Process

Beaver Creek Farm Quilt Plan

It is raining in Vancouver for the first time in many weeks. Most people don’t realize that the rainy Pacific Northwest goes through a two-month dry spell each summer. Bone dry. Great swaths of British Columbia are burning right now as hundreds of natural and man-made wildfires race through endless miles of standing timber, forests and tree farms that have been killed by the Japanese pine beetle.

To celebrate the rain and our temporary reprieve from the burning acrid soot that has been thickening the air over Vancouver these last few weeks, I did what every nerd does: I bought some books.

The Art of Conceptual Craft

Our local Book Warehouse is closing its doors to make way for another condo extravaganza so I wandered in for a final look. How lucky was I to find a copy of the Boston Museum of Fine Art’s “Shy Boy, She Devil, and Isis, The Art of Conceptual Craft, Selections from the Wornick Collection,’ for less than 30% of the bloated Canadian price on the jacket. It’s the catalog for a 2007 Museum of Fine Art (Boston) exhibition which includes, much to my delight, work by Canadian artists like Vancouver’s Peter Pierobon, Toronto’s Gord Peteran and Saskatoon’s Michael Hosaluk.

I have found the work in this book to be especially inspiring because I am finally starting another project. A close friend is remarrying and I am making a quilt for the new couple. Amy, a paramedic by day and motorcycle-driving animal rescue superhero by night, has invested her savings in Beaver Creek Farm, 20 bucolic acres on the outskirts of Southern Ontario’s rural Stevensville. The plan is to create a haven for abused, neglected and damaged animals and the menagerie already includes Vietnamese pot-belly pigs, fainting goats, a pack of ravenous toy dogs and bunnies galore, oh my!

I am impressed by the determination and vision that Amy shares with her new partner Brent, a local boy, so I have begun sketching the design for a quilt. It’s going to be a complete departure from my work to date. I began by reviewing the paintings of prairie-homestead life by one of my favourite Canadian artists, William Kurelek. Here’s a little short by (who else!) the National Film Board.

My interest in maps inevitably led me to Linda Gass’ quilted landscapes. Check them out. They’re formidable, aren’t they.

I’m going to try to quilt a map of Amy and Brent’s Beaver Creek Farm. When we were growing up it was the ‘Bremner place,’ and I have a general idea of the landscape of the farm, so I’ve interviewed Amy and Brent to find out what they envision both as a process and as a goal. Here’s the first iteration sketch. The property is bound to the west and north by Beaver Creek, an ecologically sensitive body of water that flows into a great regional swamp and from there into the mighty Niagara River. The initial plan is 7′ x 7′.
Quilt 8 Plan

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Singer 500J Rocketeer

I needed to find some motivation to return to quilting after spending a term teaching and studying and doing very little else, so a few weeks ago I took my Singer 201-3 in for servicing.  While talking to Brad at the Singer Sewing Centre in Burnaby, he showed me a Singer 500J that he was restoring.  Already in very good condition, the 500J, also knows as the Sew-o-Matic or the Rocketeer, was one of the last all-metal, gear-driven machines that Singer made, and is known to be one of the best sewing machines ever made at all.  So I bought it.

Singer 500J (front)

Singer 500J (front)

Singer 500J (left side)

Singer 500J (left side)

Singer 500J (right side)

Singer 500J (right side)

Singer 500J (back view)

Singer 500J (back view)

The 500J is very different from the 201-3, despite the mere 9 years difference between their production date. The 201-3 (1952) is a classic black with gold accents; it looks like an electric version of the old-fashioned treadle machine your grandma had. The 500J, as you can see, is an aerodynamic design gem, beige with burgundy accents and gold lettering. The 201-3 is a powerhouse, a semi-industrial straight-stitch that will drive a needle through 8 layers of denim like a hot knife through butter. The 500J is a multi-stitch with a complicated system of switches, knobs and dials that select from dozens of stitch patterns.

If you happen to have a 500J but not the manual, click here.

I’ve essentially finished Quilt 7–all that’s left is binding the edges. I enjoyed the experiment but 3/4 of the way through I lost interest and motivation. I enjoy blockprinting and trying a whole-cloth quilt was fun, but I experimented with the quilting and the final result wasn’t really what I had in mind. I think it’ll go straight to the trunk of the car for roadside emergencies. This past weekend I found enough time to do some dyeing and I’ve got Quilt 8 percolating in my head. It’s time to get back to work.

Dyeing Supplies

Dyeing Supplies

Dyed fabrics for Quilt 8

Dyed fabrics for Quilt 8

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Fern Quilt Process

My next project is well under way. Here are some photos from the beginning of the process. I am using a print block that I made out of cork and wood. I used an x-acto knife to cut a spiral in the cork which I glued to the wood. I also glued a handle to the block.

I am printing with Opulence pigments suspended in a translucent medium on a 72″ x 72″ quilt top that I dyed a mossy green using Procion MX fibre-reactive dyes. I dyed it using low-water immersion (using far less water than usual so that the dye particles cannot circulate as freely and evenly) in two stages for a richly mottled and uneven effect.  The first stage resulted in a golden wheat colour, and the second stage overdyed the gold with an emerald green to result in this great green moss. It’s been a lot of work and I’m enjoying the process.  My inspiration has been west coast mosses and spring fiddleheads.

Here’s how it looked about an hour into the process:

I completed the first layer of dark-green pigment and followed that with a lighter hue that I applied incautiously. I decided to use a translucent lime green as the final blockprinting colour to give the spirals dimension and movement. The final product looks painterly with some obvious and intentional “errors”, and in the right light it’s a dead-ringer for velvet dévorée.

Here’s a ham shot:

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Quilt 6 Process

Some process pictures from my sixth quilt.  The pattern is based on prime numbers–I wrote a little C++ program that assigned each digit from 0 – 9 to a colour family or texture group and then made a pattern based on the occurrence of all the prime numbers.

I’m using the usual charcoal cotton background that I’ve dyed myself. It’s distressed because I use low-water immersion which doesn’t let the dye particles circulate as freely.

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Quilt 5 Plans

Here are the plans for Quilt 5.  I worked with values in red (17) and black (9), using a basic variation of the traditional Drunkard’s Path block, six blocks across and seven down.

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Quilt 2

I made quilt 2 for my friend Amy Bremner, owner and operator of Beaver Creek Farm in Stevensville, Ontario.  Come back soon to see an updated photo.

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