When teaching a workshop, I feel it is important that my demonstrations are also examples of how I work in my studio. So, instead of creating a "sample", I strive to create pieces that I intend to finish and include in my inventory. This small piece was designed in early May during my "Second Life" workshop at the Georgia Agriculture Museum. (Click here for a blog post on that workshop!) I actually designed a couple of pieces at that time. They've come in handy for the hours I spent riding in our van for my art installations and for in front of my laptop streaming Mad Men on Netflix during my art residency in Minnesota.
(Above: Infant, detail.)
The tiny grave rubbing fit so sweetly on this embroidered vintage handkerchief even though I knew the fabric was quite light-weight. As expected, my free-motion machine embroidery was confined to the middle ... shrinking that area and leaving the edges rather floppy. Thus, I knew it would need miles of running stitch to flatten out the whole. Unexpectedly, the area around the dove motif puckered up because it wasn't stitched at all. That's when I attached hundreds of seed beads. This was an effect I thought I wanted for another project. Funny, that project didn't need an "encrustation of beads" at all.
(Above: Edinburgh, an altered Victorian photo album featuring images I took in the ancient cemeteries ... as shown in May during my art residency in Minnesota.)
In Minnesota I envisioned one of my cemetery images surrounded by hundreds of clear beads ... to fill the indentation in this Victorian photo album. Once home, I selected the image ...
(Above: Edinburgh, now finished.)
... made it the right size ... and ordered it from Spoonflower. When I got it, I realized that it didn't need beads at all. I quilted the black edges instead. The angel motif puckered up, was filled with batting, and the piece was inserted into the Victorian album. I cut a mat board to cover the edges and glued the cover back onto the album. Finished!
(Above: Infant, detail of edge.)
So ... I beaded one project instead of another. Amazingly, they both got finished on the same day.
The reverse was made from other vintage household linens.
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