Thursday, October 22, 2009

GuardDoll No. 1 "Gwydion"


This is the first in a series of what I have titled, GuardDolls. I wanted to create soft sculptures of empowered older women. They dress age-inappropriate because they don't give a damn what anybody thinks. And they carry a weapon or two to stick it to anyone who crosses the line.

A GuardDoll's purpose is to protect and watch over her owner's valuables. With a ring attached to the back of her head, she can be hung on a wall in an auspicious place.

Gwydion, the first GuardDoll, measures 16 inches and is constructed from the following: needle-felted wool & acrylic yarns, commercial cotton fabrics, lace, thrift shop cutlery, beads, fabric bead armature.

GuardDoll No. 2 "Agasaya"


Agasaya is friendly to whoever gives her a home, but is hostile to intruders. She will watch over and protect your valuables.

Agasaya measures 20 inches and is constructed from the following: needle-felted wool yarn, commercial cotton fabrics, lace, metallic tulle, thrift shop cutlery, beads, fabric bead armature.

GuardDoll No. 3 "Anouke"


Anouke is friendly to whoever gives her a place to stay, but is hostile to intruders. She will watch over and protect your valuables.

Anouke measures 17 inches and is constructed from the following: needle-felted wool yarn, commercial cotton fabrics, lace, fabric paint, costume jewelry pin, thrift shop cutlery, beads, fabric bead armature.

GuardDolls 4 & 5 "Menhit" and "Zroya"



Menhit and Zroya have found homes to protect. They help their owners by watching over and protecting their valuables.

GuardDoll No. 6 "Nanaja"


Nanaja is friendly to whoever gives her a place to stay, but is hostile to intruders. She will watch over and protect your valuables.

Nanaja measures 15 inches and is constructed from the following: needle-felted wool yarn, commercial cotton fabrics, lace, fabric paint, costume jewelry pin, thrift shop cutlery, beads, fabric bead armature.

GuardDoll No. 7 "Oenone"


Oenone is friendly to whoever gives her a place to stay, but is hostile to intruders. She will watch over and protect your valuables.

Oenone measures 11 inches and is constructed from the following: needle-felted wool yarn, commercial cotton fabrics, lace, metallic tulle, welded stainless steel, beads, fabric bead armature.

GuardDoll No. 8 "Octavia"


Octavia is friendly to whoever gives her a place to stay, but is hostile to intruders. She will watch over and protect your valuables.

Octavia measures 13 inches and is constructed from the following: needle-felted wool yarn, commercial cotton fabrics, lace, metallic tulle, welded stainless steel, beads, fabric bead armature.

GuardDoll No. 9 "Oriana"


Oriana is friendly to whoever gives her a place to stay, but is hostile to intruders. She will watch over and protect your valuables.

Oriana measures 12 inches and is constructed from the following materials: needle-felted wool yarn & acrylic yarns, commercial cotton fabrics, lace, organza, welded stainless steel, fabric paint, beads, fabric bead armature.

GuardDoll No. 10 "Ocyate"


Ocyate is friendly to whoever gives her a place to stay, but is hostile to any intruders. She will watch over your valuables.

Ocyate measures 23 inches long is constructed from the following: needle-felted wool yarn, commercial cotton fabrics, lace, fabric paint, costume jewelry pin, welded stainless steel, beads, fabric bead armature.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Permian Tide Pool Party--Mixed Media











This is a series of mixed-media, mostly fiber artworks I made for a show at the Bowen Center for the Arts this September (http://www.dawsonarts.org/events.htm). I started with a series of quilted, complex cloths (see March post) and sewed them onto various armatures--sponges, Styrofoam blocks, and jewelry display boxes. Then I embellished them with weird little creatures made from felt, crochet, twisted wire, beads, etc. The end result had sort of a seascape look, if the sea was on another planet. Then I thought about Earth's primeval oceans. That led to the idea of these odd life forms chilling out together in a tide pool, which led to the title of the series: Permian Tide Pool Party I-X. The average piece measures about 8 x 6 x 3 inches.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Mixed media wall hanging


This piece measures 8 x 11 inches. The background consists of a warp made from a crocheted chain of wool yarn; the weft is batik fabric strips. The figure is crocheted and needle felted. The attachments are the faces of six, cheap watches that died premature deaths. Other items in the mix--decorative yarns and beads.

Soft sculpture lizards



These two lizards were crocheted and heavily embellished. They were then mounted on fabric covered sponges. The purple cover consists of woven batik fabric strips. The orange cover is one piece of fabric that is enclosed in beaded wire crochet. Both pieces measure about 8 x 12 x 4 inches.

