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Monday, September 20, 2010

Dirty Laundry...Literally

I have returned from my One Striped Sock hiadus! I have many things to tell you about but first I will say this: bike travel is a wonderful thing. Everyone should try it out. I spent the better part of the summer pedaling my way across these United States with two friends and boy was it worth the trouble. Check out our trip blog at http://wearebikingreallyfar.wordpress.com/ and then start planning your bike tour!

So...after seven weeks of living on a bike seat by day and in a tent by night, I returned home with a hyperactive nesting instinct, a burning desire to reorganize and an inexplicable urge to make all my own food from scratch. I baked a nice fresh loaf of bread, whipped up a batch of granola, made some yogurt, deep-cleaned my apartment and started getting rid of extraneous odds and ends. Among them, copious amounts of cardboard boxes, which, like egg cartons, had seemed too full of potential to give up. I also decided that I needed, once and for all, to buy a hamper to corral my dirty clothes which usually remain strewn about the floor in the back room until I gather them up for laundry day. This is not how adults live! After a trip to a few home stores, I discovered that the woven hamper I was looking for was much too expensive. AHA(moment)!: Cardboard, hamper...Hamper, cardboard...a cardboard hamper!

I began cutting my flattened boxes with an exacto and ruler into weavable strips. In order to make them long enough, I enlisted the help of my new favorite material: brown paper tape (many thanks to Zachariah Durr, cardboard builder extraordinaire, for cluing me into the stuff). You wet the adhesive side with a damp sponge and voila! It is a super strong bond that blends right into that lovely cardboard brown. Well, I personally think it's lovely. The half circle you see is the piece I cut out for the bottom so that the hamper would sit right up against the wall.













Next, I glued an even number of strips *important for weaving* to the base in a radial fashion so that they could be bent upright and form the vertical slats of the weave (please forgive the dizzying angle of this photo).










Once all the side strips were in place, I bent them upward, secured a horizontal strip to one of the back slats and began weaving around and around. The first few rows were the most difficult because all the strips were unruly and flopping around willy-nilly, but as the basket took shape the weaving became much easier.










I continued adding strips to the weaving with paper tape until the basket was just about waste-height. I trimmed the extra length of the vertical strips and finished of the top edge of the basket with a layer of paper tape to give it a nice clean look.










Last but not least, I sewed a simple bag out of an old tablecloth to line the hamper. When it's full, I pull the whole bag out, throw it over my shoulder and joyfully make my way down to the laundry room!
















Monday, May 17, 2010

a fiber-filled reintroduction to drawing


These dishtowels do not win the prize for the most belated birthday gift I've ever given, but they certainly make the short list. What was supposed to be a pretty little present for my sister (and kind-spirited spoof on turning thirty), morphed into a series of dishtowel-sized, mixed-media tapestries. This process, which felt very similar to the way I used to approach my works on paper as a printmaker in college, must have satisfied some particular need in me. I love to make puppets and purses, but it felt good to draw again...even if I was drawing with thread.

So, a whopping three and a half months after she blew out the candles, I surprised my sister with dishtowels much too pretty to use.















































































































Each of these "towels" is made with some combination of screen print, embroidery, acrylic paint and appliqued fabric.













































Thursday, May 13, 2010

once upon a time...


...the world was just teeming with charming little objects.











































cozy toes

Never mind all those fancy expensive cycling shoe covers. It's nice to have toasty toes in the rain, but not nice to pay $50. The water-proof material and velcro I used (of which I had plenty left over) cost me less than $15, and I had the elastic laying around. Money savings aside, it was worth the trouble just to have some shoe covers that are pink (!) and purple (!) instead of black. Who says rainy day biking can't be a stylish endeavor?




















The bottoms cinch with elastic but are left open to accommodate the clip on the bottom of the shoe.













I made the pattern by draping fabric around my shoe, marking and cutting. The opening is in the back and there is a channel sewn around the outside edge where the elastic can be shimmied in using the old safety pin trick!








Fits like a...shoe glove.














An extra piece of velcro at the top to adjust the ankle and prevent water from dripping in (and to add an extra splash of pink!).

one man's trash...























