Detail from "Rain Dance," an original quilt by Sherrie Spangler

Friday, January 7, 2011

Year of the Rabbitat-tat


Take me home and love me!

Me Too!

You know I'm a sucker for rabbits, and you should know that 2011 is The Year of the Rabbit, so I just have to share some photos I took this week when we visited family in Southern California. My brother -- The Irish Poet of an earlier post -- volunteers at the Rancho Coastal Humane Society in Encinitas, which shelters and adopts out dogs, cats, and RABBITS! They have this fabulous Rabbitat where the bunnies live in luxury:




The cats and dogs are pretty pampered, too, and there's also a dog park. The place is full of animal art, meandering outdoor walkways and spacious, colorful, clean environments for the animals.




The whole Encinitas area is conducive to blissed-outedness, if you can ignore the traffic. Not far from the bunny nirvana home, we strolled through the gardens of the golden lotus, which are free and open to the public:





Every plant was perfect, the koi were enormous and still, and the views were spectacular. Surely there is inspiration for endless art quilts here.





Side note: Joe Walsh ("Rocky Mountain Way" and The Eagles)
reportedly shares this view from his home in Encinitas.
... couldn't get much higher.

Have a colorful day!

Friday, December 31, 2010

Have a Cosmic Rabbit New Year!



It's the YEAR OF THE RABBIT!

... So of course I've honored Bunners by making rabbit quilts, but I can't show them yet because I entered them in Quilting Arts Magazine's Calendar Contest -- the theme is pets -- and you can't publish your entries. But I did overlay photographs of some of the fabric and test samples into a collage, above, that shows you the colors without revealing the design. My entries are called:

"The Cosmic Rabbit Sees All"
and
"The Cosmic Rabbit Chills Out"



Here is my little Muse,
 snuggling on this chilly
New Year's Eve Day:



It was sunny and cold (around freezing) here in Gig Harbor on the final day of the year, so I headed down to the harbor for a few photos:



(That's Mt. Rainier on the horizon.)

The next two are from our neighborhood:



And here is my birthday vignette, showing a little papercut card that Julia made with our tall evergreens and a heart. I love the gold and green of her gift bag, and the green goes great with the mauve mug. Color is everything!


Have a Very Colorful New Year!

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Looking up in Victoria, B.C.


I found these four large banners -- collectively called
The Four Seasons Suite
-- displayed high on the walls of
Munro's Books in Victoria, B.C.
The "textile assemblages" are by
Canadian artist Carole Sabiston.
 

It's hard to get a sense from my photos of how immense these are. I had to tilt the camera (yes, with permission) way up to frame them, which makes them seem a lot smaller than they really are. I would love to see them up close, but at least they had a brochure giving some info about them. The brochure states that Carole's "textile assemblages employ hand and machine stitching using techniques which are unique and non-traditional."

The colors are beautiful.
 
Munro's Books is a neo-classical building that was designed for the Royal Bank in 1909. According to the store's brochure, the coffered 24-foot ceiling resembles the ceiling of the porch of the great library of Ephesus built by the Romans. In 1984, Jim Munro bought the building, which had been "tastelessly modernized" in the '50s, and had it restored and refubished -- all in eight weeks!


Here are some more things I found
when I looked up in Victoria:

Chandelier in downtown McDonald's lobby


Chandelier in our B&B hallway

Seagull on a mossy roof

Heads up!

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Seattle Art Museum inspires

"Takpekpe" (means "Conference") by El Anatsui, 2006
This metal piece in the Seattle Art Museum stopped me in my tracks last week. It really shouts "art quilt" and yet it's one layer made of metal scraps. I was allowed to take photos without the flash, so here are a few shots, all of the same piece.






Here is the accompanying sign, which explains it better than I could:


Here are a few photos of the Ewe textiles exhibit mentioned in the sign:




More African pieces at the Seattle Art Museum

Spectacular metal suit by Nick Cave in the same gallery
My main reason for visiting the museum was to see the Picasso exhibit (which did not permit photos), but these other pieces really grabbed me. I'm drawn to the strong colors and lines of African art. Nick Cave is an artist from Chicago known for his outrageous "suits," but his pieces meshed perfectly with the African pieces.

Inspiration everywhere!

Friday, December 24, 2010

All is calm, all is bright


Seattle waterfront shines


Downtown Seattle sparkles

Merry Christmas
from the Pacific Northwest!



Thursday, December 23, 2010

Melody's Scarf Goes to Seattle



This lucky pig at Seattle's Pike Place Market got to pose with my "Eternity Scarf" that I special-ordered recently from Melody Johnson, of art quilt fame. Here's a link to her blog, where you can drool over some of her other knitted items: http://fibermania.blogspot.com/  I picked my favorite shade of green and she whipped it out in no time. We art quilters love anything having to do with color and fiber, which includes yarn.

 
The cool thing about this scarf is that it can be worn lots of different ways. In the picture above, I doubled it around my neck for warmth while having my iced mocha at Starbucks and showing off the fun little bags made by another quilter friend, Nancy.

It can be looped around the neck AND the head, a feature that came in handy on the ferry to Seattle when the wind picked up. It can also be worn like a necklace in one long, dramatic loop. (I didn't get a picture, but that was the option of choice for indoors in Seattle.)
And here it is with another lucky pig inside Pikes Place Market.

Have a colorful day!

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

The Nuts' Excellent Vashon Island Adventure



The Twisted Nut Stitchers (they hate that name, but I like it) set off on another excellent adventure last week, this time taking the ferry from Tacoma to Vashon Island. That's the island in the distance and that's us gracing the front of the ferry. Instead of stitching, we were going to shop at Island Quilter and exchange our homemade Christmas ornaments with each other.


Before shopping we needed sustenance, so we stopped at a cute little shop for lattes in these very shapely insulated mugs. I also had a Magic Bar (about 1,000 calories of chocolate, nuts and sugar).


Then we went next door to the Vashon Bookshop, where we immediately spotted this cozy crazy quilt folded over a comfy couch. Here's a closer look:



The Nuts are especially attuned to crazy quilting because we're crazy ... and also because this past year we joined a crazy quilt club that met monthly at the Shibori Dragon quilt, yarn, bead and embroidery (what more do you need except chocolate?) store in Lakewood, WA. We learned how to properly piece together fabric scraps into pleasing blocks and how to embellish our blocks with embroidery. So we could appreciate the stitching on this beauty.

Lo and behold, when we exchanged our ornaments over lunch they were all made with crazy quilting and/or embroidery:


... except for mine, which I made from a pattern someone gave me way back in the '90s at my quilt guild in El Paso, TX. Mine use squares and rectangles that are folded and stacked on top of each other to form a star, then the points are tacked together with a little thread:


Vashon Island has a laid back, artsy, old hippie vibe that makes you feel like curling up in a soft chair in one of the stores or cafes with a cup of jo and a good book while listening to the rain outside.
It was an excellent day!

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Quilt, cookies, and a puppy


I made this little quilted wall hanging today to donate to our
Gig Harbor NewNeighbors holiday bazaar sale.
If anyone buys it, all proceeds will go to the
NN Helping Hands, which in turn benefits the needy.

I could also see it as a
holiday table topper,
with a little plate of cookies in the center
and the four hands reaching for them.



And speaking of cookies, take a look at these
vegan beauties
that Julia made today!

Now that you're feeling all warm and fuzzy,
here's today's parting shot:
Beth's cute little dog, Tess,
who patiently sat on her lap yesterday
all through our book club meeting.
Have a colorful day!