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Friday, May 4, 2012

Friday Feature: Ellen Pukalo @ elle in da coop


Ellen Pukalo: Creating in the Coop
I’m waving an exuberant hello from the geographical centre of North America! I’ve lived all my life here in Manitoba, specifically in Winnipeg. Visits to my Grandfather’s farm made me think a farmer was a good helpmeet. I got my wish. Michael and I married soon after leaving school and we have been married about 44 years and have 5 children.

We finally settled in Beausejour, which means a good place to stay. We are on the edge of the prairies. There are poplar bushes and the forest and smaller lakes are only an hour to the east. We’ve been here about 40 years. My only claim to fame is that I am a ‘kept’ woman as I have stayed home as a full time homemaker. This is the view from my sewing room window.

Now before you have visions of a cook for threshing crews, a bookkeeper surrounded by shoeboxes of bills, or gardener extraordinaire with a fully stocked pantry and managing to drive the grain truck alongside a moving combine let me pop that bubble.

I am very spoiled. I am totally impractical, excitable, and I’m always dreaming up terrific projects and ideas. I’m a starter and my hubby is a list making finisher. My only non-negotiable job is I must cut the grass, since I had serious farm equipment tear up a good portion of it when I was in landscape luv mode. (That was before I discovered mixed media art.) I have now sufficiently leveled any rocks higher than the cutting blade so I have been upgraded to quasi-qualified driver of a riding lawn mower. As I rotate round and round I plan endless projects for my long-suffering hubby. This happens slowly because fast causes blue smoke emissions from my farmer.

My primary job is to see that he never gets bored. Sometimes I think he would like to try being bored but that isn’t happening any time soon!

I have reached the great age where understanding begins to reveal itself and the creative part of me has tried expressing itself in my home and then in the yard. It certainly wasn’t in my cooking. I think Kraft dinner is wonderful, which is why my hubby began to thumb through recipe books. But table settings, cozy-seating arrangements, long weekend makeovers with paint and wallpaper, ah! The kids never knew where or with whom they’d be sleeping and my dearie’s shins are no longer smooth and flawless. It was only a matter of time before I discovered I could actually make bed quilts, pillows, table runners, and wall hangings. Aaahhhaaa!

I began traditionally. This would have been about 1985.

If I’d stuck with my first instincts I’d never have gotten on the petal strewn path of florals. Solids were my first luv. I’m coming back. This was a class our little quilt group, Country Road Quilters took. We were limited to shop fabrics and traditional methods. I really did try hand quilting. I perfected the stab stitch but this was never going to get finished so I bought a book on machine quilting and got ‘er done! I also sold my big Q snap frame shortly thereafter. I luv machine quilting.

I learned I’m not very traditional and I began to resist borders. I also like square. This was towards the end of my country themed decorating period. I still like this quilt; no florals. I was also moving away from safe and coordinated colour formulas. Colour is probably my favourite aspect of art.

A wedding quilt provided me with the opportunity to move more towards more modern quilts. I loved the endless options for design.

I discovered the World Wide Web in the late nineties and blogging in the summer of 2009. I can’t say enough good things about the Internet connections I’ve made. I am a changed woman. I blog because I like to write and I never thought of it as more than a kind of diary. Who knew anybody would actually want to read my ramblings. But it has served a much bigger purpose. It helped me identify who I am, what I want to do, gave me resources for learning and making, and made me actually try and finish projects. I like to share my process. I see it as paying forward all the things that I myself have learned from generous bloggers.

I joined a group from 3 Creative Studios who were challenged to make something that showed the word ‘puzzle’. This was due early 2010. I had rusted some fabric and I ‘saw’ in the fabric my vision of puzzle. I gnashed my teeth a lot, blogged a bit about it, and then met my commitment. It was all me; no copy, no adapting someone else’s idea. Dare I say original? I was very happy with it as it showed me that I was moving ahead in my art.

I was so thrilled that I just took off running, empowered to tackle a dozen different ideas.

I spread my worktable with every conceivable piece of eye candy that appealed. I became a Jane of all trades but master of none. I luv books; I want to read, make, alter and journal in them. I want to splash colour all around and dye my own fabric. I want to layer images on paper and fabric. I want to use my sewing machine, my Nina, to explore all her functions and abilities. I want to dip my hands in beads, to embellish and to make jewelry. I want to take better photos and learn digital techniques. But most of all, I want to express myself creatively and well, in my home, my hobbies, my clothing, and my relationships.

As the chicks left home I had moved from tabletop to bedroom. When I realized I sewed more than we slept I shoehorned the Rooster and I into a smaller bedroom and spread my sewing stuff in the larger space. As long as I didn’t mess with the kitchen the Rooster didn’t care. ;^) At first I made it all pretty with funky birds and teacups. I felt the word 'studio' was a bit presumptuous so I called it my playroom, The Coop and Saucer Playroom, in fact. But I learned that too much visual stimulation is not the best for me so I simplified my décor and things worked great until I began dyeing, painting, gluing, stamping. I am so messy.

We are simplifying on the farm as well. So the front half of the big barn is available. After a knock down drag’em out kind of coffee break we came to an amicable solution. The Rooster gets the smaller SE corner for a summer kitchen and I get the larger NE corner for a workroom. That’s fair; he gets the whole darn top and the back half after all! I already have a name- The Wonderland workroom. This will be for all the big, wet, and messy projects. I’m already signed up for Wednesday afternoon workshops. How is that for an incentive to finish!

I have no problem with the word 'creative', as I believe we are creative beings, just like our Creator. But the word artist implies mastery of one’s chosen craft. There I have a lack. Now it also says it is one who practices their craft and I’m doing that for sure.

