Friday, May 31, 2013

Time to Treat Yourself

What if you could be on a deserted island for a week of creative bliss?  


What if I was there to help you or just to run ideas past about your next project? 
   
What if you were surrounded by other creative souls all in the "zone" for a week?   A place where nobody could interrupt you or bug you, you don’t have to cook or go to the grocery store and you could be inspired by your fellow quilt artists.




I have that place.  It’s on a beautiful beach in Central California.  White sandy beaches with misty fog rolling out in the morning.   If you haven’t already guessed,  I'm talking about Empty Spools Seminars in Pacific Grove.   I love that place. I want to invite you to one of the best creative experiences you can have.  If you have never been, start saving your pennies because this is a must for art quilters.   It’s a safe environment to push out your creativity, try something new, or just stay focused.  Magic happens there -  it’s always so amazing.




Top requirements to be successful at a retreat like this:


  •     Desire
  •   Open to change
  •    Patience with yourself  

    ... and maybe a good teacher?

Oh, and don't forget,  lots of fabric.  

I am asked all the time how do I do my own, personal  flower quilt?  Well, if that interests you, this is the venue.  Once you do a detailed flower you will be able to use the same principles to do any subject matter after that.   All skill levels are welcome.

We talk a lot about color and values. How to see color and how to use it to make the biggest impact.  How to use your creative gifts, even if you don't think you're creative.  Believe me, by the end of a week at an Empty Spools event you will be and feel creative.  So check your calendar to join me February 23-28, 2014 or go to Empty Spools Seminars  for more information. 


This is the time for YOU.  Put the dog in the kennel, take the kids to the grandparents and put your husband on the sofa with a 6-pack and a sandwich or 2 and come have fun with me. 


See you there. 

Monday, May 13, 2013

My Mother Iris Was my Inspiration!

 I have been trying to post picture of my students work using my new Iris pattern. But all the pictures i took on my phone are coming upside down or side ways. This is becoming the theme of my life. Upside down and sideways.  So I made a movie instead. hope you enjoy.
Before you push play you may want to turn on your speakers. \Its a cute song.
What I like the best is that after awhile my student stopped following the pattern and did there own thing. Love it.

The retreat was held at Our House in Milford, Texas. This is a retreat center that hosts all kinds of retreats and will host your next creative adventurer.  And the food is to die for. 

Sunday, April 7, 2013

An Un-sticky Situation



Who knew that a sticky film of iron-on glue attached to parchment paper could give me so much anxiety?  Well, it is.  For those of you who love Steam-A-Seam 2, and I am one of them, seems like the Warm Company is having an issue with the release paper that the lovely sticky fusible web sits between. I love this stuff. Maybe that is my problem.  I think I might be addicted. Can’t live without it - or can I? 
Ironing Steam A Seam 2

The sweet girl on the phone at the Warn Company made a sad moan when she heard what I wanted - OK, I NEEDED!  My feeling is that my local grocery store has a lot of parchment paper down aisle 4, next to the foil, on the bottom shelf (that's in case they send a man to find it).  What I mean is parchment paper is EASY to find.  I could tell by her voice that I was going to have to find a new product for doing my art, at least for a while.
I have to either buy up the world's lot or find something different. I have a retreat in a week and half outside Dallas then I fly to Paducah for 5 classes at the big AQS show.  Then, 3 weeks after that the Alaskan Cruise.  I feel like I am trying to get to San Francisco but someone took my car and now I have to walk or ride a bike and I don’t do bikes.
 
Now what?  After I bought up all I could on the internet I realized that I can’t let my art and the technique I teach stop my creativity.  I have lectured all over the country about how mistakes and failures are waiting as aha moments in disguise.  Now I have to practice what I preach and it doesn't feel very comfortable. I hear my words coming back to me. 
 Look at this in a different way. How can I fix this?  Where is my seam ripper? What creative opportunity have I been given to solve.  I will make art even if I am on as desert island. I can’t stop.
Now, mind you, I didn't heard these encouraging  words until after I had a good cry, then got mad and moped around for a few days (I don’t want to leave out the good parts).  In my frustration, I decided to cut fabric for my class kits with the rotary cutter and chopped off the side of my favorite pointer finger. Ouch!
How bad can this get?  8 stitches worth and to top this off, this is the second time I have done this stupid move.  I just want to give up... but I can’t.
My whole life I have had to overcome difficult situations. From not reading until I was in the 6th grade to having people tell me I can't paint my house yellow and wanting to sue me to helping a child who had no one that cared to protect her.   All were painful but all ended well.
This is just applique, not rocket science.  I can try other fusible webs. So, I placed my order for Misty Fuse, which will arrive shortly and Wonder Under is working great.   I just like the stickiness of the S-A-S 2. But, I do have a glue stick! We’ll see. Creativity, I've heard, is the mother of invention.
So, if you are in any of these classes in the next month or so it will be fun to see what I show up with.
My Summer Rose pattern.

