Stitch Club: Norbury

Saturday, October 1, 2022

My latest finish for TextileArtist.org‘s Stitch Club was from Ruth Norbury‘s workshop. She asked us to work up a mixed media piece representing an abandoned place (though we could spin this however we wanted and do a lovely garden in bright colors if we so chose). I know I have some cool photos of places I’ve been, such as the Cathar region in France, or I could take screen shots of some beautiful game design (looking at you, Dark Souls lineup), but I chose instead to work from a historic painting.

This is Hubert Robert‘s La Fontaine. The artist has an impressive portfolio, and he almost didn’t survive the French Revolution; quite a life! He was drawn to the ruins of the Roman Empire, and I especially liked the simple lines and stark contrast in this particular painting. It is fun to imagine being here: the sounds, the feel of the atmosphere, the smells, the purpose of such a place – all when it was first built as well as afterward, in its ruined decay.

I try not to share too much of the artists’ processes here since that is not my place, but I think it bears understanding that we started with adding a lot of patches to the ground cloth, that we then cut up and washed to make extra texture-y. These were then rearranged onto a new ground cloth. This is lost a little in the dark paint and stitching that I’ve added, but you can see where I started with this; it looks so innocent and naive compared to the end result. So crazy!

This project was the second time I got to use my new water soluble stabilizer (I can’t show the other project yet). I still need more practice on the machine, but I think I did a much better job than my last machine-stitched project. It felt easier, at any rate, which was surprising considering all the lumps of the ground fabric. I only left a few details to finish off by hand. Then, to the sink it went for the magic reveal!

My hand stitching is done with an off-red perle. This would not have been my first color choice, but I work with what I have in my stash and in the particular size I wanted, I had few colors available. It grew on me, though. I did a modified stitch that I call the forward-back stitch in an attempt to put more of the thread on the front (less waste). I just alternated between a back stitch and tight running stitch, if that makes any sense. I only represented the architecture and water here rather than the original artist’s details, so I added my own little detail to the lintel stone.

For the water spouts, I was inspired by a Stitch Club workshop that I haven’t yet participated in, by Bethany Duffy. I don’t yet know her technique, but I added a small felt pad and then a lot of straight stitches in various colors, topped off by some colonial knots in single and double strands. The highlights were too stark, though, even though I didn’t use pure white.

I toned down those and the lighter background area with a dip of tea. I’ll be honest – that went much darker than I would have liked (which is odd, since normally I can’t get tea to dye much at all; though, perhaps the difference here was the tea type since I used a nice rooibos tea rather than my usual Lipton black tea). As for the central area, I like the delicacy of the railings, which I left strictly machine stitched.

One of the fun surprises with this project is that I had used some old calligraphy ink to paint with, and this was much more enjoyable than previous attempts at painting fabric with watered-down acrylic paints. That said, I had some uber bright shades, such as a lovely and vibrant green color. I thought this would be so gaudy on the piece, but after all is said and done, I really like how the green brings only a hint of algae growth here and there. Before the embroidery stitching was added, I masked off the light area and then used a sponge to add some gold metallic paint around the architecture and silver around the water.

I found that I liked outlining some of the architectural areas from the machine stitching in black alone rather than stitching everything. The thing I most dislike is just where the randomized doily placement ended up, since it made the little waterfall kind of an odd shape on the left. I know I could have worked it on top of the doily, too, if I really cared, but it was getting tough enough pushing the needle through so I opted to work around it instead.

I like the one on the right much better, though I think I might have overdone the lighter water color a little much on both sides. Lessons learned, so it doesn’t bother me. I’m happy with how it turned out overall!

Let’s look at that final version one last time. There’s so much texture here and a lot of subtle nuance that’s hard to see in an image on the screen. Plus, it looks super cool at a distance which I didn’t capture in a photo (it loses a bit of its cool vibe up close, which I find really fun for some reason).

While I am happy with the end result, mostly, I want to show you that I did go through trial and error! At this stage, I couldn’t get passed how it looked like it got ran over by a truck. I hated it, and I wasn’t going to continue with it if I couldn’t make this stage look better first.

Luckily, most of the ink washed out, so I could start afresh. Phew!

 

 

See more posts related to:

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Looking for more cases of the Crafties?
Hexie Dreams 18

Hexie Dreams 18

My fussy-cut EPP Hexie Dreams quilt is coming along. All the flowers were stitched into rows and the rows are being stitched together now for the final push. I also share some of my dear sewing supplies!

read more
Stitch Club: Maue

Stitch Club: Maue

TextileArtist.org’s Stitch Club with Joetta Maue prompted a stitched piece from a photograph and I’ve recreated an adored image of my late grandparents.

read more
Hexie Dreams 17

Hexie Dreams 17

A quick update on my fussy-cut EPP hexie dreams quilt. A whopping 131 flowers are now complete, yay!

read more
Stitch Club: Weighton 2.1

Stitch Club: Weighton 2.1

Haf Weighton lead another TextileArtist.org’s Stitch Club workshop on architectural layering, and I was inspired to render New Albany’s Culbertson Mansion based on a photograph by Daniel Andis.

read more
Stitch Club: Sproule

Stitch Club: Sproule

April Sproule led a TextileArtist.org’s Stitch Club using a spiral concept. I felt like this would be a nice project for a friend and asked her for a color palette, hence the unusual-for-me color theme.

read more
Collaged Slow Stitch

Collaged Slow Stitch

I made a quirky and weird slow-stitched collage to try to push through a creative slump. It was much more about doing than the outcome.

read more
Stitch Camp 2023

Stitch Camp 2023

I stitched this mixed media piece following Gwen Hedley’s instruction through TextileArtist.org’s Stitch Camp.

read more
Tea Cup study

Tea Cup study

I was inspired to stitch up a stack of tea cups which lead to starting a second project that I’m still thinking about.

read more
Stitch Club: Clover

Stitch Club: Clover

Jette Clover lead a TextileArtist.org’s Stitch Club using scraps and a stamp. I used a country farm stamp with a big red barn as inspiration.

read more
Stitch Club: Tume

Stitch Club: Tume

Kate Time lead a TextileArtist.org’s Stitch Club on narrative bead texture, and I was inspired to have a play!

read more
Open Press Project

Open Press Project

I ordered a small print press from the Open Press Project and have begun experimenting with pressing leaves.

read more
Stitch Club: Notman

Stitch Club: Notman

Emily Notman lead a TextileArtist.org’s Stitch Club where we would learn to make a jar wrap, and I was inspired to create a scene along a lakefront at sunset with cattails blowing in the wind.

read more
Stitch Club: Bliss

Stitch Club: Bliss

Oliver Bliss lead a TextileArtist.org’s Stitch Club recently centered on color blocking, and I was inspired to stitch up a skull with flowers.

read more