Archive | August, 2019

Special Places in Western NC

Don’t you enjoy finding little unique aspects of the places where you travel? If so, you’ll definitely want to visit the REAL, original Mast General Store  the next time you’re in the vicinity of Boone, NC.

Special Places in Western NC. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

Although there are lots of retail shops called “Mast General Store” in the area, they can’t begin to compare to the original. It’s in a low spot called Valle Crucis in the middle of nowhere and it’s a wonderful gem of living history.

Much of the store hasn’t changed in decades. The wooden floors slope severely and everything creeks, but is a strong nostalgia rush!

The pot bellied stove still stands at the ready and a fire is kept going in the winter. It’s just around the corner from the checkers table.

Special Places in Western NC. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog
As the only store in the vicinity the original store sold a little bit of everything, from food to hardware. The nail bins are shown above and the revolving drawers shown below hold all manner of hardware in pie-shaped drawers.

Special Places in Western NC. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

The food sold today still includes many southern offerings from days gone by. There are local soft drinks, moon pies, and “penny” candies.

Special Places in Western NC. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

Perhaps one of the most amazing things about the store is that it still functions as the local post office. Can you imagine getting your mail here? I think it’s VERY unique and interesting.

Special Places in Western NC. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

South of Boone is the lovely little village of Blowing Rock. It has a park in the center of everything where free music can often be heard during the summer. Plus, there are an abundance of shops, restaurants, and inns. And it’s all FILLED with beautiful flowers and landscaping.

There’s also something fairly new to Blowing Rock, a prayer tree. 

Special Places in Western NC. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

A local shop set up a table with supplies and encouraged passersby to write prayers and to tie them to a tree right on the main sidewalk. Soon, white pieces of paper were fluttering in the breeze, in abundance. More recently, the prayer slips have been enclosed in clear plastic envelopes, which gives them an out-of-focus appearance.

It wasn’t long before the first tree was covered with white tags, so people started putting them all over the adjacent plants and such.

Special Places in Western NC. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

Now there are over 13,000 messages on the tree and beyond!

Recently the store that initiated all of this had a major fire which destroyed the interior completely. Fortunately “not one prayer was lost,” as posted on a sign in the first tree picture. It’s definitely a source of local pride and interest.

If you time it right, you might even get to enjoy the weekly farmers market, which is known for it’s beautiful flowers.

Special Places in Western NC. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

I hope you get to discover wonderful places on your travels and at home.

Ellen Lindner

3

Working with Magazine Pages

Inspired by the work of Derek Gores, I decided to make a glued collage with magazine pages. I’ve done this before on a small scale. This time I moved up to a whopping 16 x 20.

This was my inspiration photo. It’s a combination of 3 photos which I manipulated and merged on my computer. Can you guess why I chose blue-green as the background (fabric) color? (Think near-complementary colors.)

Working with Magazine Pages. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

I drew my design directly onto a wrapped canvas and got to work.

Working with Magazine Pages. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

I was working with friends and we used undiluted matte medium just the way you would with decoupage. You remember that from the seventies right? Glue underneath and more glue on top.

As you might imagine, the largish pieces and the lack of accuracy needed made the background go pretty quickly.

Working with Magazine Pages. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

But, hmm, I had a problem. The shadows seemed to almost disappear. Clearly, I’d need to make them darker. More paper and more glue!

Working with Magazine Pages. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

That’s better.

I began working on the cherries in earnest and, as you can imagine, I soon had little bits of colored paper going in all directions. Finding papers was pretty fun, though.

Working with Magazine Pages. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

The right cherry completed.

Working with Magazine Pages. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

LOTS more tiny bits of paper as I worked on the other two.

Working with Magazine Pages. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

I was getting there, but I was also getting rather tired of dealing with little fiddly pieces of paper. I decided that perfection was not needed and started to work more loosely. What a relief! (I should have done this from the get-go.)

Soon, I’ll show you the finished collage and also give you a rundown of the pros and cons, as I see them, of fabric collage versus paper collage.

Ellen Lindner
P.S. See some of my earlier magazine page collages: ONE, 

6

That Niggling Doubt

Have you ever finished a quilt and then began to have doubts about it? That happened to me with this quilt.

