Quilt stitch sample. Photo © Andrée Fredette

Above, another sample that shows how variations in spacing can create a vibration effect. Almost tribal. I could have changed thread colours, but chose to stay with the hot pink. In later posts on this topic, I will show you how thread colour can play a big role in a group of stitched lines.

Quilt stitch sample. Photo © Andrée Fredette

Above: circular stitching in place, to create a little “pasty”, or embroidered dot. I left the thread on the piece between dots. For the top line of pasties, I decided to come back and to add lines of stitching to highlight the linear connection.  I could have cut the threads… but it is far more interesting this way.

IMG_0340

And this last example is a combo of machine and hand-stitching. I started with a line, punctuated by “pasties” which I topped with a thread buildup, to create a thread bead, practically. Then, I returned with another colour, and stitched up and down and around the pasties, because I felt like it…. The other lines on the right are stitched/embroidered by hand. You can also spot my fingernail-dragging mark on the fabric, where I had considered adding yet another line…

All in a day’s play.

Quilt and Stitch… Some Ideas, Part 1

Before starting to texture a quilt, I usually go through what I call my doodling step, where I try out some ideas with a felt tip pen on some newsprint. I draw lines without lifting the felt tip pen from the paper, to imitate the “endless line” motion of a sewing machine stitching line…

Stitching pattern, free-style. Photo © Andrée Fredette

Sometimes, the bright ideas are elusive and I scrap a lot of paper… And sometimes, light bulbs go on and I save my pile of paper sketches. On a good day, I can come up with several usable textures and on a bad day, well, it’s a really dry run. Go figure.

Then – before tackling an actual quilt – I take my bright ideas to little “quilt sandwiches”, to practice and warm up.

Stitching pattern, free-style. Photo © Andrée Fredette

In the sample above, you can see the light green stitching lines, about an inch apart, that form “corridors”. I often use those as a first step, to establish a direction, especially when I am trying to evoke a stem, or to draw long lines across a piece.

After laying my road map, I come back (in this case, with a darker thread) and fill in with the patterns that I pick up in the greenery that surrounds me. I am really fascinated by the lines of foliage – both on shore and in the water – on the island. Grasses, plants, kelp, anything is a good source of inspiration.

And I have found that pattern repeats, especially when they are uneven, are very interesting. They move the eye around…

Stitching pattern, free-style. Photo © Andrée Fredette

Here is an example of a textured quilt study, using simple lines to enhance the pieced design.

Mark-making. Stitching pattern, free-style. Photo © Andrée Fredette

I am not interested in perfection, because perfectly spaced lines and stitches look too automated, machine-driven. I prefer the lyrical “élan”, the irregular repeats, much like wavelets washing ashore, no two exactly the same. I want my stitching or mark-making to look a bit more like someone applying pressure on a brush, while painting or drawing. Because I draw with a sewing machine…

Fabric Painting

I got some liquid pigments and fabric medium, and got to painting.

Both these patterns were achieved with an old credit card. That was actually fun. Tchik Tchik.

Hand-Painted Cottons1 WL

And then, inspired, I used an applicator and thickened dye to draw black lines on a painted background, below. With some “thorns”, no less… Also fun.

Hand-Painted Cottons2 WL

Fabric painting is a great way to “disappear into the zone” for a few hours. I don’t have any idea about how to use these painted pieces of yardage. But something will come to me, I am certain…

Showing Photographs on Saturna

The Point Store Gallery on Saturna Island, BC, is featuring some of my photos this month, until September 25th.

As an experiment, I got some of my pictures printed on aluminum and on acrylic, with very interesting results.
East Point Sky, 30 x 20" photo printed on acrylic - © Andrée Fredette

East Point Sky, 30 x 20″ photo printed on acrylic

The day I took that picture, I had wandered to East Point, on Saturna Island and I was concentrating on the kelp. The previous night had been windy, and the shoreline is always interesting after a big wind…

When I looked up, there was a gift waiting for me: the sky. And these people by the former fog alarm building obligingly provided scale to this grandiose sky.

Speaking of the shoreline after a big wind: a lot of kelp ends up on the shore at low tide. Bull kelp, in particular, fascinates me.

Elegant Duo, Bull Kelp - 24 x 18" photo printed on aluminum © Andrée Fredette

Elegant Duo, Bull Kelp, 24 x 18″ photo printed on aluminum

Wet kelp is very sleek. Its lines are seductive. I tried printing this one on aluminum; in the areas with light pigment, the metal shows through, highlighting the shining effect of the light.

During the opening, last week, I liked watching people interact with this picture. They walked back and forth in front of it, observing the changing light effects.

More experiments to come.

Photography on canvas: my new venture

In addition to showing some quilts at Insight Gallery, on Galiano Island, as part of the Saturna Artists Show, I decided to include some new photo prints on canvas.

This is my April Eagle. I took that picture from my deck last April. This eagle was just sitting in a Garry oak, surveying the neighbourhood. I decided to play with the photo and thought that this would be a good print. The rough surface of the canvas enhances the texture.
April Eagle on CanvasThe feedback I got during the reception was positive. I am building up a couple of series of these prints. Some are nature-based, others are more abstract. Something to do when I am not sewing…