"Red Cashmere Birthday Scarf"

100% cashmere in three reds
2010

A gallery in town requested a small red cashmere scarf for a client who wished to gift it as a birthday present; I had roughly 48 hours from the time I received the request to delivery. I'm glad I had a cute box to match the piece, and time to shoot one picture.

Happy Birthday!!

"Her Scarf Stopped the Traffic"

Scarves
60/2 mercerized cotton
Original draft
2009

Experimentation with finer cloth lead me to this series. I intended to weave three scarves 96 EPI, but after sampling a few pieces, I noticed I had the wrong reed and was weaving at 160 EPI. But because I liked the hand of the samples, rather than resleying I created and modified different styles of drafts and continued to weave with the close sett.

After washed, the scarves in this series obtain a heavy, wet texture that is lovely and luxurious around the neck.



"Frou Frou"

Scarf
20/2 mercerized cotton & rayon accent yarn
Original draft
2009

My (and my friends') challenge for me to use brighter colors and more hues culminated in this piece for a small exhibition on the Internet, and after months of mixing more and brighter colors, I began to feel less uncomfortable, if not enthusiastic, about colors. And having got this out of my system, I was so ready to go back to more subtle, harmonious color schemes!


”Bye Bye, Blue Eyes", Nelson, New Zealand, 2008

Sometime in late 2007, I was asked by Exhibitions Coordinator Susie Lees if I would like to have an exhibition at Fibre Spectrum, Nelson's textile cooperative. 2007 was an extremely busy year for me, so I agreed if I could have a late 2008 spot, and I was given the November spot.

Shortly before my exhibition, actor Paul Newman passed away, and since he was a favorite of mine since I met him ever-so-briefly in Minneapolis in 1975, I wove a series of blue scarves remembering his famous eyes.




The full story of my magical meeting the Paul Newman can be found here.

"Desire/Euphoria"

Scarves
20/2 mercerized cotton
Original drafts
2008-09

"Desire/Euphoria" refers to a tiny exhibition I had as a feature artist at The Suter Art Gallery shop in August 2008. These scarves are the kind of textiles I've wanted to weave ever since I took up weaving: fine, luminous cloth that looks old. I like this series and it has become something of my signature work, and I hope to continue experimenting and weaving these.


"Craft 08", Nelson, New Zealand, 2008

Nelson furniture maker John Shaw wanted to showcase craft in Nelson and curated this exhibition at Refinery Art Space in January 2008. This was the first exhibition I was asked to participate.


"Re:Fine", Wellington and Nelson, New Zealand, 2007/ 2008

"Re:Fine" was held in conjunction with the World of Wearable Art show in Wellington in September 2007 to showcase Nelson's art and craft. Then the exhibition was slightly altered and reassembled back home in January 2008. It was my first experience in submitting a proposal for work to be considered, though the curators thought my pieces from "Sea, Sand and Sky" would be more suitable.

In Wellington, there was a fancy opening where the nation's ministers were invited at The Academy of Fine Arts. All too intimidating for this novice.

In Nelson, I attended a floor talk by the curator of the exhibition, not knowing we would be asked to say a few words; again a first.

"Wave" behind Katie Gold and Owen Bartlett ceramics, in front of Tracey Smith costume. Beyond, from left to right, Scilla Young multimedia work "The Dance of Red", Catharine Hodson and Janet Bathgate paintings, in Wellington

"Bubble" and "Paua" with Charles Shaw's pots, in Wellington

"Deep" and "Windprint" with Charles Shaw's pots andDavid Haig/Lindy Harward chair

In Nelson, I was able to inspect more closely how "Wave" was propped up to look wavy.

"Culturally Routed", Nelson, New Zealand, 2007

"Culturally Routed" ran at the newly-rebranded Refinery Art Space in Nelson in October/November 2007. The theme of the show was traveling from other cultures and arriving at Nelson, and many of the contributing artists were born elsewhere. Curator Andy Clover visited me at home to see some of my Pacific-themed shawls, and he was less than enthusiastic. Then he saw a tiny scarf hanging and waiting for me to finish, and Andy decided I must weave a banner/ribbon to hang from high ceiling of the gallery. This was my first non-utilitarian piece, and the first time I made a "contemporary art" piece.

"Sea, Sand and Sky", Nelson, New Zealand, 2007

"Sea, Sand and Sky', my very first solo (and tiny) exhibition in the lovely then-Gallery 203 on Trafalgar Street, Nelson, was held from 29 January to 16 February 2007 during three scorchingly hot summer weeks. It was an entirely hand-made exhibition, and a wonderful (and actually very fun for the most part) learning experience, as I gained appreciation for what goes into making an exhibition.



