Having just recently enjoyed working the garden on and around the wall and gateway, it reminded me how much I have enjoyed sewing other garden scenes in the past. The one above was based on a lovely quiet corner in a large established garden, with huge pots dotted about, not all with anything growing in them.
Another corner with pots, this time with plants growing in them, almost swamped by the nasturtiums and other flowers growing around the bases.
This garden was purely imaginary, worked on a hand felted base, I just embroidered the flowers wherever the colours of the felt dictated.
Another walled garden embroidered almost 20 years ago. Whilst all the other pieces in this post have sold, this one I have kept, as it was a breakthrough piece of art for me at the time that I made it. It was the first time that I had attempted to make a textural wall and the first time that I had embroidered vegetation on wash away fabric to be applied individually when washed and dried.
Thursday, 30 June 2016
Monday, 27 June 2016
It Worked!
Just a narrow strip to add to the side of the piece that was too small, but which of the many different green threads did I use in the original piece? By carefully matching I think that I've selected the colours correctly, good enough anyway, as the leaves are all different shades in nature anyway.
Just by cutting around some of the leaves on the bigger piece and overlapping the smaller strip I have avoided a straight join line, and I think that it looks O.K. I also cut off one of the free standing flower stalks from the right hand side piece to add to the line up here, the left top looks a bit bare. Done!
Just by cutting around some of the leaves on the bigger piece and overlapping the smaller strip I have avoided a straight join line, and I think that it looks O.K. I also cut off one of the free standing flower stalks from the right hand side piece to add to the line up here, the left top looks a bit bare. Done!
Saturday, 25 June 2016
Final Piece of the Jigsaw.
This is the final piece of the vegetation to go on the right hand side of the gateway. I've made it a bit larger than would seem necessary, as I'm sure that the left hand side piece is too small.
Here is the new piece of embroidery in place, and I'm wondering if the lower section in the shadow is too dark., but it might just have to stay that way! Yes, the left hand piece of the puzzle is too narrow, so I'll have to work another section to fill in the gap. Almost there.
Here is the new piece of embroidery in place, and I'm wondering if the lower section in the shadow is too dark., but it might just have to stay that way! Yes, the left hand piece of the puzzle is too narrow, so I'll have to work another section to fill in the gap. Almost there.
Wednesday, 22 June 2016
That's Better.
Trying to save myself work, I had placed some old bits of embroidered foliage from another project below the new piece at the top of the panel. It never looked very good, so I made some new strips of vegetation which are better colours for a start and even though nothing is attached yet, it already looks a lot better. It may not be the final configuration however.
Tuesday, 21 June 2016
The Next Stage.
Here is the next stage in the walled garden scene. Unfortunately I don't think that I was careful enough measuring the area that I worked on, a little wider would have been better, but I can always add some more leaves later if it still doesn't look quite right.
Monday, 20 June 2016
A Long Way to Go.
None of these pieces of embroidery are fixed in position yet, but this is more or less what I have in mind. The foreground comes next, which will be a bit of a challenge, as it will need to have bigger leaves and flowers to suggest that it's all closer to the viewer than the vegetation that is on the wall.
Sunday, 19 June 2016
Grass Tree Lino.
This is the first print from the lino cut that I started work on last week. It still needs some more tidying up, but so far so good.
As usual I couldn't resist playing around in Photoshop!
Wednesday, 15 June 2016
New Lino Cut.
Cut from a photo that I took shortly after the devastating Canberra bushfire some years ago, this Grass-Tree or Xanthorea survived with just a very black trunk and singed leaves.
Even the tall flower spikes survived when almost all of the vegetation on the hills beyond were burnt black and destroyed.
As I want the trunk of the tree to print black, all the leaf spikes will have to be cut so that they print in the positive too. That might not be easy, especially in this cold weather. I am going to have to make sure that the lino is warm. The small red mark 2/3 of the way up on the right is a blood stain where I zoomed off the lino and just nicked the tip of one finger. The lino was not warm enough to prevent the cutter skidding off!
Even the tall flower spikes survived when almost all of the vegetation on the hills beyond were burnt black and destroyed.
As I want the trunk of the tree to print black, all the leaf spikes will have to be cut so that they print in the positive too. That might not be easy, especially in this cold weather. I am going to have to make sure that the lino is warm. The small red mark 2/3 of the way up on the right is a blood stain where I zoomed off the lino and just nicked the tip of one finger. The lino was not warm enough to prevent the cutter skidding off!
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