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Saturday, October 24, 2009

Leaves … and a poem


I’ve been obsessing a bit about leaves lately. I'm planning a series of pieces all based on extreme closeups of leaves, so I’ve been aiming my camera at every leaf I can find. This morning I swooned over these beauties on my doorstep after a hard rain last night. They made me think of this poem, one of my favorites by Robert Frost. It seems to perfectly capture the melancholy nature of the season:

Nothing Gold Can Stay
by Robert Frost

Nature’s first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

A chance to win my new book!

C&T Publishing is giving away a copy of my book, Appliqué Petal Party, on their blog. Leave a comment at the end of the post, and you might win! You must leave your comment before 9 a.m. Pacific Standard time on Monday, Oct. 26 to be eligible for the drawing.

http://www.ctpubblog.com/2009/10/20/applique-petal-party-giveaway

The post also includes a little interview of me (or as C&T calls it “ the low-down on [Susan] and her new release.”)

This is “Pink Petal Party,” the quilt featured in the book:

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

My favorite season


Fall is my favorite time of year, and Halloween is my favorite day (it’s also my birthday, which is probably part of the reason why). Today I went out in search of autumn color and texture at my local farm stand, Carrigan Farms in Mooresville, NC.

Vivid oranges, blues, yellows, purples and reds in pumpkins and gourds to make your soul sing:





I take a lot of photos year round. These photo shoots provide fodder for my work. A shot of mini-pumpkins I took several years ago was the idea behind this piece, “Autumn’s Bounty,” which won a spot in the 2010 Quilting Arts Calendar (they used it for October, of course!):


And this piece, “Indian Corn,” is also based on a photo:


Now’s the perfect time to shoot pumpkins, jack-o-lanterns, gourds, leaves, cute kids in Halloween costumes, and fall foliage, so don’t miss this opportunity to snap photos to inspire projects in the months ahead!

Upcoming events at The Mint Museum locations

If you live in the Charlotte area, don't miss these upcoming events listed below. They are being held in conjunction with American Quilt Classics, 1800-1980: The Bresler Collection, showing at The Mint Museum of Craft + Design now through February 6, 2010. The collection includes spectacular examples of Baltimore Album quilts, crazy quilts, Chintz pictorial quilts, Amish quilts and log cabin quilts.


Quilting Demonstration
Local quilt artists Claudia Reynolds (pictured above), Patti Cline and Cindy Page will demonstrate various techniques found in the extraordinary examples in American Quilt Classics, 1800-1980: The Bresler Collection.
Tuesday, October 27, 12:00–1:30 pm
at The Mint Museum of Craft + Design (uptown Charlotte)
FREE!



Curator’s Tours with Annie Carlano, Director of Craft + Design, Allie Farlowe, Assistant Curator of Craft + Design, and Michelle Mickey, Curatorial Assistant of Craft + Design
Space is limited, registration requested with Karen Vidamo 704-337-2098 or Karen.vidamo@mintmuseum.org
Free for Mint members, or after admission
at The Mint Museum of Craft + Design (uptown Charlotte)
Select Thursdays, 2:00-2:45 pm, and November 5

Artists’ Forum: Susan Brubaker Knapp and Janet A. Lasher
Artists’ Forums are designed to give area artists a platform to discuss their work as well as current issues and activities in their artistic fields.
Tuesday, Dec. 1
7 to 8:30 p.m.
at The Mint Museum of Art
2730 Randolph Road, Charlotte NC
FREE!

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

My door organizer featured in Quilt Scene magazine

International Quilt Festival Quilt Scene magazine came out last Tuesday. This magazine is a collaboration between Pokey Bolton, editor of Quilting Arts magazine, and Karey Bresenhan, director and founder of International Quilt Festival and president of Quilts, Inc. It is a special commemorative issue to celebrate 35 years of International Quilt Festival.

