Tag Archives: light

time to make dinner

For many years I resisted upgrades to our graphics software because learning one’s way around a new-ish program takes time and is frustrating.  Invariably these ‘upgrades’ take perfectly acceptable features and make them more complicated or just switch them up in ways that undermine automaticity.  I’m a big fan of automaticity.  And, yes, that’s a sign of impatience and laziness.

It had gotten to the point, however, where I couldn’t even find answers to simple “help” questions online because no one talked about our antiquated version anymore. It was time to buck up or buckle down or stop bucking the trend, and place myself, happy or not, back onto a learning curve.

That’s why I didn’t post yesterday.  Too busy figuring out how to resize pictures again.

And now, it is time to make dinner (I’m thinking — wilted cukes, shrimp cocktail, and a big salad with bitter greens, including watercress).  So, a little photo story ensues.*

I’ve done a series of thread sketches based on a photo of my younger son skateboarding.  Here it is, pinned to one of the back windows.  Given this current exploration of white, I played with the exposure bar to lighten up the scene.

washed-out-photo

He’s doing (so I’m told) a ‘hard flip’ and yes, he landed it. The photo is a little bit old –taken sometime AFTER he broke his left arm the first time but BEFORE he broke it the second time.  I study the torso pitch and the folds of denim and the outflung arm angles as an artist – what goes where? and how do I capture that sense of a body flying in a controlled sail off a set of stairs to the pavement below?  As a mother I am using it to remind me of his strengths. Strengths such as — remarkable kinetic gifts, the willingness to land and land hard, and unbelievable persistence when learning something he cares about.

dirty-damask

dirty damask – from black walnuts, maybe?

damask-on-floor

damask-backed sketch on the floor

The above sketch was photographed on the floor.  Shot this way, the charcoal blotches are not very visible at all.  But, below, see how visible they become when the cloth is pinned up onto glass, with light pouring through.

damask-on-window

damask on window

pink-tunic

black thread on linen, pinned up on glass

stitch-on-drawing-backlit

‘wrong side’ with pencil marks is my preferred side – here against a window

three-thread-drawings

side-by-side, the mintons forming an ‘implied’ nine patch

IMG_3368

and — ah!!! — how freeing it is to paint

IMG_3370

and then scribble in that paint with a pencil!

Something Mo said about ‘light coming through’ got me thinking about how each and every needle puncture creatures a teeny avenue for light. Some of the recent things Jude said about clean and dirty whites were rattling around in my mind selecting the blackened damask… but more, actually, I was thinking about something she said less recently about how even when we cover up a section that has been worked and perhaps beautifully so, that section does not go away.  The energy of it remains.  With respect to the blackened blotches sometimes showing, sometimes not — I think about how they are always there even if not visible.

And now it is time for bed!  Dinner did happen in between start and finish. And so did input on a Gatsby paper. And American Idol (Lazaro? Top three?! Are you shitting me?!)

I must stop before I embarrass myself any further.

*  Again, this is a response to and inspired by, the goings on at Spirit Cloth and by one of my boys.

sneak peak and light

Here she is without body or hair yet – stay tuned! She is actually finished, just in need of a photo.

Do you think she looks worried or amused — or something else?  And what about names – I’m thinking about Greta or Elyana.

Could her look be a reaction to the falling away of the season, I wonder…. look how autumnal the light is on our dining room wall!
I love fall.  Do you?

auditions

Beautiful, right?  That’s three pieces of arlee barr‘s master dyeing (stablizied, cut (yes! cut!! — one of the many moments in the life of a quilter requiring FEARLESSNESS) and read to go), and a little end of a silk scarf (tie-dyed) given to me recently by a friend.  The light and the fabric are really working together here.

And speaking of fearlessness, I went ahead and added machine stitching to the blonde (yesterday’s post).  So far, only gold thread and pale sea green — will I venture to black?!!

Second Solstice

The storm, a day later — this morning.  Rosy sky.  Crisp air, but not freezing.

December light on Saturday.  In the studio I block it near the cutting table, or I am walking in and out of glare as I step from machines to the ironing board.  Not a sensation I like.

But upstairs, the light is welcome.

One year of blogging seems to ask for a kind of note.  So here it is —

For someone who struggles to stand in her own routines, I have to say this is more of an accomplishment than you (dear reader) may realize.   For 2010, I plan to double my posting rhythm — up to twice a week.  Dog-terror-of-camera-or no! Lack-of -decent-tripod-or-no! Sore wrists and boundary issues to be dealt with!

Declaring an intention to one’s pack, according to Cesar Millan, is more important that consistency — music to my ADD-addled ears!!!!