Tuesday, 2 January 2024

 18th January 2024 

'My textile practice and love of ecoprinting' -  a presentation by Jane Hunter

 

Mini workshop 13.00 - 15.30  'A little tin of stitched treasures' 

NB will be part 2 in March

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

My textile practice and love of ecoprinting

Jane is from a family  who have always knitted and sewn which led to her following a creative career. At university she studied knitted and woven textiles including dye, stitch, weave etc, this was followed by creating her own knitwear which she sold at agricultural shows. Jane then took a teaching qualification, worked on knitting/felting and since Covid has focused on 'ecoprinting' of fabrics.

Ecoprinting incorporates her love of nature and dyeing, Jane uses all natural ingredients but as a chemical reaction is required in order to dye she uses mordants, Alum, Iron Sulphite, Copper and Aluminium Sulphite ( these help with light and colour fastness).

 

She uses alum and iron the most, liking the iron as it reacts with the tannins in the leaves. The different colours are all obtained from leaves which Jane picks in the summer (when they have most colour), dries them in layers of paper with card on top. Oak leaves have a good tannin content,the tops and undersides give different colours, birch leaves give green whilst onion skins are amber. Ferns, honesty, geranium, ash leaves all give good shapes.



 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 To create silk scarf Jane paints on the mordant, layers the leaves on top,rolls them round a bar/pole and wraps with string, puts into bag and steams in a pan  or folds and presses between blocks,clamps them before  dyeing.












 

Jane uses freezer paper to separate the layers of fabric and once removed the print on the paper can be ironed onto a scarf or used to cover books or make cards.

 

 

 

 

 

Fabrics used are silk, cotton, wool (merino), the wool can also be felted to achieve texture. The protein fibres give the most detail whilst cotton (cellulose) needs different treatment(slaked lime/vinegar) and paper requires the leaves to be in very close contact to obtain a good print.








 7th December 2023 Christmas Celebration, lunch and surprise speaker


Members enjoyed a musical trip around the world with our guest followed by a buffet lunch.

Sunday, 12 November 2023

16th November 2023

My road to ruins and beyond - a presentation by Leah Higgins

 

Mini workshop 1.00 - 3.30 pm

Button cushions part 2 

Saturday, 30 September 2023

 19th October 2023

Who needs words? a presentation by Jane McKeating

 


Mini workshop 1.00 - 3.30 pm 

Button cushion - part 1 this will be the embroidery

part 2 in November will be completion of embroidery, putting together and making tassels

Sunday, 17 September 2023

 21st September 2023

September social, AGM, coffee and cake 

Trisha (chair) welcomed all including visitors and thanked everyone for their continued support. She reviewed the year including the variety of excellent speakers and range of different work they created, the workshops and popularity of the mini workshops following meetings, finance, publicity, stitch together, sales table and raffles.

Thanks and presentations of flowers to:

Glenys who resigned from committee, but still takes entry fee and raffle money at meetings.

Jan (who is moving from the area)  for her work organising tea/coffee rota and supplies.

Lynn has now undertaken this role.

Notices/reminders

Exhibition at Nantwich museum approaches, theme is 'Seasons' although there will be a space for 'non seasons' work. Any type of stitched work hand/machine, any size, mount onto board/ box canvases, it must have mirror plates attached to it in order to fix to the walls in the museum.

NB Please e mail Trisha the rough size of the piece(s) of work you are creatingand also the season it depicts .

 If you are producing 3 D pieces of work we need to know the size as it has to be able to fit into the display cabinets in the museum. 

October/November mini workshops - 'Button Cushions'

Stitch together 1st and 3rd Monday of each month, now at St Annes Community hub - members welcome

Residential and 1.5 day workshops - Waddow hall now closed so would need a new venue if there is sufficient support for a residential type of course. 1.5 day workshops have seen a decline in interest/ perticipation with several having to be cancelled due to lack of numbers.

Any thoughts or suggestions please e mail Trisha

 

Winners of the Chairs Challenge 
(vote was tied)

Lynn Simpson and Judy Fairless

 

 

There was also a selection of work that members had produced at workshops.








 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Many thanks to Sue J for the wonderful selection of cakes that she made for the 'coffee and cake' social which followed the AGM.


 


Monday, 3 July 2023

 20th July 2023

'My travels with sketchbook, camera and needle' by Polly Woolstone was very interesting being illustrated with a selection of her work. 

Polly went to Art college and studied illustration and graphics, as she did not want to be a commercial artist she decided to teach art. Whilst doing this she went on courses including creative textiles and developed this in schools.

 



 

It was only when Polly went on holiday that she had time to do any of her own work when she created many sketch books. In 2002 events led her to return to cycling, this and a book 'A Bike Ride' provoked a visit to Ireland. In order to develop a theatre at her school Polly started fund raising with a sponsored bike ride around Ireland.

 

 

Her next sponsored cycle ride was during a sabatical term when Polly went to Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam ending the journey with 2 weeks in India.Throughout she recorded in a small concertina sketch book.




 

 

 

She fell 'in love' with India and returned several times including taking textile trips to India which resulted in experimentation and creation of her own work.




 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Polly uses sketch books to experiment with ideas /techniques, the temples and monuments in Myanmar, many in state of disrepair led to exploration of surfaces and texture through layering ( Fragments). 

She also makes use of free machine embroidery, an extension of drawing. 




Whispers in the wind - bird panel which is part of a series based on the Irish famine/deaths/emigration/cottages/words from songs/poems.  

 

 

 



Tide over pebbles






Thursday, 1 June 2023

 15th June 2023

 

 'My art practice' by Maria Wigley was an interesting talk illustrated with examples of her work.

Maria likes making art and sees this as her interpretation of the world around her.

 She took a degree in Fashion and Textiles which involved taster sessions in printing, weaving, knitting and embroidery. During this Maria realised that embroidery could be applied to many different areas and importantly could be done on a small scale by hand at any time rather than requiring a lot of equipment and space. Within the embroidery she incorporates fabric manipulation.

Maria likes printing,drawing and writing and uses hand and machine embroidery to stitch words onto the fabric.

 





 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Her work has developed, with some of her inspiration drawn from plant structures, poetry and oriental paintings. Poetry is a creative way of writing, Emily Dickenson wrote on envelopes and scraps of paper, Maria uses this idea in her work creating envelopes and using 'asemic writing' - abstract caligraphy where the words create a picture although the words themselves are not legible and do not mean anything.

Maria uses a combination of painting and stitch (machine and hand embroidery), she uses sketch books to draw - line drawing using pencil/charcoal. Her work uses layers of paper, aqua film, chiffon/silk and various soluble fabrics which can be put in an embroidery hoop to support and then drawn on and stitched onto. Once the drawn and stitch samples are complete Maria assembles them and once happy stitches the layers together.