If it gets really bad I even thought of going back to, dare I say,  hand applique...
just kidding! 

Sunday, March 24, 2013

It has a New Home!

I never planned on selling this quilt. I made it just for me and my son, to help me deal with the thought that my only child was going to be a Marine and probably go off to war. That was very difficult for me to handle but as all quilters do when faced with challenges; I went to the studio and put my feeling into cloth. There are tears in that fabric. 
I looked at all kinds of patriotic subject matter before I realized it HAD to be a flag.   
My idea was to visualize this quilt years later on the wall in my son’s office when he is an old man. We both made it through the trial of war and came out the other side.

I started to take the quilt with me on the road when I did trunk shows around the country. I had no idea the emotion it would cause in others as I showed it. It was overwhelming and very special, so this quilt is for all the mothers and fathers and brothers and sisters of soldiers through all the wars who, like me, have given their loved ones for our country to be free.  This quilt is not mine, it’s ours!

I had to write a story for a newspaper about my quilt and this is what I said:

As all parents do, we want a better life for our child.  Joe and I wanted Matt to be able to go to college without the financial burden that we had. He graduated with a degree in mathematics and we were so proud to say that he was the first Bula to graduate with a college degree.  But 2 days later he joined the United States Marines. I was proud and very worried. You see, he is my only child, not that a mother with more than one doesn't have the same feelings.  It just hit me hard.

We stood at the front of the church when he was 1 year old and dedicated him to the Lord and promised that we would raise him up to be the man that God had made him to be. I was thing maybe God wanted a dentist. 

We all went to see him graduate from boot camp that August day in 2010. How proud we were.  That day I saw all the other families that were going through the same feelings as us. I noticed all the flags denoting the various states represented and other countries from which the new Marines had come.  I was amazed how many countries were represented but, of course, that’s what America is — a land of immigrants.

I noticed a young Nigerian man marching at the head of the battalion and carrying the flag for his platoon. My son had told how the other Marines in the Nigerian’s battalion questioned him about life in his West African country. He immigrated here when he was only 14 years old. His days in Africa were spent running from danger and searching for food for his family and there he stood as a Marine holding his battalion flag proudly at the head of the line.
Compared to my own son, whom they’d raised with many advantages, a safe home and plenty of food, I realized that every Marine and every family there told a different story.
I was determined to never forget that day.  As an artist I express my feelings through quilting. I started making the flag quilt immediately when I arrived home from the ceremony, and during the process I cried many tears.  I cried for my only son going off to war and all the other mothers and fathers and sisters and brothers, wife's and husbands, that I knew felt the same way.

I made this quilt for the families whose children didn't come home.
I made it for my uncle who had no choice in the 60s and was drafted into Vietnam, served as a Marine, and when he came home, he was spit upon, and I cried again.  I cried for the young men I heard about who have come home struggling to readjust.
Generations of my family have fought for America to keep it free and safe, but I had forgotten that some of these new patriots came to the United States recently for the same reasons and now wanted to stand by this beautiful flag.  I dedicate this quilt to all military men and women.  Because of them, we can say “…and our flag is still there.”

