Tag Archives: nature

A flower, for a sunny Friday

I was going to write a longer post in the series I started, about texturing quilts… but it’s a sunny day and the garden is calling me.

So instead, I am offering you a photo of Mount St. Helens last week, when the cloud cover briefly lifted and revealed the caldera and the meandering outflow in the valley below. Spectacular scenery!

Mount St. Helens, April 2015. Photo © Andrée Fredette

On the hills below the volcano, the wildflowers were everywhere…

Indian Paintbrush, Abstracted. Photo © Andrée Fredette

Here is a digitally-manipulated version of Indian Paintbrush (Castilleja), one of those abundant wildflowers below Mount St. Helens last week, in Washington. And now, back outside in the sunny Pacific Northwest…

Water Lily and Bullfrog – Photo Wednesday

Going through old files, remembering our Ontario cottage… This photo was taken from a canoe, on a July morning, early, when things were very quiet on the lake.

Water Lily on Little Kennisis Lake, Ontario. Photo © Andrée Fredette

Beautiful Yellow pond-lily, growing near an island in the middle of Little Kennisis Lake.

That early morning paddle meant quiet water: no powerboats and no waterskiers. Just me and some beavers, a pair of loons, oh… and a bullfrog.

Because after my paddle around the lake, I found an impressive American bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana), waiting for me on the dock ladder. I didn’t disturb it, just went around to the other side.

American bullfrog (Lithobates catesbeianus). Photo © Andrée Fredette

I sigh with pleasure, when I remember that morning.

Little Treasures in the Moss

Walks in the forest can be dark, around here. The trees are very tall, and they occupy the sky. Down below, little surprises are hiding.
Gold coral mushroom on an old stump. Photo © Andrée Fredette
The golden little “manos arriba!” mushroom, above, is probably a coral mushroom being born… on an old tree stump covered with moss. It was hard to miss, sunlight was caressing it in the middle of dark cedar and fir shade.
Mossy Treasure. Photo © Andrée Fredette

And this tiny white one (sorry, don’t know its name) was the one I saw because I had to bend down to tie a loose lace. There it was, next to the trail, a delicate and practically glowing treasure. Maybe 2 centimeters tall…

And then I turn my gaze up, and admire how tall the trees are around here. I am reminded of Terry Pratchett’s observation about the “race for the light”…

“There are no medium-sized trees in the deep forest. There are only the towering ones, whose canopy spreads across the sky.  Below, in the gloom, there’s light for nothing but mosses and ferns.  But when a giant falls, leaving a little space … then there’s a race — between the trees on either side, who want to spread out, and the seedlings below, who race to grow up.  Sometimes, you can make your own space.”
– Terry Pratchett, Small Gods 

Spring Warmth – Photo Wednesday

Sunny days on the West Coast. Things are warming up, it’s promising. Here is a close-up of fresh baby leaves, sprouting on the trunk of a gigantic arbutus (Arbutus menziesii, also known as madrone or madrona in the USA).

New Growth Arbutus with close-up ant. Photo © Andrée Fredette

This tree is at least 6 feet in circumference, and this is the smooth side. You can glimpse a bit of the rough edges on the left.I chose to zoom in on the ant to give you an idea of the smoothness of the bark, and scale… I think arbutus is a tree with lots of personality. More photos coming…

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.