![]() |
Luna and the Moon Copyright 2024 Susan Brubaker Knapp 14" square |
Cotton fabric, cotton thread, ink, cotton batting, interfacing. Raw-edge appliqué, free-motion machine threadsketched and quilted.
![]() |
“Amanita
muscaria” |
This mushroom is commonly known as fly agaric or fly amanita. It is usually red and white, but subspecies or variations are sometimes yellow or white. It has hallucinogenic properties, but is poisonous (although death from poisoning is rare).
This is the mushroom made famous in the Mario and Smurfs franchises!
![]() |
Castle Hill Copyright 2024 Susan Brubaker Knapp 17.5 x 11" |
I attended my godson’s wedding last weekend at a gorgeous venue outside of Charlottesville, Virginia. We arrived early and sat in our car waiting until it was time to go to the ceremony, and I took a photo of the beautiful meadow, some in sunshine and some in shadow, with the lovely mountains and forests in the background. This piece is based on that photo, and I'm giving it to my godson and his new bride.
Batik fabric, cotton thread, interfacing, cotton backing. Raw-edge applique, free-motion quilted.
![]() |
"Join the
Chorus" |
My periodical cicada obsession continues. I had already finished this piece, and sewn on the facing, when I decided it wasn't done yet. It just looked too simple, and the oak leaf design I'd quilted in the background was confusing, and not reading as leaves. So I pulled out my trusty paint and painted the background with a darker blue and some metallic gold/green.
![]() |
Before |
![]() |
“Cicada Dance
1” Copyright Susan Brubaker Knapp (2024) 17.5" square. |
My latest in a series of pieces I planning that celebrate the periodical cicadas in Brood XIX that emerged in our area this spring.
Cotton fabric,
cotton batting, cotton thread, acrylic textile paint, interfacing.
Wholecloth painted and free-motion quilted.
![]() |
“Brood XIX” Copyright 2024 Susan Brubaker Knapp |
"Garden at Dawn"
(Copyright Susan Brubaker Knapp 2024)
15.5" square
I started this piece years ago, for a demonstration on Quilting Arts TV on how to use acrylic textile paints to achieve a watercolor effect. I’ve been going through some pieces that were set aside over the years, as I was busy helping my dad and my children, and then moving and re-settling in Chapel Hill, and decided to finish this one.
Cotton duck, acrylic textile paint, perle cotton, cotton batting, cotton batting. Painted, free-motion machine quilted, hand embroidered.
![]() |
“Dragonfly Meetup” (Copyright Susan Brubaker Knapp 2024) 15.5” square |
I’m teaching a class later this week where students create a thread-sketched dragonfly, and decided to finish up a piece I started while demonstrating in previous classes. Cotton fabric, cotton thread, cotton batting, interfacing. Fusible appliqué, free-motion thread sketching, free-motion quilting.
For the past four years, our friend (and the wonderful realtor who helped us find our current home), Natalie Marrone, has been holding Festa Della Terra. It’s an “artful food drive” held around Earth Day that benefits PORCH, a local organization with programs that distribute fresh and non-perishable food to families, pantries and schools. This year we set our goal to feed over 600 families in our community for a full month! It was held this past Saturday in Natalie’s backyard, featured artists, musicians and refreshments. People were invited to come and to bring bags of food or a cash contribution.
It was lovely to see all the art hanging and displayed amidst the trees in their fresh green spring leaves.
Looking to buy or sell a home in the Chapel Hill/Carrboro/Hillsborough/Durham NC area? I highly recommend Natalie as a realtor! You can find her here: https://www.nataliemarronehomes.com/
![]() |
Anatolii Tarasiuk |
![]() |
Deenie & Flip |
![]() |
David Hinkle |
![]() |
R. Scott Horner |
![]() |
Natalie Marrone |
![]() |
Will Ridenour |
![]() |
My display |
![]() |
Talking to visitors |
![]() |
My work hanging amid the trees |
![]() |
My work on the treehouse |
![]() | |
“Scintillating” Copyright 2024 Susan Brubaker Knapp 12-13" x18.5" |
“Scintillating” is another piece in a series of experimental small works that I’m creating to try out some new ideas, and just play. I find that this often leads me in different directions in my work, and is a healthy way to work – without expectations or confines – between larger pieces.
