Sunday 26 October 2014

creative thinking blog hop

Thank you Marigold from http://marigoldjam.blogspot.co.uk/ for passing on this creative thinking blog hop to me, which has made me reflect on my creative process. Better late than never, here are my thoughts:

What am I working on?

Since I left the Day Job in June I have been like a child in a sweetshop, working on too many things at once. I get to the end of each day and wonder where its gone.




I recently returned to a regular life drawing group after a long gap, and realised how much I had missed the discipline and quiet concentration of it. The drawings are making their way into my sewn work, via the sewing machine, and I am incorporating this technique into making small quilts, and quilts which use old family photographs, a kind of heirloom-within-an-heirloom.





I'm using the same technique to make small brooches too- naked (or more modest) ladies (or men) for your lapel.







































































Of course I'm easily distracted, and I've recently been making small freehand log cabin blocks from tiny scraps, as if I didn't already have umpteen hexagons made from scraps still to make into a quilt! Still, winter is the time for sewing hexagons together whilst sitting down in the evenings..





























And on a side note, its interesting to look at these in black and white to see how different they look if you arrange them differently. See? Easily distracted..





I'm also still trying to make a drawing a day, some days more successfully than others..









How does my work differ from others in this genre?

Everybody's creative work is personal by definition- it comes straight from the heart. I suppose my work reflects my personality: not too many straight lines, and the happy embracing of serendipity. If something looks 'right', in it goes. I don't pay too much attention to how things 'should' be done, although I think its important to learn the rules before you can play fast and loose with them.

Why do I create what I do?

I have always drawn, as far back as I remember, and I am completely content if I have pencil and paper in my hand. 

My Mum taught my sister and me to sew when we were young, and she made all her own clothes and clothes for us, so it was part of my upbringing to make things. I guess the first patchwork thing I ever made was the patchwork jacket I sewed in the 70's out of a mixture of satin, velvet and other scraps. I wish I still had it!

How does my creative process work?




I have a (tiny) space where I am surrounded by inspiring clutter- I pin things up on the wall and generally make a mess. Sometimes an idea even comes from two bits of fabric which have randomly been put side by side.

Specifically at the moment I am looking at the Bayeux tapestry, redwork, old family photos, kantha quilting, and people with tattoos...




Some thoughts on other inspiring things:

Of course the internet is a wonderful resource, and I 'waste' a lot of time following a trail of thoughts and images through blogs or on pinterest.

I like to get to London for exhibitions- I'm looking forward to seeing Grayson Perry's latest works at the Portrait Gallery soon.

I always carry a camera, and use it as another kind of sketchbook.


























And always colour! (never beige) and just looking at things.

...and all these get distilled into the things I make, by a kind of osmosis!

Thank you, Marigold- this really made me think. Maybe Jenny from Handmade Happiness: http://jenny-handmadehappiness.blogspot.co.uk/ would like to pick it up? I'm sure you would have some interesting insights, Jenny.

p.s. the robots from my last post became this bag for a friend- I found the fabric and couldn't resist it for somebody who has a clockwork robots salt and pepper set!




2 comments:

  1. Fascinating read Molebags! I know our mutual friend loved the bag she was in raptures when she wrote to me! Am interested to know how you transfer your phbotos onto fabric - is it washable? I tried using freezer paper and puting it through the printer but it is not fast and I have long wished I could make some patchwork using photos. Do tell!

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    1. Hi Marigold, I do it with freezer paper and then iron it with a hot iron and the pictures seem to survive the couple of washes I've tried, but I guess I'm mostly using them for things that wouldn't be regularly washed or not washed at all. Also I quite like things that fade!

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