Monday, 29 June 2009

Postcard nostalgia


A postcard of Dovecote Street, Stockton-on-Tees, from the High Street - c. 1960? No, it's a bit later - I've spotted a mini outside of Collingwoods on the far right*. I love the array of parked cars at the front of this card! More or less as I remember it from when I was little. It is now pedestrianised and you can't park on the High Street either. I'll take a photo to compare with this next time I visit.

I am planning a project for vintage postcards for sometime next year, although I am going to use cards from the Japan British Exhibition (1910), held at White City, London. The juxtaposition of the Japanese gardens and buildings with the slightly surreal Asian architecture of the White City, the terrifying fairground rides (like the Flip Flap, the V-shaped contraption in the background of the second card) and the hordes of Edwardian visitors in their best holiday outfits creates an interesting effect. Wouldn't it be interesting to travel back in time to see it?


*UPDATE - I did an image search for the Dovecote Street postcard and found it on the Frith Collection website (it is a Frith card). The site dates it c.1965. So about the same age as me!

Plastic Bags

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/8123521.stm

Looks like I will have to start buying bin liners again!

If people were more responsible in their re-use of plastic bags (i.e. not littering the countryside with them), the whole plastic bag issue wouldn't be so much of a problem.

Last year, our wheelie bin collection became fortnightly. The bin was last collected on Wednesday. It already stinks. We bin very little food waste, but leftover cat food, fish skins, bones, etc. have to go in the bin. Unless we switch the cats to dried cat food (they refuse to eat without some wet food) and start living on ready meals (i.e. no waste) this isn't going to change. Wrexham County Borough Council's suggestion to stop waste smelling in the bin? Put all your rubbish in a sealed up plastic bag first...

So, if there are to be no one-use carrier bags, I will have to buy bin bags, which have far more plastic in them - even the small ones are larger and thicker than a Sainsbury's free carrier bag.

I don't like a lot of the "eco friendly" bags sold by supermarkets. The hessian ones can't be cleaned or sterilised and some of the plastic "bags for life" are quite flimsy (handles that tear off) while others use many, many times the amount of plastic used in an ordinary supermarket carrier. The calico bags that we use, bought years ago, can be washed on a hot programme. But is it really more eco-friendly to have to hot wash your carrier bags every month? They start to smell if you don't. Or do you just keep using that hessian bag until you finally do get salmonella poisoning via that chicken you carried home in it last week?

I might get a roll of bin bags next time I shop and insist on opening them at the checkout so I can pack my groceries in them!

Saturday, 27 June 2009

"21 Sensational Patchwork Bags" - the very last hardback copy...


I thought I had sold the last one, but there was one more in the sales box. I have listed it on an eBay charity auction, with 20% of the final auction price going automatically to the British Heart Foundation.

http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=270416715393

It is a 10 day auction... so good luck bidding!

Thoughts on tacking quilt layers

I don't usually tack (baste) quilts using diagonal lines nowadays (as seen in the scrap quilt photo in my previous post). This method, using a slanting diagonal stitch on top and a horizontal stitch underneath, in lines radiating from the centre, was something I learned from Japanese quilt books, very like a tailor's padstich. There are some advantages over tacking in straight lines - the stitches hold the layers together quite firmly and there is little chance that a whole line of tacking is going to clash with where you want to quilt. It takes a bit longer to remove though!

When I laid the quilt flat yesterday, the borders definitely looked a bit wavy, like there was slightly too much fabric in them. This illusion was caused by having tacking the centre quite densely and also starting quilting in the centre (about a third of the centre panel is quilted). As I tacked the borders, the waviness started to disappear.

If I am only going to quilt straight lines, it can be as effective to tack fairly close along each line, and not bother to tack at right angles. That is what I did yesterday. It seems to hold the layers just as well. I try not to have the stitches going in and out of the fabric in exactly the same rhythm, as that makes the quilt seem wavy.

Friday, 26 June 2009

Chester Ps & Qs UFO day and more Sandown Park pictures

The UFO day was organised by Krysia and co. from Chester Ps & Qs, at one of our regular meeting venues at Burley Hall, Waverton, near Chester.