But I am now a wiser woman. I’m learning. My appetites are far bigger than I can actually bite into. I’m learning the wisdom of a healthy artistic diet. Bloggers often pick a word for the year. I’ve learned to Focus and not continue my scattered pecking all over the place. I’m learning to find my style, my best ways of working; my most favourite things to fiddle with and then to fine tune them, and gain the mastery of them. Then I want to Finish what I start. I’m a Triple F kind of gal. Focus Fiddle Finish is my mantra.

This year I’ve learned that it is in the samples, the experiments, the trials, even the mistakes, and the sheer body of work that the budding artist finally has the aha! Moment, when the process and the idea comes together. The creative click, so to speak. I’ve found this to be true with the journal pages. I now understand loosing track of time to make one more page! The joy of creative expression! I’ve stayed in the process of making kid’s key chains, building skills and progressing up to making some adult jewelry. Now I’m anticipating that kind of consistent growth as I push the boundaries of my fibre art.

I want to learn how to be an artist, proficient in my chosen crafts. I want to encourage and share what I learn with others. I have done some teaching in a quilt store, for quilt groups and retreats. I enjoy that. I have also worked one on one with young girls who have no background in sewing or other crafts. I would like to continue that and I see the bigger workroom becoming an integral part of that. My biggest goal is to continue to get up each morning, anticipating a blank white piece of fabric, page or canvas, and making a mark that positively affects my family, my friends and myself. And when anyone steps through my door I’m anticipating friendship. I want to share the wonder of it all!

Please drop in. You can find me over at elle in da coop.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

WIP Wednesday #37 @ TN&TN

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

WIP Wednesday #36 @ TN&TN

Monday, April 23, 2012

Call for Entries Update!

Thank you to Jackie - more information has been posted.  Click on the link "Call for Entries - Canada" above, or click HERE.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Feature Friday: Margaret Blank, Fibre Artist: One-of-a-kind textile art

(if you can't see the text of this post, click to view it from the website as our font is white/light grey)

My name is Margaret Blank, and I live in the Hamlet of Mirror, Alberta, located about 40 minutes NE of Red Deer and equidistant between the City of Lacombe and the Town of Stettler. Though I was born in the small town of Huntingdon, Quebec, I moved to Calgary in the fall of 1976, with my husband of one year, Howard, who was from Vancouver. We lived in the NW of that city for all of our married life, and it was a wonderful place to raise our two children. However, Type 1 Diabetes took Howard’s life in August 2006, and soon I was homesick for the countryside in which I’d grown up. With a daughter in Edmonton and a son in Lethbridge, I knew I couldn’t move ‘back East’. What a delight to find the rolling hills and proximity to Buffalo Lake that I have in Mirror, where every street ends in trees.


I learned to knit about age 8; cross-stitch, embroidery and garment sewing soon followed. It was only in my forties that two girlfriends persuaded me to try quilting. They figured that slicing strips would be a good way to battle the stresses in my life, and they were right! That was about 1996. A few years later, when I saw my first exhibit of art quilts, I was gobsmacked. I just knew I had to try it! I have been studying textiles as an art medium since 2000 or so; my first instructor was Saskatchewan’s Anna Hergert (http://annahergert.wordpress.com/), who was living in Calgary at the time. Currently I am working on Module 6 of eight in the City and Guilds of London Level 2 Certificate program, Creative Techniques: Quilting. I am so blessed to have another amazing teacher: Linda Kemshall of Design Matters (http://www.lindakemshall.com/).


In April 2011 I had my first quasi-solo exhibit: a booth of my artwork juried into the Annual Lacombe Art Show and Sale. As a result of the show, I sold a couple of my larger pieces, and one of my art cards (framed). This year, because of my studies, I’ve decided to enter only three framed pieces into the “Gallery” portion of the show. It runs this weekend (April 20-22) at the Lacombe Memorial Centre, if you’re in the area! I’m delighted to have had my work juried in for a second year, and to have my daughter’s photographs, on stretched canvas, in the Gallery this year as well.


I’ve been a member of SAQA (Studio Art Quilt Associates) for several years now, and have been part of its Visioning Project for almost three years. This has enabled me to focus on what I want to do with my artwork, and has given me confidence to enter competitions and shows. Currently I have a piece with the SAQA Trunk Show, “This is a Quilt!” that is touring Canada and will be part of an exhibit in Taiwan later this spring through December. I also have a piece in the Focus on Fibre Arts Biennial Juried Show, opening in Edmonton on May 3, and one in the SAQA Western Canada Regional Trunk Show, opening at the Central Alberta Quilt Guild Show in Red Deer in June.


I turn 60 in September. Given my long years of work and parenting, caring for my aging mother and my ailing husband, being responsible and ‘in charge’ all the time, I’ve chosen to pace myself and not get caught up in the drive for artistic success. My goals right now include finishing my City and Guilds Level 2 certificate, preparing for a full booth exhibit in Lacombe next spring, and enjoying the process of creativity. My biggest dream for myself would be to live long enough to use up my three stashes: fabric, fibre and floss!


I’ve been blogging since February 2003 – believe it or not! – and you can find me on the Web at www.margaretblank.com : Margaret Blank, Textile Artist. Please check the tab, “3F Creations” for more examples of my work. You can also find me on Facebook as https://www.facebook.com/MarginMirror -- and I have a “3F” page there too.


It’s been an honour to be a featured blogger on The Needle & Thread Network, and I look forward to “seeing” you in cyberspace!

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

WIP Wednesday #35 @ TN&TN

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

WIP Wednesday #34 & a NEW announcement! : )