Note that the piece is purposely not square. The top edge is about an inch shorter than the bottom edge.
Hand-dyed, surface-designed, and batik cotton fabrics, cotton thread, cotton batting, holographic sequins. Raw-edge applique, free-motion machine quilted.
![]() |
Lichens and Moss (Copyright 2024 Susan Brubaker Knapp) 11 x 13" |
On my morning walks, I pass a neighbor’s mailbox that was encased, years ago, with wooden strips. Now, it is covered with fabulous lichens and moss in beautiful aqua and green colors. I based this piece on a photo I took a few weeks ago, after a good rain.
I started with a base of fabric, and added several extra layers of batting under the wood fabric strips, to make them more dimensional. I constructed the lichens from painted and heat distressed Tyvek and Lutradur. I free-motion machine stitched the moss with cotton thread, on water soluble stabilizer. (This is a technique I’ll demonstrate on Quilting Arts TV 3100, which we shoot this summer.) The piece also has some hand embroidery.
Lichens have always fascinated me. They consist of fungal filaments (hyphae) that surround green algae cells and/or blue-green cyanobacteria. (The understanding that bacteria may also be part of lichens is relatively recent.)
Lichens provide food, shelter and nesting material, and are an important indicator of air quality.
And in case you were wondering: The dark spots are the fruiting bodies of the lichen. “Most lichenised fungi are ascomycetes, and these produce their spores in sac-like asci held vertically in a ‘fruiting body’. These fruiting bodes may be disc-shaped (apothecia) with a margin of the same or a different colour.” – The British Lichen Society.
“Falling
Ginkgo #7”
Copyright 2024 Susan Brubaker Knapp
14" x 22”
White cotton
fabric, acrylic textile paint, cotton thread, interfacing, cotton
batting.
Painted, stenciled, free-motion quilted.
I made this piece as a sample for my “Stencil Magic” class, after selling six smaller versions. I’ll be teaching this class for the first time Aug. 3 at the
Old Murphey School in Durham, NC. (This is the home of the Triangle
Weavers Guild.) The process involves painting/smearing/scraping paint onto plain white fabric, then stenciling designs on top, and then masking out around imagery (leaves, in this case) and painting again. The class involves no quilting (although we will talk about how to quilt your piece when you get home.
You can get details, see supply lists, and register at https://susanbrubakerknapp.corsizio.com
Here are the three classes I have scheduled later this year in Durham:
![]() |
“Pink
Angelfish” Copyright 2024 Susan Brubaker Knapp 7.5 x 16” Cotton fabric, cotton thread, cotton batting, interfacing. Machine embroidered, thread sketched and free-motion quilted. |
I’m working on three segments for Quilting Arts TV Series 3100, which we will shoot this summer (the shows will be probably be available and airing on many PBS stations in November). This will be a sample for a segment on using water soluble stabilizers to create embroidered elements for art quilts. I machine embroidered the sea fan at the bottom on water soluble stabilizer – Sulky Ultra Solvy.
![]() | |
East Fork Soup Bowls 21" x 34.5" Copyright 2024 Susan Brubaker Knapp |
I'm a big fan of East Fork Pottery. Based in Asheville, North Carolina, East Fork's stated values are “Accountability, Compassion, Equity, Sincerity, and Adaptive Tenacity.” Gotta love that. They also pay living wages to about 100 employees, and give a lot back to their community, with partnerships that help educate people about projects and services in the area. And their pottery is just plain fabulous. And addictive, so consider yourself warned.
You can read more about them here: https://www.eastfork.com
Commercial fabrics, fusible web, interfacing, cotton batting, cotton thread. Fusible appliqué, threadsketched and free-motion quilted.