And another jacket. Materials: indigo dyed hand spun, hand woven cotton from a Lienten village in northern Laos, 2003. The fabric is very thick with indigo and not easy to work with. The white hand woven cotton is from Japan, katazome, which is a resist paste of indigo, either block printed or done free hand, here in a butterfly design. This fabric is about the same weight and texture as the dark blue. The collar is a 50/50 silk cotton I picked up in Myanmar a couple of years ago. The design is a modified kimono style. It has irregular shaped pockets and "picking", or sashiko, a Japanese running stitch. I used DMC perle cotton white for the sashiko.
Next project is to embroider my old Levi jacket. I am doing scroll work, a moon and Tibetan clouds.
Being a place for things creative, textiles, jewelry, books, things I make, things I like, things for sale.
Sunday, August 9, 2015
Friday, May 22, 2015
Jackets
The jacket: I used an Indonesian tube skirt from Flores for the body, back and front, and part of the sleeves. For the collar, I used a very old silk hand woven partial pha sin from Laos that was part of a phasin that had been cobbled together. I took the old skirt apart and salvaged the pieces. The very dark pieces near the bottom of the sleeves are from pieces left over from another old phasin, hand woven with indigo dyed threads. The large sections of the sleeves is a skirt border, old, silk, from Laos. It felt good to use all the small sections and pieces I have been saving because the seem to precious to just throw away. This jacket came out beautifully and I will wear it a lot, I'm sure. I did have to shorten the sleeves a bit, and did that by adding black rayon/linen to the reverse sides of the sleeves, and turning up the cuffs a bit. I also added pockets. It's quite a coat!
Friday, August 8, 2014
New Project...the poem
Sunday, June 8, 2014
As finished as finished can be
the back |
Sterling silver Turkoman beads with sterling quality Afghani drops. The one on the left has a tiny turquoise and carnelian bead. Sterling round spacer beads as accents. |
Sterling silver Lao butterfly buttons with sterling content Afghani drops. |
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Tuesday, January 14, 2014
Return to Embroidery
Now that the hectic holiday season is over I am back at my embroidery. I have a new chair, which helps, and I'm doing some of my work in the daytime, which is HUGE! Better light, better back, better inspiration and less fatigue. The purple tunic is getting full. I have to remember not to try to do projects on it in very dark colors. They just don't show up. I found some antique linen tea towels, old, heavy linen, and I'm going to do a series of hangings on these. I want to do one for the RL Stevenson poem, Travel. After all, it is what set my mind to travel as a child, hearing my grandmother and then my mother, reciting the poems from A Child's Garden of Verses. So that is my new goal. In the meantime, I have much to do before I go back to SE Asia. I have a mission at Samphan Lane to find some embroidery thread, perhaps silk or rayon, and different buttons, perhaps some nice trims. Who knows what I will find in the rat's nest of alleys and packed lanes? It's taken me two years to think up a valid reason to return there. Now if I can only find it.
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Creative Impasse
Since this seems to be the only place I'm doing any writing, what the hell. I rescued another mistake today. A Chinese style tunic I made for myself turned out way too large at the top. Who knows what pattern I was using, but I cut it down, did some clever trim, added gussets, which made it hang correctly, and after taking it apart, removing facings and changing them a couple of times, I actually think I'm almost done and it might be good. Still embroidering, and looking at knitting some neck cowls as gifts. I used a gift certificate from my mother from last year and bought some beautiful yarn. I've taken 4 sweaters apart in the last 4 years and wound the yarn to reuse, reused it, and taken it apart again. Maybe things made with one ball of yarn will be easier to finish. How is it that my skills have fallen by the wayside, like making my pie crusts. I used to make wonderful pie crusts, for years, and then every pie crust I made was like an old worn tire, rubbery and chewy. But now my pie crusts are good, actually, a little better than good. Can I redeem my sewing, my embroidery, my knitting skills? Who knows, but I'm tryin' to find out.
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