In case you are asking, "What is a UFO?", in quilting terms it is an UnFinished Object, also sometimes described as a WIP (Work In Progress). Mine didn't quite qualify as the longest-running UFO there, as it was narrowly beaten by a sampler quilt.


I started this quilt in 2001, as a 70th birthday present for my mum. My dad got a double bed quilt for his 70th birthday, so she suggested a single - to go in my old room. Before I could get it finished, they moved another bed in there... so I now had the problem of really having to make TWO quilts. As I'd made this from the contents of our 1970s/1980s scrap bag (lots of Laura Ashley, Liberty, Viyella etc.) there was the slight snag of finding enough similar fabrics NOW! Over the last few years, I've checked out sales tables when I visited quilt groups and Guild events, and bought up as many similar fabrics as I could find. I was even lucky enough to find the same border fabric in another colourway. So this autumn I'll start the other quilt (but won't take too long to get it finished).

The inspirations are in Åsa Wettre's "Old Swedish Quilts", a great book for all vintage quilt fans (looks like it may be out of print now). The busy, scrappy centre combined with a wide but fairly plain border is typical. I had to resist the temptation to add pattern to the border and it will be quilted with parallel lines, 1 1/2in apart. I'm using perle thread and quilting in big stitch, which isn't really traditional (now I've got to hunt out enough thread for that border - 80 metres minimum!*) The wadding (batting) is "Matilda's Own", a lovely 80% wool, 20% polyester from Australia and it so nice to stitch through.

Now I'm pushing to finish the quilt, as I've entered it in the "Traditional" category at Festival of Quilts at the NEC in August. Compared with the other UFOs today, it seemed huge, but it is only a standard single bed quilt - 92in x 72in approx.

It is called "Luleå Blockhus" (Luleå Log Cabin), although it will probably be written in the programme as "Lulea", as it is on the quilt label I've been sent. Seems Creative Exhibition's word processing can't cope with some letter accents.

Continuing the scrappy look, here's my Scrappy Pinwheel hanging at Sandown Park. Blocking it did improve the quilt.


The Kona Bay Challenge quilts were displayed where I could get a better photo of "Butterfly Dance". It will also be shown at all the Grosvenor Exhibitions Autumn Quilt Shows in 2009.


* I sorted out my perle no.12 threads... including some Valdani perle, with beautiful shaded effects. Turns out there is an amazing 100 metres in each of these tightly wound balls of thread, so I should be OK! I have a choice of two different shaded golds or a red/burgundy varigated thread, which I bought several years ago to finish the scrap quilt project - luckily I haven't started using them for anything else. By compairson, the Anchor no. 12 perle I've been using in the central patchwork have only 60 metres per ball.

Thursday, 25 June 2009

Pink Paradise Birdsong

In the last year or so, I have noticed more and more retro style in the fabric/quilt world. It is probably time to revisit one of my small wallhangings, "Pink Paradise Birdsong". I finished it in 2005, although it had been on the go for about a year, longer if I go back to my original sketches - I seem to have started out on this project c. 2002. At the time, I wanted to do a book of retro quilt designs, but my editor wasn't convinced that the style would last...

It won the Art Quilt award and the Computer Aided Design award at the Great Northern Quilt Show in 2005, and was subsequently shown at Quiltfest in February 2006 and at the quilt show in Yuza-machi, Japan, in July 2006. I also included it in the "Inspiration Gallery" in "Japanese Sashiko Inspirations", to show how sashiko can be used for non-Japanese themed pieces.

Jelly Rolls... yum yum!


I decided I rather like Moda's Jelly Rolls - basically, I like the whole idea of being able to get a huge assortment of fabrics ready to use. Hancocks of Paducah had the one above in their "precut" websale and I ordered it to make another version of the ever popular new workshop quilt, "Super Strips". I wonder how I missed this range when it first came out?

However... I have another quilt sketched out on the computer that has been designed for 21/2in strips. The more I thought about it, the more this roll seemed perfect. Today I quickly worked out the cutting list and it fits the Jelly Roll with very little waste - at one point I thought I'd need to order another one, but it will work out with just one roll, although the design seems to need two strips of sixteen of the fabrics. The trick is to go through the roll and pair up as many fabrics with a different print but with the same colour background, then treat these two fabrics as if they are one. Prints that won't pair up comfortably with another can be used for another part of the design.

