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Surround Sound and Green Man make the cut!

Surround Sound Vest’ wins FUNCTIONAL FIBER 3rd Place award!

Surround Sound vest

83 pieces were entered into the Michigan League of Handweavers 18th Biennial Show.

The ‘Green Man’ tapestry was also accepted into the show.

Green Man_Barbara Schutzgruber

The exhibit at the Holland Area Arts Council, 150 E. 8th Street, Holland MI 49423, runs from May 17-June 29, 2014. (Regular hours: Monday-Thursday 10am-8pm, Friday 10am-5pm, Saturday 10am-3pm)

The reception, awards ceremony and talk by juror Ann Keister (retired professor of Art & Design at Grand Valley State University) will be on Sunday, June 29, 2014 from 2-4pm.

Read stories behind the creation of these pieces
Surround Sound Vest

The Saga of the Green Man
part 1  –  part 2  –  part 3

 

Winter Blues Jacket revisited

I had a little jacket, it was old as can be…
Tralala lalalala lalala
What I’d ever do with it, I just couldn’t see
Tralala lalalala lalala
So I thought a little while
And made myself a vest in the very latest style
Tralalala lalala – Tralalala lalala
Made a vest in the very latest style.
–from a Yiddish folk song

What does a fiber artist do when she realizes that she has not worn the hand-woven jacket she spent months weaving and constructing?  She turns it into something else.  Or even better… ends up with 2 items of clothing!!

In 2012, I created ‘Rapunzel’s Winter Blues’ jacket

The finished jacket!!

when I took Michelle Moenssen’s workshop “Making a Jacket from Hand-woven Fabric”.  This was fabulous learning experience, as I had never sewn a tailored jacket (i.e. suit coat) before… let alone one from hand-woven fabric.  [click here for the slide show of the full process]

After 2 years… I realize I had not worn the jacket even once.  My life at this point doesn’t need that style of jacket.  But as any fiber artist who makes her/his own cloth for garments knows, one does not just toss away that much ‘time, sweat, and tears’; and though I do sell my woven and felted garments, this one has strong emotional ties for me so it would be like selling one of my children!  So… I began to think what could the jacket transition into that I would be more likely to wear?

I decided that remove the sleeves – transforming it into a vest – would be the simplest as I had no desire at this point to completely deconstruct the jacket.

Winter Blues jacket revisit

Now… what to do with the hand-woven fabric from the sleeves?  Mary Sue Fenner’s ‘One-of-a-Kind Jacket Trunk Show’ at the March 2014 AAFG meeting inspired me to make a second garment using lightweight commercial wool and the hand-woven fabric as accent panels creating this ‘Two for the Price of One’ vest.

2for1 vest   2for1 vest back
(pattern – Simplicity 2341)

I’m happy to say that both vests will be on the runway at AAFG’s Fiber Feast on April 5, 2014.

The song begins with an overcoat becoming a jacket – jacket to vest – vest to tie – tie to button – button to nothing – nothing to song and Simms Talback’s 1999 picture book Joseph Had a Little Overcoat is a Caldecott Metal winner so who knows… over the years to come this hand-woven fabric may continue to be re-imaged and transformed, giving it renewed life and rebirth.  Tralala lalalala lalala…..

The Saga of the Green Man (pt2)

When we last left our hero…. he was awaiting my decision:
Do I chuck all that I’ve done so far… cutting my losses (literally!)
and start over?

Or do I continue on and see what happens?

I am a ‘process’ artist rather than a ‘project’ artist which means I am more interested in the journey than I am in reaching the original destination.  So of course…. my decision was to move the cartoon lower, realigning the eyes, and continued on!!

The Green Man’s features were now more square than the original design.  The good thing about choosing a Green Man for my first attempt to weave a face is that a Green Man is not “human”.  As long as I kept his eyes focused, the rest of his face was open to interpretation.  Not wanting to redo the cartoon, I continued to follow the original, trying to keep my beating pressure the same as I had used the year before.

9_continue weaving  10_15inches  11_16 to 17 inches

Once his forehead was finished…
12_19.5 inches   

I packed down the new weaving to match the new proportions of his lower face.

13_19.75 inches

I was VERY pleased with how he came out but there was still more to do…..

The Saga of the Green Man (pt1)

Some projects just take time.  They are never going to fulfill any need I might have for instant gratification.  The Green Man tapestry has been one of those.

I started this project back in August 2012.  My goal at the time was to have him completed for the February 2013 Ann Arbor Fiberarts Guild annual wall hangings exhibit at the University of Michigan’s Power Center for the Performing Arts.
Click on the links to read about the process:
designing – preparing the loom – the cartoon – weaving –  the face – the eyes –  taking longer than anticipated.  

By mid January it was clear that I would not be able to have him ready.  And so it was…. the Green Man looked on as other projects, deadlines, commissions, and life events took center stage.  [see the blog archives]  For 9 months he patiently watched and waited.

weaving room

FINALLY… 1 year after I started him, I was able to once again turn my attention to the Green Man.  One of the skills I worked on during the AWSD summer school tapestry course in Carmarthen, Wales [see September 2013 blog postings] was beating/packing down the weaving.  Looking at it now, I could see that yup…. my packing was pretty loose so I began to compress.

before

before

The result = the tapestry was now 3″ shorter!

after

after

Also at this point I could see that my warp tension was pretty wonky and I would not be able to easily correct this = OOPS!!!  I now had major decision to make:
Do I chuck all that I’ve done so far… cutting my losses (literally!) and start over?
Or do I continue on and see what happens?