Wednesday, December 8

the wonderful world of trade....

my fabulous color theory class has included several painting projects. i now appreciate anyone who can successfully work with paint, and i am fascinated by everybody's individual style. i have a classmate who is already a painter so she showed superior skills to the rest of us who had never played around with the stuff. i fell in love with one of her paintings......



and i asked her if she would be willing to let me have it. she suggested a trade. i was flattered. i am always excited when i find people who enjoy and support my craftiness. i quilt and she crochets (and she often includes it in her artwork) and we are both looking at exploring womens 'craft' and how it can/will overlap the art world. what a great exploration!

here is the quilt i made for her.

it's about 38" x 45" and it was super fun (and quick) to make.

here's the back:


i hand quilted it and love, love, love the way it turned out. it was my first experience handquilting, and i am a convert. i am now excited to handquilt everything. i feel like it gives me more creative control.


i'm always excited to have great pieces of art from people i know. thanks for trading with me allyson.

Monday, December 6

the pressure is on.....

this is my final week before finals so there is a huge push to finish projects and get papers written. what better time to post. apparently procrastinating brings out the inspiration. lol.

the least stressful of my classes has been color theory. very fun, very mellow and lots of room for creative expression. i love that.


for the latest project i chose to recolor 'jacqueline with flowers' by pablo picasso. this was the result....

i had a lot of fun with this and am pretty happy with the result. i might consider doing this again, just to see what wacky color combos i can create.

my teacher suggested making this into a quilt..... i might take that on.

stay tuned.

Wednesday, November 17

space frames



here's the latest and greatest....

this was an assignment for my 3 dimensional design class. the object was to make a 3-d form out of balsa wood with at least one side covered by a translucent membrane of some sort. then that form needed to be repeated 20 or more times. we were allowed one color (i used 2. what a rebel) and there could be slight variation in size. we then had to choose a place to install our project.

my cubes are interlocking. the yellow one has one leg that locks around a leg of the pink one. otherwise, they are not attached so they are able to be arranged in different ways depending on which corner they are hung from. i used two colors to differentiate the two cubes from each other.

the intention of our project was an 'architectural intervention', meaning it should cause the viewer to percieve the space in a new and different way. i chose this stairwell (in central classroom on auraria campus in denver) because it is very uninteresting. it is concrete and railing with no color. everytime i've ever used these stairs i don't give any attention to the space. it's just a place i have to go through in order to get where i am going. because of this i wanted to create something interesting and bright to add to the space. the frames also have a delicate look that contrasts the strong utlilitarian stairs.


i had some difficulty in the beginning trying to create some sort of genius work, with a terrific abstract shape and some profound meaning or interpretation. mostly this just lead to me procrastinating. a lot.

i found that sometimes simpler is better, and creating things/shapes that i relate to. once i gave up having to be spectacular, the process became really easy, and i found that i really loved the outcome.

i've never dealt with installation art before but it was a fun experience and i'm proud to walk by my work when i'm at school.

Monday, November 15

love yourself

this little sign is taped to the outside of someone's locker. i walk by it everyday and everyday it makes me smile.

it's great to have little reminders posted throughout my day....sometimes i need redirected out of my own funk.

"I now discover how wonderful I am. I choose to love and enjoy myself."

- Louise Hay





Thursday, October 14

CSU visit


i was up at Colorado State University last week checking out the Fiber Arts program, and considering it for the remainder of my education. it was wonderful and i am very excited! more on that later when I have more news.

i did visit the Annual Flower Trial Garden that CSU has south of old town Fort Collins. the flowers were quite beautiful still. as i was taking pictures i noticed some movement among the daisy's. i knew it was too big to be a bug or the wind. as i looked closer.....i saw a mouse. i felt lucky to get a picture.


Tuesday, October 12

the latest project...

my assignment for color class.... create something with color.

sounds great right? sometimes when the possibilities are endless it gets overwhelming though. you pray for inspiration to land on your shoulder.

so i decided to create a process, rather than an outcome. i selected several fabrics (some of my favorites, some i don't like, some i figured don't go and some solids) and cut them up into random pieces. i threw them into a paper bag and as i drew them out, i sewed them together. i do have to admit there was some editing though. same fabrics didn't get sewn together and sometimes i had size issues.

for the most part, it was very improvisational. and, it was fun! i like the result and i created something i might not have before with my brain engaged.

cute huh?


i am exploring the line between quilting as a craft and quilting as a fine art. i am pushing myself as a quilter to create modern and contemporary pieces and i am exploring my personal style as an artist.

my next step is to expand on this project. i have a sketch of an arrangement of several pieces. they will be made in a similar fashion and then displayed like the sketch shows. i'm hoping it helps create the feel of a modern art exhibit.