You can see this quilt at the National Quilt Museum in Paducah, Kentucky.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Quilters Affair in Sisters, Oregon

Nothing is better than teaching in Sisters, Oregon.  OK, maybe Hawaii but I am stuck on the mainland for a while.  Jean and Valerie at Stitching Station in Sisters have set up a fun and wild week of mad stitching fun in July . If you have never been there, put it on your list. It’s great!  I am teaching a 2 day Hibiscus class, a 2 day new Hidden Beach class and a 1 day Bird Of Paradise class. I promised my students the supply list, color charts, and a little more information to get you ready for the class and here it is!
Let's start with the fabric first, the most important part.  I always say It’s all about the color and that is so true but what if you feel a little timid about how to choose color?  Here is a tips to help you in selecting your fabrics that I learned from Alex Anderson: More is always better.
First, realize that you may have to buy some new fabrics.  You will be making a beautiful art quilt that you will be proud to show off.  I guarantee it.  You are paying good money to take this class and to come to this wonderful retreat. Why would you not bring the best fabric you can?  Treat yourself to making a great quilt, which starts with beautiful fabrics. You don’t need yards of it for this class but you do need the right colors and values in that color to make this work.  The largest amount is ½ yard, the rest will be ¼ and 1/8 yards.  Fat quarter yards work great!  I personally have always been on the quilting budget, so I have had to be careful with the pennies I spend on my fabrics.  That is where the color chart comes into play. 


I have made a color chart to help you choose fabric colors and amounts. In class, I will help you make your color chart with the fabrics you bring.  The key to making a successful color chart is to bring more fabrics choices than are on the chart.  Example: if you can’t decide between 2 fabrics, just bring both.  That way we, together, can select the right colors for you.  You don’t have to know it all before class - I am there to help you, which is why you are taking the class!  Now, breathe.

Next supply you will need is Steam- A- Seam 2.  I don’t use the Lite because it doesn't stick as well as the 2.  It can be purchased in packages or by the yard - it doesn't matter but you will go through it like candy. When I say to bring 6 yards I mean 6 yards.

Another important tool is the scissors you bring to class.  You can’t build a house using a TV remote, right?  Do yourself a favor and bring some good, comfortable scissors.  You will need large ones (8”) and a small pair.  I did a blog on good scissors called Running With Scissors - you may want to read it before class. It’s kind of funny, too.

If you have any questions please email me.  If you can’t find Steam-A-Seam 2, you can buy it from me. Here’s the link to my web site. They will also have beautiful fabrics and Steam-A-Seam in Sisters.  
Now, download your supply list or I can mail you one if you don’t have a good printer.  I look forward to meeting you and playing with color. 

Hibiscus Class

Hibiscus Supply List:
  • Background fabric cut to 28"X 28" in a color you want your flower on.
  • Tweezers or stiletto to help you move small pieces around.
  • Sharp scissors in a variety of sizes - this is your most important tool for this technique.  I like large (8”), good quality scissors for cutting.
  • Sharpie markers, fine tip and bold in black
  • Pencil with eraser 
  • Small post-it notes
  • Glue stick
  • Straight pins - I like the larger ones with the yellow round heads.
  • 6 yds. Steam-A-Seam 2 - I like the 18”width, but any size or packages will do.
  •  Teflon pressing sheet (optional
To finish your quilt at home:
  • Sulky Rayon 30 weight thread, in colors that match your project
  • Jeans Denim needles or Top Stitch needles in size 12/80 or 14/90
  • 1 yd. batting -I like Dream Cotton in the lowest loft,Request.
  •  1 yd. backing fabric

Sunday, March 17, 2013

A Little Quilt History from Nebraska


Art and creativity today is always influenced by the past. Even when we think we are being so original it still has ties to the past.  So it’s important to know where we came from and what were they creating?  As I get older, I really appreciate the women that molded my life and art today, even the ones I never met.

In my first year studying art at junior college, I remember being so bored by art history class.  I loved the impressionists and wanted to just study from that time period forward.   But we had to start at the beginning.  Why do we have to know this stuff? I would ask my art teacher.  She would very wisely say To be able to stand upon a firm foundation to create.  I didn't really know what she was talking about at the time but I sure do now and I can’t get enough of the history of artists, their art, and the whys and hows of their work.  What was going on in history that influenced their work and there lives?
When I use the word artist I am also including quilters. Yes, quilting is art even though it has been a much under-appreciated art form.  You can see the art so clearly when visiting the International Quilt Study Center & Museum at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln.   This is one of the must visit sites for the art quilter.  I had the privilege of getting a private tour of the museum this last week while speaking and teaching for the Nebraska Quilt Guild. 