I sold no shawls, but I sold a copy of one of my photographs!



"Wind Print"

"Wave"; blue on one side and green on the other.

"Bubble"

"Gentle"

One piece was not completed until the evening of the day the exhibition opened!

"Deep", a day later

The second room had only two pieces, but two chairs for those who wanted a break after climbing up the steep steps to the gallery. I also set up my small loom and wove small scarves while the exhibition was open.



"Paua"

"Paua" detail

"Rabbit Island"

A Weavers' Afternoon Tea; they are looking at the samples pieces and my notes.

My dear friend Kath Bee held lunchtime mini-concerts every Thursday.

An index to all blog posts leading up to and during this exhibition can be found here.

"Hannah's Blanket"

Blanket/Throw
Mixed wool warp, 100% merino weft
Handweaving.net #3357 woven in double width
2005

This was the last adventure of 2005. Glenda, who knows a thing or two about textiles, asked me to weave a wedding present blanket/throw. I was nervous and excited about the auspiciousness of the occasion.

Glenda and I agreed the overall color would be natural/beige/off-white, but I wanted the piece to be durable, and the weave structure to show up. So I used coercer wool in two beiges in the warp and undyed merino with scales in the weft.

After wet-finished, the weft brought on an almost-felted, moist texture to the piece.


"Paua"

Shawl
100% merino warp, 50% merino/50% merino weft
Original Twill-based draft
2005

As I wove "München Opera House Park" I saw a field of polished paua (abalone) shells before me. Paua is often used in New Zealand in jewelries and as ornamentation on wood and stone carvings. I immediately made up a draft, and this shawl came to life within days.

This piece received the First Time Entrant Award at the Nelson/Marlborough/Buller Area (of the New Zealand Spinning, Weaving and Woolcrafts Society) exhibition in 2006; it was shown at "Sea, Sand and Sky", then at "Re:Fine" in Wellington, and now resides in Scotland.



"München Opera House Park"

Shawl
100% merino warp, 50% merino/50% merino weft
Original Twill-based draft
2005

Shortly after I received my order from Liz, I received a second commission from my friend Keiko. This project was lovely and intimidating at the same time.

Keiko grew up in the textile district of Kyoto, Japan, listening to the sounds of silk weaving day and night, and she studied dressmaking and kimono-making. In addition, the shawl was intended as a Christmas present for a Japanese opera singer, with whom Keiko's husband had worked on several CDs and concerts; someone I've never met. Oh, my!

Luckily, Keiko had sent me one of her CDs, and Googling revealed the said opera singer preferred monotone dresses with interesting weave patterns, and she trained at Hochschule für Musik und Theater München. Nine hours of Googling of München, the school, and the Opera House later, I discovered that either around the Opera House or at a nearby park were fence posts modeled after the top two-thirds of a G-clef. I envisioned her, as a young music student, rushing from her flat to school, running though this park (?) dreaming of singing at the Opera House.

I created several drafts based on this shape, and decided on one which was most stable and still resembling the fence post. I was a very new weaver, or designer, and when the draft was woven, the G-clef was not as obvious as I had hoped. I wove two pieces with the same weft but different picks, and chose the closely-woven piece in which the mohair produced a more beautiful sheen.

It was one great design adventure for a novice weaver, and secretly, I think it is one of the most elegant pieces I've woven.



"Tahunanui Beach" and "Liz's Shawl"

"Tahunanui Beach"
Shawl
100% merino warp, 50% merino/40% possum/10% silk weft
Original Twill-based draft
Glass beads in one selvedge
2005

This was the first piece I submitted to an exhibition, and it was not only accepted, but sold in the last days of the exhibition. I live near a beautiful beach in Nelson named Tahunanui Beach, and I wanted to express the waves coming in and going out, and the sparkles in the sand, both in the warp color changes and the structure (weaving pattern.)



"Liz's Shawl"
100% merino warp, 50% merino/40% possum/10% silk weft
Original Twill-based draft
Glass beads in the fringes
2005

I was so pleased I finally managed to submit a piece to an exhibition, after years of talking about it, that I emailed a few photographs to my friends who had heard about my weaving for years but had never been shown anything. To my utter surprise, I got an order for my first commission piece from my best friend from high school, Liz. I am happy, also, that my first commission piece resides in my beloved city of Minneapolis.

The weaving draft in Liz's piece was an alternate to the exhibition piece above. I liked this draft better, but for reasons I cannot remember, I selected a "safer" draft for the exhibition. I was glad I was given a chance to bring this draft to life beyond sampling.