Tuesday, September 14

newspaper tower

this post qualifies as one of those random happenings....

i am in a 3-d design class at metro (it's one of the basic classes for an art degree) and our first assignment of the semester was to (in a group) build a 25 foot tower out of newspaper and masking tape. those were the only materials we were allowed to use and we were not allowed to use anything to assist us in setting it up, i.e. cranes, ropes, the side of the building, etc.

i do have to say that this entire process was super stressful for me, not to mention we we're in a mercury retrograde (ended september 12, by the way). my perfectionism and my pessimissim reared their ugly heads. but the rubber-meets-the-road reality of this project was that we needed lots of newspaper rolled up and taped together. we divided the tower into five 5' sections and built those. we used crossbraces to stabelize each section, and we built the base so it was signifigantly wider at the bottom than at the top to support the weight of the tower.

when we set it up we started with the very top section and set it on top of the second section and taped it together. then we set that unit on top of the third section, and so on. so essentially we set it up starting at the top. the plan worked great! we did get a little tipsy when we had four sections hooked together and were lifting that onto the base. it almost got away from us a couple times. it took all five group members holding onto it and willing it to stand.

it was a success and it stood until we knocked it over. yay! i have to say that it was very satisfying to have such a successful project, but i am very glad for it to be over.

here is a picture of the final tower.


and here are some 'artistic' photos of it.


Saturday, September 4

turning 30 project - vol. IV (part 2)

yesterday i met lindsey at a fun restaurant in downtown littleton called merle's. it was quite fun and I think it might have been the first time ever that just the two of us sat down to lunch. there was plenty of talk about various life subjects: her boys, my school and other facinating tidbits.

and of course, she walked away with her fabulous birthday quilt.




i have had a blast with this project, and i am excited to finish and give away the next 5 quilts.

read the next installment here:
turning 30 project - vol. V

Sunday, August 29

turning 30 project - vol. IV

ta da! here is the second quilt of this lovely series. one of the best things about this project is the different personalities that show up in each quilt. this one is for lindsey and it turned out beautifully.


lindsey's choice of fabric was a classic black and white floral with small roses. for the most part i kept with black and white compliments and threw in a splash of color. the border repeats the rose theme with a black background and a very delicate line drawing of roses in white. i used what was leftover from the border of summer's quilt to bind this one. the classic combo of black and white bordered with red looks awesome.

i found this great fabric for the back, white with black hummingbirds and green flowers. i used a green coordinate to border the section of squares. needless to say, i was thrilled when lindsey told me that she loved green!

here is the label. it reads:

Turning 30 Project

"Delight"

2 of 7

Made for: Lindsey DeJonge Lehman
October 14

Designed & Quilted by: Shawna Doering
Littleton CO USA

2010

i haven't given lindsey her quilt yet, but i just couldn't wait to get it posted. = ) i'll update with pictures of the happy recipient on a later date.

read the next installment here:
turning 30 project - vol. IV (part 2)

Sunday, July 25

turning 30 project - vol. III


so, here is the reveal of the first finished quilt. summer was here in denver over the 4th of july weekend, so i took the opportunity to give her quilt to her in person. i was really excited to get this quilt finished and very pleased with how it turned out.

summer has always liked the purple since i can remember. the fabulous fabric she chose would have been complimented nicely by purple, but i wanted to do something unexpected, so i bordered the quilt in a terrific cranberry color. i love how it turned out. i did incorporate purple into the quilt in the end though.....i put it on the back.


here is the label for the quilt. it reads:

Turning 30 Project

"Serenity"

1 of 7

Made for: Summer
September 18

Designed & Quilted by: Shawna Doering
Littleton CO USA

2010

and here is the happy recipient!


read the next installment here:
turning 30 project - vol. IV

Saturday, July 24

turning 30 project - vol. II

on with the project. here is a list of what i wanted for the quilts:
- i wanted to create the design myself
- i wanted each quilt to contain a piece of everyones fabric
- i wanted each quilt to have it's own personality; to be an expression of it's owner
- i wanted the design to be fun and modern

i took my inspiration from Freddy Moran and Gwen Marston's books "Collaborative Quilting" and "Freddy & Gwen Collaborate Again".



these books are really fun. gwen and freddy use liberated piecing techniques (gwen has written a couple of books on this technique) and they use bright fun colors. freddy says in the first book that 'ten colors don't work - 100 do'. the two of them have breathe life into the quilting tradition. a definite good read! scoot on down to your nearest independent quilt store and pick them up. just having them on your shelf make you smile a bit bigger. (i decided today that i've got to purchase the second one. i've checked it out from the library 6 times!)

