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Saturday, March 17, 2012

Friday Feature: Kit Lang @ Kit Lang Fiber Art

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Dear Subscribers,
I'm very sorry to be a day late (and maybe a dollar short, ha ha) posting the Friday Feature but here it is, Kit Lang's story...
Hi Needlers!
I’m Kit Lang of the rather predictably named Kit Lang Fiber Art, living in a mercurical and funky neighbourhood in Toronto, Ontario, called Leslieville.
I started out calling myself a quilter, and then became an art quilter, and then became a fiber artist and now, as I combine fiber and quilting with paint and charcoal and encaustic and resin… I don’t know – but it always starts with textile. Which I totally blame on my mother!
I am about to turn 50 and grew up with a mother who was nearly 50 when I arrived, so she was Old School (note the capital letters.) She stayed at home and cooked and baked and sewed. She sewed clothes for all of us kids and herself, and made curtains and cushions and slipcovers and pet beds and tote bags and satin purses and felt hats and rag rugs and placemats; (pause for breath) and she cross-stitched and knitted and crocheted and tatted and embroidered and I knew she’d crossed to the dark side when I was 11 and she became a diploma-ed pattern maker.
And so I grew up with her bits of fabric all around me and was always encouraged to sew all kinds of things – she even taught me some basic pattern making so I could make clothes for my dolls. So I’ve been sewing one thing or another my whole life. But strangely, she didn’t quilt; so I didn’t either.
But my Oma and my Tantes quilted, so quilts were all around me. And because of that, from an early age, I got into the habit of saving my bits of fabric in like coloured bags, and then boxes, and then bins, and then boxes of bins! And by the time I was 46 I had a wall full of bits of fabric in boxes labelled “green”, “pink”, “soft green”, etc. and my Beloved Spouse (“BSP”) said “What are you saving those for?” and I said “I’m going to make a quilt” and BSP said “Well, make one already!” So I did.
And I fell into the rabbit hole.
I didn’t have a pattern or a rotary cutter or any idea of the importance of a ¼ inch seam, and since the quilts I grew up with were tied, I didn’t know that your feed dogs needed to be down when you free motion quilted: so that first quilt was a mess! But I thought it was the most beautiful thing in the world and I knew I had to make more.
So I bought every quilting magazine I could find, and went on the internet and googled “quilts” and found out that there were approximately eleventy billion quilting blogs out there – so I promptly started making and blogging. I don’t know how BSP and my children survived that first year, because in that first year I made 36 quilts. Fifteen of them queen sized. And I was NOT a stay-at-home mom.
But I was consumed with the quilts that I saw in my head and wanted to be GOOD enough to make them; and I knew the only way I could do that was by making them.
In 2009, I accidentally made an art quilt. I say accidentally, because I dreamed that I made one, and the next morning, I got up and followed the instructions from my dream self – and by 12 hours later, I had myself an art quilt.
I was a reluctant art quilter though – I thought art quilters were a rareified breed of elite quilters who were in a kind of semi-secret society that clearly, I had no part in; and I thought they were kind of snobby and I didn’t think I liked them. LOL!
So I went back to my quilting and concentrated on that, but I would occasionally think about other art quilts I’d like to make and finally, in 2010 I did. And then I went though a whole thing where I was trying to “choose” between art quilts and bed quilts and finally figured out that I didn’t have to; and then I went through another thing where I realized that when I finally learned how to make the art quilts I saw in my head, that they wouldn’t strictly be art “quilts” anymore so if I wasn’t an art quilter, what was I? So I started calling myself a textile artist – and here we are at the beginning of this introduction again! Now I don’t really call myself anything – I just make quilts and art and other stuff – and whatever the stuff I make is, there’s always a needle in there somewhere.
In the past year, my biggest accomplishments were things that might seem small to other people. My only goal for 2011 was to learn the skills I needed, to make the art I wanted to make - and I did! Honing the ones I have and learning more will always be part of what propels me forward in my art, but that was truly my biggest accomplishment of 2011. An indication of that growth was that in 2011, I was asked to be a contributing member of a surface design blog that I had been following called And Then We Set It On Fire; and I was also asked to exhibit a quilt I’d made in 2011 at a quilt show in Europe this year.
I’m supposed to finish up by telling you what my biggest dream for myself is, but it’s one I hold gently to my heart, so I’ll share with you my second biggest dream – I want one of my works – whether a quilt or an art piece – to be juried into the International Quilt Festival in 2013. Stay tuned!
And thanks for having me. If you’d like to see more of my work, please come by my blog, Kit Lang Fiber Art.

Kit

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

WIP Wednesday #30 @ TN&TN



Tuesday, March 6, 2012

WIP Wednesday #29 @ TN&TN



Thursday, March 1, 2012

Friday Feature: Michèle-Renée @ Quilt Matters

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Hi everyone, I’m M-R and I live in Ottawa, Ontario. M-R stands for Michèle-Renée, but people find that a little long so it got shortened to M-R, which I love.