There is just one problem with a Jelly Roll - it simply isn't possible to see all the fabrics in one really well in a photo, as at least 60% of them are round the back of the roll. So it's great that Moda also show them like this -

When Jelly Rolls first came out, most of the fabrics weren't really my style, so it is great to see several Japanese retro ranges in the Jelly Roll format.

Grosvenor Exhibitions have chosen "A Jelly Roll Adventure" for their themed category at the Great Northern Quilt Show at Harrogate this September. There's still time to get your entry form sent in, as the deadline for entry forms is July 7th. One of the great things about Grosvenor's quilt shows is you can deliver your quilt to the showground just 2 days before the show opens - so you have all summer to work on it. This is also the show that has the amateur wholecloth quilting category, so if you enjoy making wholecloths (and aren't a professional quilter of course) you can enter a category solely dedicated to that quilting genre. The venue, at the Great Yorkshire Showground, is my favourite out of all the quilt show venues we attend - access and parking are easy, you don't have to brave the Harrogate rush hour, everything is on one level, there are delicious ice-creams (!) and you can nip into Sainsbury's on the way out. Maybe see you there?

Wednesday, 24 June 2009

Residential Sashiko Courses at Denman College

Whenever I'm demoing at shows, I get a lot of enquiries about where I teach. Apart from the obvious answer (I'll visit your group to teach - distance no object!), I will be teaching some residential sashiko courses at the WI's Denman College, near Abingdon, Oxfordshire. Simply click the dates below for more details

5 - 7 October 2009

19 -22 February 2010

The first two courses are basically the same as the one I ran at Denman College in April 2008. The February course has an extra day, and we will be able to use this extra time to start you off on a special sashiko project.

The next course follows on from the earlier ones, although it will be possible to join it as a beginner (those new to sashiko will have less challenging stitch patterns among their options!)

13 - 16 September 2010

Denman College is a lovely venue, with ideal teaching facilities and excellent accommodation (non residential options are available too). The food is fantastic (well, you wouldn't expect anything less from the WI, would you?). And you don't even have to be a WI member to attend courses there!

Tuesday, 23 June 2009

World Quilt Show - Hakone Yosegi sampler


I found out a few days ago that Hakone Yosegi Sampler, from "Japanese Quilt Blocks to Mix and Match", has been accepted into the World Quilt Show, so it will be off on a long journey soon!

Summer Sunday workshops at Gresford - date update!

The first of the Summer Sunday workshops, "Spinning Squares" I planned to run at the Memorial Hall at Gresford has had to be changed from the original date, Sunday 5th July, as it turns out that the room was double booked (I booked it back on May 26th, but it seems there was something wrong with the booking system and a regular Sunday booking didn't show up when my booking was added - it seems there is a computer booking system but also a card/diary system, and one isn't regularly updated onto the other).

So if anyone picked up a flyer at Wrexham Quilting Circle's exhibition last week, please note that the date will be changed!

"Spinning Squares" will now be held on Sunday 2nd August 2009. All other details remain the same.

Please pass this info on, if you know of friends who are planning to attend but haven't booked yet.

Friday, 19 June 2009

Fish & Chips at Sandown Park


"Fish & Chips" won a Judge's Merit at the National Quilting Championships at Sandown Park today. Not bad for a quilt that was only pieces of fabric Wednesday of last week!


Monday, 15 June 2009

Morris dance date for your diary

One of the highlights of my trips to Kent while demonstrating/teaching at the National Quilt Championships at Sandown Park is an evening out with Hartley Morris Men, the side my cousin (currently Squire of the Morris Ring) began dancing with. This year, it coincides with the following locations - 18th - 8.30 p.m. Harrow, Knockholt (TN14 7JT)
_____9.30 p.m. The Bricklayer's Arms, Chipstead (TN13 2RZ)

Judging by the postcodes, we won't have too far to travel from where we are staying. A great evening of dance with a good singaround afterwards is pretty much guaranteed.