here are two specific images from the books that i pulled from for inspiration.



i have plenty of sketches in my quilting design journal, probably too many to share, but here are a couple of them. the second one is the one i ended up using as my final design.



i redrew this to finalize the design and to plan out the center block. the majority of the quilt would spotlight the fabric of the person the quilt was for as well as some coordinate fabrics that i picked out. the center block would then include the remaining 6 fabrics of everyone else in the group. each quilt would have the same design but the fabrics in the center block would rotate in each quilt. it's kind of hard for me (a very visual person) to explain this in a blog post! lol. as the quilts get finished and posted, it will start to make sense. so i used this drawing to number the squares and plan for the placement of the center blocks in each quilt.


i made 7 copies of the master design (before i wrote all over it) and used it as color layout for each one of the quilts. i wanted to make sure that there was no confusion later in the process.


this proved to be extremely helpful throughout this project. having something to refer to was fabulous. i have to write everything down as i go so i remember later, as illustrated in the next picture. this was my master list for all my measurements. sometimes along the way measurements change or i have to make adjustments. when working on seven quilts at the same time that have the same design it is really important that i remember changes i make.


notice i have an urgent reminder to double all measurements! then i crossed it out....plans changed.

i also made a design and measurement layout for the back of the quilt. again, they will all be the same design. there will be boxes down one side of the back. they are a sample of each of the fabrics that people picked and they are bordered by the coordinate fabric that i picked for each of them. they will be placed in birth order (the same order we will all turn 30) in case we forget over time who's is who's. we'll just have to remember the order in which we were born.



read the next installment here:



Saturday, July 10

1st ever blog post.

so, i've been pondering for a couple of days now what should go into my very first blog post. the more i contemplate it the more confused and overwhelmed i get. so i'll give up my perfectionism for the moment and just post. welcome to my blog.


this is a picture of me and my brother when we were small ones.
i think we were adorable.

turning 30 project - the official introduction

i am approaching the big 3-0 and for the most part i am excited and empowered by it. however it has caused me to stop and take notice. the past 10 years since high school have blown by like time does whether you're having fun or not. i started to take an inventory of my life....what i've accomplished, what i haven't and what i want to. more on that later.

i grew up with six other girls my same age. our parents were friends since they were teenagers and in some cases our grandparents were friends as young people. we're long time friends, and coincidentally going to all be turning 30 (hence the title of the project). i wanted to create something that connected us all in our busy lives. since i am a quilter i naturally went in that direction.

i asked all the ladies to go to my mother-ship (the fabric store) and pick out one fabric they felt represented themselves and send it to me. getting fabulous fabric in the mail felt like it was my birthday everyday. it was awesome! everyone participated which made me super happy and it was a ton of fun seeing what everyone picked out.


Summer

Lindsey

Ranetta

Moi

Sharalyn


Jennifer


Julie

read the next installment here:
turning 30 project - vol. II

 

Wednesday, June 30

back to germany

lotta is from germany and she came to america as an exchange student. she lived with my cousin in minnesota for about a year. they came to denver a couple of times to visit so i got to spend some time with lotta and she's super cool.

i wanted to send her back to germany with a little memory of her time here and a little reminder of the family she'll always have here in the u.s.



i used fabrics from my extensive kaffe fasset collection and used a pattern from a quilt store in minnesota. i love the way it turned out! it's very bright and fun and super cool for a super cool teenager.

we'll miss you lotta!

Friday, May 28

graduation season

ah, graduation season....my favorite time of year for making quilts.

graduation is a great time to celebrate, and what's better than a personalized handmade gift? i had a lot of fun making both of these quilts.

this is the front of sarah's. she requested no pink or purple....


i, of course, then had to put pink and purple in the back of the quilt. just to be ornery. the back turned out great (and maybe more interesting than the front) and it kind of became a reversible quilt. maybe i'm on to something.....

the quilt for amber was a tad bit late. she graduated 5 years ago. but i wanted to make sure i included her in the graduation quilt bit, so she got one too.

i worked with a color scheme for the front of this one, which i had never done before. i picked my scheme (blue-green, yellow-orange and red-violet; a triad) and then pulled all my fabric that fit into that including neutrals. this was the first time i tried this method. it turned out to be pretty successful.

for the back i used a fabulous large print (humungous print actually) that i had been waiting to use for something. i used up some scraps as well, which is always a good thing.