On the way to the
Big Draw event at Jerwood Space I filled the travel time with something I've rather lost track of -
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| Travel lines |
Lovely materials for people to use -
Richard McVetis provided instruction and inspiration -
When you can't decide where to start, "take the nearest" - so I found myself with perforated card and string. Fortunately there was a needle with a big enough eye, but getting the string through the card wasn't easy.
What looks like random stitching is actually subject to rules about how many holes and what direction next: on the left, variants on 2-2-2-1; on the right, 1-1-1-2 -
An intriguing box of goodies -
from which I took the "pattern winding" (so like the patterns on egyptian mummies!). How could it be done in stitch?
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| front |
After a bit of practice, it found a rhythm.
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| back |
The fabric is a dense wool, the thread a wool mix.
My neighbour took an enviably free-form approach, using some springy linen thread on felt -
When her square was completely stitched, it looked wonderfully map-like.
I couldn't resist using some lovely perle thread and trying the stranded "
mouliné" thread - stiffish, shiny, unravels and (used in 6 strands) knots itself like billy-oh. Also got a snippet of the linen to continue the stitching on the way back home.
But I didn't have a needle with me ... and this the state of the sample at time of writing -
The yellow may have been rayon - hard to stitch into the dense wool, and untwists itself with each stitch. But a glorious colour (especially with grey) and good for couching.
Along the street, this bit of street-stitching has been getting grimier over the years -
Jerwood Space closes at 3 on Saturdays, so I didn't get a chance to see all of the Drawing Prize exhibition again. The pieces nearby looked like they could be, or contain, or be converted to, stitch marks -
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| Closeup of a stitched piece - couldn't find the label with the name of the artist |