Update with photos -

An almost Solstice sunset -




Fish & Chips - design influences

Other than fish and chips, there are several inspirations for the quilt (which is 1 metre square).

My cousin's cat, Billy, a large black cat, used to like to sit up at the dining table and watch what was going on. He seemed to enjoy this immensely. I imagined he might just like to do the same thing at a fish and chip counter. Black cats usually have a hint of tabby when seen in bright light, so I used this when I chose the piece of batik for the cat.

I like the way that artist Mary Fedden arranges and interprets objects, particularly the way she views adjacent objects or even parts of the same object on different planes simultaneously. For example, she will depict a mug with the bottom edge straight as if you are looking at it from the side only but the top oval, with a view into the mug. Her work often depicts the sea or things of the sea, and cats frequently make an appearance. She uses strange colours or textures to depict familar objects (such as pairs of black apples). Her still life paintings are full of everyday objects yet are mysterious at the same time.

"Cat and Compass"

"Still Life by the Sea" & biographical notes


"Irish Lilies"

"Black Cat Cafe"

Try a Google image search for "Mary Fedden" and you will be able to see many more images of her work.

Fish & Chips


I finished binding the quilt this afternoon (still need to remove tacking threads and add a hanging sleeve this evening). Click the photo to see it at a larger size.

Cat, salt shaker, vinegar bottle & mushy peas tub all have a bit of extra wadding/machine trapunto, as do the fish & chips.



The pop bottle is based on my recollections of the very distinctive Lowcocks bottles that used to be sold on Teesside in the early 1970s. They were pressed glass, with a stopper that screwed down into the neck and very heavy - 3d if you returned one I think.


Batiks have so many designs that look like 50s laminates, batter etc. Even the border batik has fish bones! The "Kitty Chronicle" newspaper was a real find.

Sunday, 14 June 2009

National Quilt Championships at Sandown Park, Esher, Surrey

Just a reminder that I will be demonstrating, teaching and sigining my new books at the National Quilt Championships later next week - all the info is on Grosvenor Exhibition's website.

I have entered two quilts - one is the scrap pinwheel quilt below (instructions will be published in "Popular Patchwork" magazine in about a week) -



The other quilt is my entry for the "Batik Beauties" challenge. This year's theme is "Delights of the Sea". My 1 metre square wallhanging has something to do with this photo (quilt photo later!) -

Wednesday, 10 June 2009

Sashiko in Shaftesbury - North Dorset Quilters

I visited North Dorset Quilters on my way to Jersey last week, doing the "Travels with a Bag Lady" talk on Wednesday night and the "Sashiko Kinchaku Bag" workshop on Thursday. We had a bit of a surprise when we turned up at the hall they had booked for the workshop - Thursday was the day of the EU elections and it had been taken over as a polling station. The polling clerk was initially pleased to see us, thinking we had turned out to vote!

Kate, the group's chairperson, stepped in and we went to her ultra modern house, which turned out to be the ideal place for the workshop. I completely forgot to take any photos of the completed work in the afternoon, as we were running slightly late due to the change of venue and of course some people had to leave at 4p.m. Thanks to Kate for sending the photos below.


As the day was warm and sunny, the quilters could take their stitching out in the afternoon.

Here is a link to Kate's wonderful house - a great space for workshops.

Yuza Sashiko features in "Patchwork Club" magazine


Following on from my previous blog post, the Yuza Sashiko School course devised and taught by Reiko Domon and Chie Ikeda has been featured in "Patchwork Club" パッチワーク倶楽部 magazine in Japan. There is a photo of the group at work on the top right of the cover, directly under the words "Patchwork Club". They are becoming known more and more for their work bringing sashiko traditions into the 21st century.

As usual, please click the images to see them at a larger size. There are a lot of large photos in this blog entry, so please be patient if you internet connection is slow!

The Japanese title for the article is 私たちがキルトで残しいもの - this can be translated as "What we are leaving (bequeathing) in quilts". The kanji character 残 is the main part of the verbs nokuru (remain, be left over, stay, linger, survive) and nokosu (leave behind, keep back, save, amass, beaqueath). It is also the "zan" in zanshi ori, the leftover thread weaving that used to be made by country weavers for their own family's use.