Red Devil Doll


This doll measures 4.5 x 13 inches and is made of felted wool tubes and strips of fabric.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Hairy Red Monster Doll





Here's the latest addition to my doll collection. This one measures 6.5 inches wide and 18 inches long. I plan to take it to Artomatic 2009 this May. The body was knit on a circular loom and has a toy baseball for armature.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Complex Cloth










These examples of complex cloth were made by creating a collage of hand-dyed & stamped fabric scraps over a foundation fabric such as an old linen napkin, a piece of hand-dyed fabric, or a commercial batik. Sometimes I add pieces of Angelina fiber or short lengths of novelty yarn. Once I achieve a composition that pleases me, I pin a layer of tulle on top and secure the "sandwich" with free-motion quilting. The piece of complex cloth then becomes part of my fabric stash collection to be used later in a specific project where it gets cut up and incorporated into the design, whatever that may be.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

A gold doll and an old lady doll


Update: I sold the old lady doll at Empire but not the monkey-faced dandy.

The gold doll is made of fabric beads joined together with buttons. The face is needle felted. I wanted it to look like a dandy from the 1700s. Unfortunately, it looks like a monkey-faced creature in a very peculiar outfit. "It" measures about 14 inches.

The white doll is made of satin fabric beads with a knitted dress. I wanted her to look young and springlike, but she ended up as an old lady with an attitude. She measures about 9 inches.

I hope to sell these two at the Empire quilters guild show in Manhattan this March.

http://www.empirequilters.net/pg/eqshow2009.html

The Abominable Madonna


If there are abominable snow men (or Yeti), then there must be abominable snow women and their babies, too. The mother here measures about 16 inches and is made of knitted, crocheted, and felted wool. The baby is needle felted.

Two weird pink dolls

Update: I sold both of these dolls at Empire.

I made these two dolls for the Empire quilters guild show this March (http://www.empirequilters.net/pg/eqshow2009.html). The cross-eyed doll measures about nine inches, and the one with the long neck, about 18 inches. My friends tell me the the bigger doll has a face that reminds them of a chicken! The head and limbs are made from Knitted wool tubes that were felted in the washing machine. The hair consists of crocheted wool also felted in the washing machine. Buttons and beads form the joints.

Mostly blue yarn & fabric dolls


I sold the doll with the knobby hands & feet and the light blue hair at Empire.


These dolls measure approximately 18 inches long. Their hair consists of crocheted chains of wool that were felted in a washing machine. One has fabric beads for its appendages; the other two have knitted and felted tubes. I plan to offer them for sale at the Empire quilters guild show this March (http://www.empirequilters.net/pg/eqshow2009.html).

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Fiber & Yarn Dioramas





Here are some dioramas that started as 6 x 6 x 2 inch boxes that were then covered and filled with knitted, crocheted, quilted, & beaded elements. I am hoping to display and sell them at Artomatic 2009 in Washington DC.

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Three weird green dolls


Update: I sold all three dolls at Empire.







I just finished these three weird green dolls to sell at the boutique for the Empire quilters guild show in Manhattan this March (3/21-22/2009). The main construction consists of fabric scraps wrapped around sections of drinking straws. I also knitted tubes, using a wheel loom, to fit over some of their limbs. Lengths range between 9 and 12 inches. Why green dolls? I was working on a quilt challenge with the following rule: Make a 3-D study in green where the focal point must rise at least one inch off the surface of the quilt. I thought some small green dolls would work. But, after making these three, I decided to let them hang on their own. I'll figure out something else for the challenge later.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

One-Foot-Square Art Quilts



Last year (2008) I entered a quilt in the SAQA (Studio Art Quilt Associates) online auction of one-foot-square quilts. It was titled "Forbidden Love" and it featured my fabric bead snakes. I'm happy to say that it sold, so I was encouraged to submit another one for this year. I call it "Itsy Bitsy." This one was the result of a challenge with several quilting friends: Make a 12-inch quilt where the viewer can guess the name of a nursery rhyme. Well, not too many people could guess what my quilt depicted, that is if I didn't tell them the title!

Fiber Bead Dolls





Lately, I've taken a break from traditional & art quilts to make fabric bead dolls. The beads are made by wrapping drinking straws with fabric strips and gluing them into place. The fabric beads are then joined by threading them onto buttons/beads to create the doll body. The fun part begins when it's time to dress them and give them a personality. Here are several examples.