(found outside the recycling center on E. 4th)

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

a birthday giraffe

Three seems like a pretty small number - unless of course you are talking about the number of times you've been struck by lightening, or, say, the number of miles an ant could walk...in one hour. or even, I don't know...the number of raisins you could squeeze into an olive without the olive splitting down the side. I know what you're saying - gross, why would you put raisins inside an olive?...and you're right, I've gotten a little off track here, so let me just start fresh.

Three:
Three seems like a pretty small number, but when you turn three for the first, and incidentally, the last time, I'm pretty sure it doesn't feel small at all. This is the first year my niece, Mira, has totally grasped the concept of celebrating a birthday, and celebrate she did! Apple juice, mac & cheese and a grand ol' time was had by babies and grownups alike. I can safely say no person on earth has ever more joyously or less self-consciously awaited a flickering Arthur birthday cake as it approached the table.

It is all the willpower I have not to post an entire album of small, face-painted children frolicking around a wrapping-paper-strewn living room. Instead, I present to you the friendly blue giraffe puppet made just for Mira!




































"Peeko" is his name, courtesy of the birthday girl.














And mama is already a burgeoning puppeteer!

wondering what i did...

...with my avalanche's worth of egg cartons?

a new and flexible lighting fixture!























Okay, okay. I know. I stole the idea from craftzine:
http://blog.craftzine.com/archive/2008/12/how_to_recycled_egg_carton_fai.html

But if you are a compulsive egg carton saver like I am (there must be some kindred spirits out there), then you know that tasteful and attractive egg-carton-recycling projects are few and far between. We must seize upon the awesome ones!

When it's dark out and all the lights are off, this string of "fairy lights" gives a really nice, gentle glow to the room.


don't quit! QUILT!

After threatening for (gulp) a year, I have finally put the edge on the last of three quilts from my thesis project. Nothing quite like the soft, warm, and quilted comfort of closure...

This is a Gee's-Bend-inspired block quilt made from all second hand fabric: clothing, bed sheets, cloth napkins, etc.

(and yes. my next project, if you must know, is to make that giant american flag you see into a quilt.)


















Feels good to replace my too-hot winter comforter with a light, summery, homemade quilt!


















What a sweet little house embroidered by someone at last spring's quilting bee!























...and a few screen-printed bones thrown into the mix - after all, this was my printmaking thesis project, eeek...
























Gee's Bend:
Listen: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=970364
Look: http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.fiberarts.com/img/03-2-r204.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.fiberarts.com/article_archive/reviews/group/quiltsofgeesbend.asp&usg=__Uy4vWrtVNjvkWPB41Fhn0HqVB2o=&h=455&w=360&sz=36&hl=en&start=2&sig2=GTS7kagUOw3-c0P5o247w&um=1&itbs=1&tbnid=dnbGWszx4B6dwM:&tbnh=128&tbnw=101&prev=/images%3Fq%3DGee%2527s%2BBend%2Bquilts%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26safe%3Doff%26client%3Dsafari%26sa%3DN%26rls%3Den%26tbs%3Disch:1&ei=3brpS7PYPMG78gbL_JXgDg

Sunday, April 25, 2010

the perfect food

soft boiled egg: yes
toast with jam: yes























http://www.albinoblacksheep.com/flash/eggsong


...but what to do with the cartons? they just seem too...useful...to throw away.




special totes for special goats...I mean people, special people.

proud llama bag for annemarie (alleged llama lover).






































rubyn's 8-months-late birthday present.




















A little birdie told me...


a baby ostrich puppet for the Blue School!












































(he loves the big city)

Goofball Galaxy

a play written by a nine-year old boy and his mom, (and produced by the story pirates) about intergalactic travel, planetary health, sustainable living, and of course, how babies are born.













(cyclops from the planet "humongo")













(knock-knock joke-cracking blueberry pie)













(biting flower that puts you to sleep!)



















(the enigmatic talking key)



















(giant t-rex from the planet "germy squirmy")

last summer's terrifying beast

"Kalkara" for The Story Pirates Ranger's Apprentice book tour.