It is said of Yuza Sashiko that it is passed on "from hand to hand" from one person to the next. Both Chie Ikeda and Reiko Domon can trace back their sashiko learning heritage via Yoshimi Arakawa's lessons in the 1990s to Tetsue Ikeda who taught in Yuza-machi in the 1970s (she was Arakawa-san's teacher), when she was already in her eighties, having learned sashiko from her grandmother. People of Tetsue Ikeda's generation were interviewed about their life experiences for the local archives, so their legacy has been preserved locally.

In places like Yuza-machi, rural life has changed so much even over the lifetime of what might be considered "traditional sashiko", and today's sashiko items need to fit with modern life in town and country. The generation of the Meiji era over 100 years ago had new technology in the form of things like pendulum clocks (every farmhouse seems to have had one) and even cameras (Aoyama Tomekichi, a fisherman who became a wealthy merchant via his fishing grounds around Hokkaido and who built the Aoyama House, was a big photography enthusiast), so it wasn't as if people in an area like Shonai a century ago were living a completely Edo-era lifestyle - and this was the time when sashiko was in its heyday for clothing and household goods. They needed things like sorohikihappi (sled hauling waistcoats) and furoshiki (wrapping cloths) to be hardwearing - we might need a shopping bag and a mobile phone case, but the purposes of sashiko - protection, strength, warmth and decorative possibilities - are the same.

The detail photo shows Reiko (left in photo, wearing the blue waistcoat) and Chie together at Reiko's studio, which has been adapted from Reiko's family's old shop premises. You may recognise them from when they came to the first Festival of Quilts in 2003, when we had the "Magic of Sashiko" exhibition.

The photo below shows Chie teaching one of the sessions. The course they devised covers 30 different patterns, stitched on 10cm squares, the same format I use for my "Introduction to Shonai Sashiko" workshop. The caption title reads - "Japanese Classwork".

The caption at the top of the page reads "sashiko and patchwork collaboration - bag compliation".



Their variation on my Rice Sack Bag from "21 Terrific Patchwork Bags" appears half way down the page. The mustard coloured bag on the left uses patchwork blocks from "Japanese Quilt Blocks to Mix and Match" - the way the centre of one of the blocks has been filled with sashiko makes a very good effect. The photo caption below explains how I came to be in Yuza-machi as an English teacher, and how my Rice Sack Bag is inspired by komebukuro (traditional rice bags). It says how sashiko and patchwork make an enchanting combination. They do! I have romanized my name in the text below.

かつて英語の講師として遊佐町にやってきたイギリスのSusanBriscoeさん。刺し子に魅せられ、刺し子とパッチワークのコラボレーションも心がています。Susanさんが日本の米袋にヒントを得たRiceSackBag は、スクールでも取り組みます。

Below (clockwise from top left) - the sashiko group (top left), Reiko's quilts using sashiko with stained glass applique (top and bottom right), a recent work featuring a phoenix in patchwork & applique with sashiko, the sashiko book Reiko and Chie wrote with Yuza Sashiko history expert Izumi Sato. The panel with yukata cotton rectangles framed with sashiko is the image on Reiko's studio street sign. The quilt at the top right was inspired by traditional kite designs. The page title reads "sashiko and patchwork collaboration - quilt and wear compilation".


The quilt at the bottom right uses hitomezashi sashiko with stained glass applique, but including hand dyed threads from the UK. The design is inspired by Gaudi's architecture. Detail shown below (again, from the 2006 exhibition).



My "New Year's Eve in Yamagata" quilt block layout works very well for framing sashiko samples (two quilts, centre right). The group have been experimenting with printing photos onto fabric as well, with several quilts made with the Yuza Sashiko School hitomezashi samples combined with images of Mt Chokai and the surrounding farmland of the Shonai Plain. Top right you can see some of Reiko's miniature sorohikihappi waistcoats, in the patchwork wallhanging version. She has also made them as actual miniature garments.