Karey tells how she started the festival, and how its popularity expanded to include a summer show in Long Beach, Cal., and a spring show in Chicago, Ill. Pokey shares how she changed course from teaching and attending graduate school to start a fledgling publication for art quilters.

It is packed full of wonderful photos of the history of Quilt Festival, profiles and photos of this year's top award-winning quilters and their quilts, a bunch of patchwork and stitched projects you can make, and articles from top quilters offering tips and techniques on setting up your studio and learning to be a better free-motion quilter. You can order a copy for $14.99 on the Interweave website.

My project included in the magazine is this nifty door organizer you can use to organize your stuff and leave it on the door so you won’t forget it on the way out:

There are pockets to hold your phone, keys, mail, pens, sunglasses, iPod … anything you don't want to forget on your way out the door. I think it would be a great organizer for a teenager. Or pack it with crayons, paper and colored pencils, and tie it to the back of your headrest on your car’s seat, to keep a kid happy on a long car ride.


It stitches up in a jiffy, and would also make a great holiday gift for someone special.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

I’m in an internet slideshow on The Quilt Show’s blog!


I got a note from a friend who had noticed this... I am in a photo in a slideshow on Alex Anderson and Ricky Tims' Daily Blog. It’s on the website for their internet web television program, The Quilt Show. How cool! Looks like they were shooting while I was autographing books in the C&T booth during Quilt Market. I'm in photo number 36 out of 49. You can see lots more shots of Market and Festival in their Smilebox slideshows posted this past week.

Quilt Festival, Part IV


It was really fun to meet people (including lots of Facebook friends that stopped by) during the Open Studios at Make it University. I had planned to demo thread-sketching, free-motion machine quilting and painting on fabric, but there were so many people and I got so many questions that I spent most of the time just talking.







Many thanks to Liz Kettle and Melanie Testa for taking photos of me to show here. Here’s Liz demonstrating needle felting in Open Studios:


After my Open Studios gig, I was lucky to win a spot in one of the Make it University sessions taught by Jamie Fingal.

The family sitting in front of me at Make It University was so cute! They were working hard on their project. It was nice to see some young children looking at the stuff in the vendors' booths and at the quilts in the exhibits.


This is the project we made in Jamie’s class. It is a little art gallery in a box. The outside is an Altoids mint box decorated with paper and coated with gel medium. An accordion-folded paper inside can hold photos of your art. A very fun way to spend an hour (and to get off your feet for a bit!)


While shopping, I saw Maggie Winfield, and had to go up and talk with her. She is an absolute sweetheart and pure creativity in human form. Much of her ensemble was created with recycled thrift-shop finds. Hat? Glittered. Shoes? Painted. Glasses? Rhinestone glitzed.


Here’s a closeup so you can see some of the details on Maggie’s hat, glasses, vest and necklace. And the pure joy in her face that comes from just being herself.


Just before I sped off to meet the shuttlebus for the airport, I snapped this shot with Pokey Bolton, editor of Quilting Arts magazine, on the floor of Make It University.

Here are a few more of the hundreds of spectacular quilts at International Quilt Festival:

“The Endless World II” by Noriko Kido is made from thousands of tiny hexagons. It won an Honorable Mention award in the Handmade category.


“White Dew” by Tsuneko Shimura won first place in the Handmade category.


Detail of “White Dew” by Tsuneko Shimura.


Sue Reno’s “Prickly Sow Thistle.”


Detail from Sue Reno’s “Prickly Sow Thistle.”


“Nuance” by Pat Lapierre features 180 different decorative stitches on Japanese fabrics. It won a second place ribbon in the Art-Abstract, Small category.


Detail of “Nuance” by Pat Lapierre.


“Building Up” by Kathy York won first place in the Small Abstract Art Quilt category. Another of her quilts, “Falling through the Cracks,” won third place in the Embellished category.


“Pup Art” by Nancy Brown won third place in the Art-Whimsical category. Nancy does a lot of quilts about pets and wild animals. This one gives a pop art spin to dog portraits.