That Niggling Doubt. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

I was happy with it and began to quilt it. But, you know, quilting is a slow thing and it gives you time to think. I slowly began to suspect that the quilt just didn’t have quite enough energy.

Hmm, how could I add some pizazz? What if I rearranged it (i.e. cut it) somehow?

First, I auditioned the idea by folding the actual quilt. Two vertical folds are shown here.  See how the lines now have a zigzag to them? And, of course, the proportions have changed.

That Niggling Doubt. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

And two more folds.

That Niggling Doubt. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

Energy yes. Greatness no. So, I worked on the computer rearranging things. First, 2 bottom cuts.

That Niggling Doubt. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

Then , a few more.

That Niggling Doubt. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

Next, I cut out some paper versions and cut them up.

That Niggling Doubt. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

Well, that was certainly energetic. I kinda liked it – even with the jagged edges. But, I kept experimenting.

That Niggling Doubt. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

I may have gone too far on the one above. But then I tried something very simple, just cutting the quilt into 3 vertical pieces. Then, I just swapped the two side pieces.

That Niggling Doubt. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

I liked it! But, what if I put black lines in the gaps? I auditioned it on the computer and got this.

That Niggling Doubt. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

Yes! I loved it! So, I finally had a plan.

I’m excited to move forward with this piece!

Ellen Lindner
P.S. I have a little bit of a reputation for cutting things up.

2

Designing by Trial and Error

After recently starting a new abstract quilt, I entered the exciting and frustrating world of trial and error.

I deviated from my drawn design right away, due to the size of my favorite fabrics.

An "Intersection" Abstract. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

And it just kept on from there. These photos represent maybe a third of the things I tried.

Designing by Trial and Error

Designing by Trial and Error

Designing by Trial and Error. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

As always, I learned a lot of things that didn’t work. And that’s valuable, too.

Designing by Trial and Error. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

An "Intersection" Abstract. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

An "Intersection" Abstract. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

The photo above shows my final  decision about fabric placement. At this point they were all just folded and pinned in place. Next, I cut and placed them, and glued them to one another. Progress!

Ellen Lindner

0

A Nice Award

It’s always nice to win an award and my quilt, Vine Ripened, has recently done so.

Vine Ripened, an art quilt by Ellen Lindner. AdventureQuilter.com

Vine Ripened

It won 3rd place in a show called “National Juried Fiber Arts.” The exhibit was held at the Bower Center for the Arts, in Bedford, VA.

My piece won 3rd place. You can see my ribbon and award certificate below.

This exhibit runs through August 17th, so you’ve still got a little time to see it.

I really like entering my quilts into exhibits which include objects other than quilts. I also like to send them to places where I’d like to teach, in hopes of attracting a little attention. (My folks live in VA, so I’d like to add it to my teaching resume.)

Ellen Lindner

1

Another “Intersection” Abstract

After success creating Segue into Summer, I decided to use it as a loose template for some additional quilts made with hand dyed fabrics.

I’m calling this my “Intersection” series. I plan to use tilted straight lines as the “skeleton” for each one.

First, I pulled out the large scaled hand dyes I wanted to use, plus pretty much everything hand dyed that matched them. What a collection!

An "Intersection" Abstract. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

Clearly, some editing was called for, so I pared it down somewhat.

An "Intersection" Abstract. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

And, since I’ve been “learning to like vinegar” (colors, that is,) I added in a few “ugly” colors. I knew they’d add quite a bit of pop, but would need to be used carefully. Can you see them?

An "Intersection" Abstract. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

These are the two fabrics I expected to be the stars of this piece. I dyed and painted them to go together. I  knew I’d need to add additional colors, as well as lights and darks.

An "Intersection" Abstract. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

I started in my usual fashion: creating a muslin base for my composition. I drew on the perimeter lines, as well as the proposed skeletal lines for the design. I’ve make them darker here, so you can see.

An "Intersection" Abstract. Ellen Lindner, AdventureQuilter.com/blog

As you can see, I got my two star fabrics in there right away, using them in the largest sections where they would fit.

Right away, I had to redesign the size of the top right piece, to accommodate the fabric size. The line shows the size I intended that shape to be, but the fabric wasn’t large enough, so that design line got moved higher. That would be change #1 of about 100!

I was off and running. I’ll show you LOTS of trial and error in the next post.

Ellen Lindner

 

 

0