Tuesday, 9 June 2009

Craftsperson's Craftwork of Japan Vol 4 - Reiko Domon feature

One of my friends in Yuza-machi, Reiko Domon, is the leader of the local quilt group, Peaceful Hearts. Her work has increasingly used the traditional Yuza Sashiko hitomezashi patterns in new and innovative ways, helping to breathe new life into sashiko by finding modern uses for these traditional designs. She sent me two books which arrived while I was away - one is "Craftspeople's craft work of Japan" (book - click here to go to the website (Japanese)) and the other is 'Patchwork Club" magazine, both of which have features about Yuza Sashiko.


The first book features Reiko's work, with many small articles made from Yuza-sashiko, while the patchwork magazine shows the work of Yuza Sashiko School, classes run by Reiko and my sashiko teacher, Chie Ikeda, with many works by different stitchers. I will post scans from that magazine in another post soon. Please be patient - these are large scans and the blog will take slightly longer to load than with regular photos! Also, if you don't have Japanese language fonts enabled on your computer, the Japanese text I'm typing will look like a series of punctuation marks etc. all mixed up.


職人仕事の日本 (Craftspeople's craft work of Japan) Vol 4 - cover


The article title refers to teaching Yuza Sashiko.

I will see if I can get some help re translating the longer sections of text, as my Japanese reading abilities aren't very good! As usual, click the images to see them full size.

Reiko stitching - the photos on the right show the front and back of the same pattern, which combines hexagons (longevity) with diamonds (increase), filled in with little lozenge-shaped motifs inspired by kasuri (ikat) designs.





Sashiko is a skill which has undergone many changes in the last hundred years, from being a mostly ultilitarian necsssity, but with decorative possibilities, to a craft that can be used for modern items that need to be just as hardwearing as the old farmer's waistcoats (like the one in the second photo above) - Yuza Sashiko is excellent for modern items like handbags, shopping bags, wallets, sewing goods, and any items that need to be handled and used a lot. It reinforces the fabric while adding traditional decorative designs, which also have symbolic meanings, such as long life for hexagonal patterns (the pattern of a turtle shell). Many Yuza Sashiko patterns have similar designs to the small komon stencilled patterns that were used for samurai kamishimo (a formal waistcoat and hakama pants set).

Like any tradition, it has to evolve to survive. I don't agree with the idea that sashiko is a dying art. It is just too popular in Japan and, today, all over the world for that to be the case. It is not an exaggeration to state that you can buy sashiko books, threads, fabrics, needles etc. in almost any sewing shop in Japan, which is hardly the mark of a craft which is dying out, and most Japanese homes probably have something made in sashiko (even if only toilet paper covers!) It is true that today the items people are making will not be hanten workjackets any more than quilters in the UK will be making huge North Country or Welsh wholecloth quilts - we are taking the traditional designs and using them to make smaller articles suitable to our lives today, but this does not imply that the patterns are any less meaningful or symbolic for contemporary quilters. Think of how many times a quilter tells you that they included a particular pattern, fabric or colour because they were making a piece of work with a special person in mind. A modern British quilter stitching a sashiko quilt for her husband is just as likely to include patterns like urokozashi ((fish) scale stitch) or a koi motif if his hobby is fishing as a Japanese stitcher at the end of the nineteenth century might have decorated her fisherman husband's waistcoat with the same urokozashi.


Sunday, 7 June 2009

Super Strips Quilt Top workshop on Jersey

Here are some photos of the workshop and the gorgeous quilt centres made today. If you like the project, it is available on my main workshop list and I'm teaching it a bit closer to home on July 12th (see my earlier blog post for information).


It is a design that works well in so many fabrics, and is especially suitable for Jelly Roll cuts. Moda have gorgeous fabrics with that vintage look -

and spicy Paisleys -


Thimbleberries fabrics look stunning in this design -


Batiks have been popular every time I run this workshop -


Black and white produces a great Op Art effect -

Rowan/Westminster fabrics, including those by Kaffe Fasset, in summer fruit colours -


Alternatively, it is a good project for your scrap strips or to coordinate with another quilt, like this feast of blues & purples -


Thanks for inviting me to Jersey!