Saturday night my husband and I went to a slide presentation by the
MASTER of color,
KAFFE FASSETT,
who is famous not only for his brilliant and complex quilting cottons, but also for his richly hued knits, needlepoint, paintings, and color combos in general. I bought his latest quilt book, nestled above in some of his fabric that I plan to embellish with embroidery and beads. The presentation was in a little high school auditorium on Vashon Island. Kaffe and his design partner, Brandon, have been on the island for several days of quilting and knitting workshops.
It was a much needed injection of color in our corner of the Northwest, as you can see by the next two photos, which I took on the bridge and from the ferry on our way over to the lecture. As the crow flies, the lecture was only about four or five miles from our house, but since we're not crows it was a one-and-a-half-hour GRAY, WET JOURNEY over the bridge, onto the ferry and through the woods.
Tacoma Narrows Bridge on Saturday at 3 p.m. |
Inside our car on the Rhody Ferry from Tacoma to Vashon Island. |
IT WAS SO WORTH IT:
This is some of the Kaffe Fassett fabric I bought from
the shop on Vashon that organized everything. That store is a MUST for anyone -- not just quilters and knitters -- who needs an injection of color during our interminable gray fall-winter-springs. The slide show was full of photos of tile work, weathered buildings, gardens and other slices of life from around the world that inform his work. But I thought his best comment was afterward, when someone in the audience asked if he could talk "a little bit" about color. He said he could talk forever about color, but that the best way to learn about it is to get outside and LOOK at things. He pointed out that color cannot be condensed into the color wheel, which is how I've always felt.
Here are orange flowers from the grocery store that I brought home a few weeks ago. Sorta similar feel to the fabric I bought last night.
A grocery store bouquet on my kitchen counter. |
Crazy quilt embroidery that I've been working on. |
This is Seth, age 10, proudly displaying his very first quilt last week at the Gig Harbor Quilters meeting. His grandmother taught him to quilt over the summer, and he finished this colorful quilt in time to give it to his mom for her birthday. And he knits, too!
Have a colorful day!
Your embroidery on that crazy quilt is absolutely WONDERFUL! I do hope you will do a BIG post when it is finished. Keep up the great work.
ReplyDeleteWonderful to read your blog.... miss Victoria like crazy... and the rain.. thank you for sharing! And, Ann is right, your crazy 'embroidery'.. wonderful.. we need to see that 'big time'...
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing! I'm just starting a Kaffe quilt and have loved his work since I saw his first sweaters.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments guys. I love doing this crazy quilt work, but it'll probably never be "done." I've got five blocks going and keep painting more silk ribbon to use and adding more beads ... you know how it goes.
ReplyDeleteSherrie, those pics of the bridge and ferry to Vashon sure brought back memories. Your silk embroidery is quite lovely. I too have a probably will never be finished quilt - about 10 blocks I think of Baltimore Applique. At least we'll always have something to pick up if we run out of other ideas!
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