I made my first quilt while I was in university. I had a tiny room at the time, but I wanted a double bed and needed storage space for my clothes and ringette equipment (yes, it wasn't the prettiest smelling room). I couldn’t find a double captain’s bed anywhere, and I was stubborn so I designed and made one IKEA-style. That bed was a tank and served me well for four years. I imagine it's still floating around some campus today.
Well anyways, after I made the bed, I thought it would be fun and fitting to make what went on the bed too. So I went to the library, found a book on quilts to make in a weekend (ha ha), bought some fabric that was on sale (polycotton!), and started an absolutely awful and incorrect Irish Chain quilt . I loved it anyway and it adorned my bed for a number of years. I didn't realize until a few years ago that it actually isn't even close to being an Irish Chain. I have no idea what happened. I thought I followed the pattern correctly, but clearly not. Oh well...we'll just consider it to be my first original design. ;)
I really got bitten by the quilting bug though when I got engaged to my high school sweetheart Charles (a.k.a. Chuck or the Hubster) a few years later and thought a quilt would be a perfect wedding gift. I had a ball designing the quilt and buying the fabrics. It was a sampler quilt of blocks that had personal significance to each of us. Unfortunately, I did not have the skills to make what I envisioned in my head, nor did I have other quilters or the Internet to turn to for help. That became UFO #1 and remains to this date my oldest UFO. That didn’t stop me though and I've been quilting ever since, slowly improving my skills.
A year ago, I pledged to do something quilt-related everyday, even if it’s just for 20 minutes. I started my blog Quilt Matters last May and have been having a blast ever since. I love meeting other quilters online and trying new-to-me quilting styles and techniques. Lately, I’ve been playing with modern quilting in my Modern Block Monday posts, thread painting, reverse appliqué and collage quilts.
In January, I set out a number of goals for 2012. One of which was a Colour My World Challenge, whereby we do a mini quilt/block each month using a different colour. I’m learning so much through this experience and love seeing what the others who are participating are doing. We started sharing February’s challenge finishes yesterday. If this is something that interests you, you are more than welcome to join in!
I’m also one of the co-founders of TGIFF! (Thank Goodness It’s Finished, Friday!), which Laura from Quokka Quilts and I started as a way to motivate us to finish those UFOs and to celebrate our finishes. It’s a touring linky party every Friday and it’s a great way to end the week! If you’d like to learn more about it or sign up to host an upcoming party, check out the TGIFF! Site. I’m hosting next Friday so come on by and link up a recent finish of your own.
On the personal side, I’m currently on leave from my job with the federal government so I can stay home for a few years with my three rambunctious boys: Patrick who is 7 years old, Daniel who is almost 5 years old, and Micah who is 2.5 years old. They are wonderful and spirited little boys who are learning to quilt (among other things).
I made them Wee Spy quilts when they were born and a few other baby quilts. Last summer, I made Bottled Rainbow quilts with Patrick and Daniel for their beds. It was an amazing experience that they seemed to enjoy as much as I did – could we have some future quilters here?
And because I clearly can’t get enough of boys, I’m a Beaver leader to 17 other rambunctious boys and 2 girls. I’m now plotting how I can get them all quilting too. ;) I also play ringette, ski and am currently working on my 10,000 hours of quilting experience to become a quilting expert per Malcolm Gladwell’s theory in Outliers. Even though, I’ve been quilting regularly for the last 14 years, I’ve still got a long way to go…
Thanks Monika and Rita for inviting me to share with you a bit of who I am and what I do. Hope to see you on the quilt side!
Cheers,
M-R

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

WIP Wednesday #28 @ TN&TN



Thursday, February 23, 2012

Friday Feature: Holly @ Through My Window

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Hi, I'm Holly McLean and I have lived, for the last 24 years in the small city of Bathurst, on the north shore of New Brunswick, Canada. It is a beautiful little city of about 12000 people.



We enjoy the four seasons with lots of snow and winter activities and warm beaches in the summer. We also have some beautiful rivers where we kayak.

I've been crafting and drawing since I was young, and have always loved the outdoors, spending time making mud pies, building towns in the sand pile, and making tents in the long reeds on the marshes. I have had a long time fascination with nature, always coming home with my pockets full of bits and sometimes even critters much to my mother's chagrin.

I took up knitting and crocheting among other things such as papier mache and painting in my teens. I love hand made things. I wanted at one time to go to art college but university was actually cheaper, so I became a teacher, taking art classes of all kinds on the side. Eventually, I taught some art to both children and adults.

I made my first quilt at the age of twenty.

While working and raising 3 children I always had one form of art and craft on the go. In my thirties I began doing watercolors, but I sometimes got too uptight about making the perfect picture. I was also still quilting at the time, eventually getting involved in a guild here in town. I have always loved textures and fiber and so, it was a natural transition for me to become an art quilter. Now I am happy with most of my pieces and I thoroughly enjoy the process. I have only had the confidence recently to call myself an artist!

I started blogging because I was a rare bird among my traditional quilting friends (I still do make some quilts) and I needed some some connections to inspire me. Since I left work due to illness 2 years ago, the blog has been a wonderful place to make new artist friends and to be inspired. It even gives me some impetus to keep creating every day.

My works are often quite colorful and often involve a depiction of something from nature--my favorite things are flowers, birds, the woods and the ocean.

I was recently very surprised and pleased to be asked to write an article for Quilting Arts magazine. This was not at all one of my goals but it has inspired and encouraged me to continue creating. I even just opened an Etsy shop which was a big step for me.

I'd love it if you would visit me at my blog.


Moderator comment: Make sure when you go to Holly's blog, you click on the image labelled "My Art and Quilts" on the right. It will take you to her Picassa album. There are lovely images there showing her work! So impressive!!


Tuesday, February 21, 2012

WIP Wednesday #27 @ TN&TN