“Heart’s Desire” by Deborah Kemball won second place in the Traditional Appliqué category.


“Cinnabar and Indigo” by Judy Mathieson won first place in the Innovative Pieced category. Judy is famous for her Mariner’s Compass quilt designs, and has written several books about them.


Detail from “Cinnabar and Indigo.”


“Zodiak” by Martha Brown features the 12 signs of the Zodiak in the circle, the planets in the center, and the four elements around the outside.


Here’s a detail shot of my sign (Scorpio) and a bit of Libra in “Zodiak” by Martha Brown.


“The Calm After the Storm” by Inge Mardal and Steen Hougs won second place in the Art-People, Portraits and Figures category. This team produces exquisite work with photographic detail year after year.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Quilt Festival, Part III


"The Cubist's Edge" by Frances Holliday Alford.


"Rondo of Roses" by Akiko Muraki.


"Pointless Possibilities" by Jamie Fingal is part of the "Edges" special exhibition.


Here's Jaimie (left) with Leslie Jenison in their arty aprons. Jamie and Leslie are co-curators of the Dinner at Eight Artists group.


"The Pittsburgh Friendship Quilt" has 32,000 pieces, each 2-1/4 inches, and measures 80 feet long.


A detail shot of "Oriental Expression" by Karen Kay Buckley. This quilt is the focus of the book Japanese Garden Quilt by C&T Publishing. It is being produced in the same format as my book (a booklet and full-size pattern sheets in a laminated cover envelope). It is being released in November 2009; you can pre-order it on Karen's website, or from C&T.


"Moon Garden" by Judy Coates Perez won an Honorable Mention in the Art-Painted Surfaces category.


Michele Muska demonstrates techniques in the Open Studios/Make it University area. That's the ATC swap area on the right side of the photo, and the Make It University floor behind her.


Fiber artist and textile designer Melanie Testa at work in Open Studios. Melanie's book Inspired to Quilt: Creative Experiments in Art Quilt Imagery teaches how to "transform a concept into a finished art quilt using new and innovative ideas while capturing your unique design style." It is published by Interweave.


I traded ATCs (Artist's Trading Cards" with Lyric Kinard. Lyric's book Design Principles and Creativity Exercises "delves deeply into the building blocks that make up visual language," offering exercises to help art quilters learn design principles. It is published by Interweave.


Here's art quilter and teacher Laura Wasilowski reading Lyric's book. Laura sells her quilts, patterns, and hand-dyed fabrics and threads through Quiltfabrik (she has a booth at Festival, and sells on her website).


Another interesting aspect to Quilt Festival is the many worthy causes that raise money at Festival. Here, people gather around the small quilts up for sale to benefit the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative.

Debbie Chenail and Ami Simms have raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for this national charity seeking to raise awareness and fund research. The AAQI auctions and sells donated quilts, and sponsors a nationally touring exhibit of quilts about Alzheimer's.


Here's the beautiful little quilt I purchased today to benefit the group. It is "Labyrinth" by Susan Bennett. Four famous quilters (Hollis Chatelain, John Flynn, Becky Goldsmith and Sue Nickels) are also having a competition called "World Quilt Federation Smackdown" to raise money for the organization. You can see their donated quilts, and read more about it here.


"Iguana" by Carol Morrisey. Carol designs beautiful art quilt patterns.


Tami Pfeil and Kim Kleine of Handbehg Felts had the cutest creations made with wool felted balls and sheets. I met them at Spring Market, and they had great new stuff this time. Isn't this a beautiful bouquet?


"Circles Collide" by Gloria Hansen won third place in the Digital Imagery category.


People were gathered around "Glass Beach" by Desiree Habicht, commenting on how realistically she portrayed stones in a glass canister. Look how beautifully she captured the reflections of light on the glass and on the surface around the canister.


This is an amazing applique quilt called "A New Look at a Grand Old Lady" by Suzanne Louth. It won Best of Show at the 2009 Vermont Quilt Show.