OMG!  Don’t mess with Nebraska - they got it all going on.

The first exhibit I saw was on the history of indigo painting and dying in America.  It was fascinating as it covered all the different processes and colors of indigo. There were many processes for adhering the indigo to the cloth over the years so it would remain permanent.  America loves its blue!


I learned so much about the process of indigo dye and all the different colors of indigo. You can see that in the quilt above.
One color sometime makes the best statement.
I love this one.  This quilt is called Britchy Quilt and was made by Maggie Smith in 1980 in Greene County, Alabama. It's hand-pieced and hand-quilted.  She removed the pockets which give a great block of deep blue.  I love the fading of the indigo jeans and  how she put this together.  Pure art.  I see a little Gees-Bend in this one.

 This next exhibit was 100 years of Quilts and their photographic history.

Quilts were used a lot in family pictures.  Do you have any old pictures of family with quilts?
This little girls has a crazy patch dolly quilt in the corner.


 This is a photo of Bertha Neiden and her award winning quilt. She was very proud of this quilt and rightly so. Someone even wrote on the picture that there are 10,222 pieces in this quilt.  She counted?
The museum has the original quilt in its collection.  It was damaged in a flood and the colors bled but that gives it a water color effect that I love.  She worked in a garment making plant and made this from the scraps.

The fabric looks like velvet but it is 100% cotton and has the look and feel of Cherry Wood fabrics. NOTE: I did not touch it.

Then there was this great picture of the Cherokee lady from Oklahoma Territory quilting an Irish Chain.  They met at the church once a week and quilted together.  Someone listed all their names on the back of the photo.  That is what my great-grandma Lula Youngblood-Standlee did and she was Cherokee.  Quilting is in my blood.
Nothing says America better on Saint Patrick's Day than a group of Native American women working on an Irish Chain Quilt in red and green.

 A blizzard blew me into the state of Nebraska but the quilts and quilters lit my fire. 

Monday, February 18, 2013

Hilo Adventure



Traveling is sometime a little tricky so I have learned to always be prepared and decided not to take a flight to Hawaii from San Francisco but to go out of LA because San Francisco can sometimes have fog early in the morning so, to be safe, let’s go out of L.A.   Well, do I have egg on my face?  Los Angles was fogged in the morning we needed to leave for Kona.  So, we made a detour to Ontario, CA to wait the fog out and we missed our flight.  Of course, Betty in row 9D is in a panic over the delay and can’t make her flight and we all have to hear her talk to all 14 family members - that’s 14 different calls on her cell, as we wait on the plane for a gate.  Oh, by the way, did I mention she was a LOUD talker?
Thank God I was flying in a day before I had to teach at Quilting on the Beach in Kona, Hawaii. When we finally arrived in LA we had to change our plans which meant standing in a line forever to get a new flight and now we are going to catch the next flight at 5pm to Hilo, which is also on the Big Island of Hawaii.  I ask the reservations girl on the phone how far Hilo is from Kona.  It’s an island can’t be that far, right?  She says it 65 miles away.  Well, she was wrong!  It takes 2 hours to get to Kona from Hilo and we were arriving at about 9 pm so our hosts ask one of their teachers if she could put us up in Hilo until tomorrow when Robert (our host in Kona) could come and get us.  Well, it was a nice surprise to an exhausting day to find our hostess was Phyllis Cullen, a fiber artist extraordinaire.   She and her husband, Mark, just moved to the island from Chico, CA 6 months ago and her house was to die for and I was in heaven.  Here are some wonderful pictures of her studio, house, and their gardens.  So the fog turned into a great surprise. Thank you, Mark and Phyllis!

The driveway to the house is a cave of palm trees with orchids out of every other one.  Amazing!

Phyllis's dreamy studio.

 Some of Phyllis's beautiful quilts.

Joe in front of Phyllis's quilt.

Mark and Joe
Mark went out and cut these bananas off their tree. They were so sweet.
The view.
Phyllis is making her way through the jungle to show us her waterfall.
The waterfall.
                                                                               
Their yard was like a botanical garden.  I think my next quilt idea is coming from the pictures I took there.

We eat the guavas right off the tree.
  Now we just have to figure out how to make a living in Hilo!