Tag: sewing

  • Sing Along

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    IP - Sing Along 5

    Last year during lockdown I compiled a collection of songs that I learnt to sing at Firekeepers' events in and around Melbourne. Some of the songs were even learnt in online sessions when I hosted song circles with my ten year old daughter. I had a lot of fun tracking down the origins of the songs, finding their creators and the original lyrics. I also included links to audio recording where I could so anyone who reads the  songbook can learn any of the songs that appeal to them. I can't read music so being able to hear a song is the way I learn it.

    I printed out a copy of the songbook and bound it using some brown coloured cardboard I bought. That songbook was left with a good friend when I went to visit her so I needed to make a new copy. And being me, I decided to make a few (five actually) while I was at it. I love making more than one of something. I wanted to use some gorgeous paper for the covers and I had the brainwave of eco-dying the paper. I really don't know why I hadn't thought of it earlier. 

    So all that happened last year and the books have been sitting on my desk ever since. I did bind one back in February to give to a friend's daughter for her birthday but the rest have been waiting for me to get around to them. This being the impromptu weekend of craft, I finally made them into books.

    I can't wait to take one away with me next week when we go camping again with the Firekeepers' community. It's been 15 month since the last camp and we're all hanging out to be back in the bush, running wild.

     

  • Strung Together

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    It's a tradition in this house for my girls to make presents for their relatives. They've been making cards and Christmas presents for grandparents and aunts and uncles since they were tiny. I guess it isn't surprising given how much handmade craft happens around them although I have to say with poetry consuming so much of my time and attention lately, there's been a lot less time for craft. Although I do manage to sneak in a bit here and there.

    We've been through a big phase of fabric gifts embellished with artwork – bookmarks, calico shopping bags, tea towels, aprons and t-shirts. This year my oldest girl who is becoming quite an accomplished artist is doing paintings for everyone. She works in watercolours and acrylics, drawing all sorts of things – landscapes, people and still lives.

    My youngest girl had the brilliant idea of making hand bound books for everyone. Of course she wanted to make the fanciest (ie most time consuming) type. So we've been madly cutting, folding, burnishing, sewing, gluing and pressing for the last few days. I know Christmas is still a while off but I wanted to get them made nice and early. And luckily I did because when I took them into the post office yesterday to send on their merry way, the lady said it was pretty much the last day to send a package by ordinary post to get to Canberra in time.

    It's quite a process and when you're making ten books in one go it can become quite tedious. My girl was starting to flag so I did a fair bit of the heavy lifting so to speak but she did take part in every step. We had some chats about why we were making things because halfway through she was wanting to quit and just go out and buy presents instead.

    I've always maintained that her family spend so much time and money doing nice things for her that it's only right she should spend some of her time making things for them. Of course there's the added bonus of being able to give the people you love something beautiful you have made with your own two hands – in my opinion no store bought thing will ever have all the love you put into handmade gifts.

    And really, who doesn't love handmade gifts? The wonkier the better of course!

     

  • Little Felt Friends

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    IP - Felt Friends 1

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    IP - Felt Friends 4

    Here's some more felt friends finger puppets inspired by the book, Mrs Echidna's Dilemma, by Betty Johnston. I've had so much fun sewing these little creatures.

    When my first daughter was two we were living in Sydney and joined a wonderful playgroup where the mamas and papas did craft while their children played and listened to stories. She's now 14 years old and I haven't done any hand sewing for years.

    I'm really enjoying getting back into the groove of blanket stitch and sewing with wool felt. I love how it feels under my fingertips and the way the puppets come to life as I am making them. I'm even overcoming my aversion to sewing on eyes – lots of my girls' felt toys don't have eyes on them because they're fiddly and impossible to get exactly the same as each other. 

    I'm letting go of that perfectionist streak and embracing the slightly wonky eyes and the charm of handmade.

    The blue tongue lizard is my current favourite. What's yours?

     

  • Still: Books

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    This book contains the poem, Still: Books, that inspired my process zine, Some Thoughts About Writing A Poem For A Journal. The zine details my creative process for writing this particular poem. There's an art to writing a poem for publication. It's an art I am struggling to learn. But I keep on trying and keep piling up the rejection letters. In the meantime, I'm making books and making art with my 'failures'.

    I always felt Some Thoughts About Writing A Poem For A Journal was the first volume of a two volume set of books. Volume 2 of course, would contain the poem referred to in Some Thoughts About Writing A Poem For A Journal.

    After making notebooks with eco-dyed paper covers I was itching to make one containing my poetry. And here it is. If you're interested in buying one, you'll find copies of Still: Books and Some Thoughts About Writing A Poem For A Journal in my shop.

     

  • Noted

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    After the success of my first notebook with an eco-dyed cover I just had to make some more. Being me, I got rather carried away and used a whole pad of A3 watercolour paper to make eight A6 sized notebooks.

    I feel like I'll be making more of these in future and can't believe it took me so long to get around to eco-dyeing paper and turning it into books!

     

  • A Sketchfolio

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    This is the first book I made from Tangle Journey: Exploring the Far Reaches if Tangle Drawing, From Simple Strokes to Colour and Mixed Media by Beckah Krahula. She calls it a sketch folio. It has nifty little pockets in which you can store paper as well as a notebook sewn into the main compartment at the back. It's such an ingenious design.

    Unfortunately I didn't have any Lotka paper and the biggest size I had was A3 watercolour so my sketch folios are super small. But they're also super cute. I had so much fun making them that I ended up making three! One each for myself and my two girls. 

    A Sketchfolio 5

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    After making them I went to sleep dreaming up variations and wondering if I could make one big enough to hold the 9x9cm zen tangle drawings I wanted to create. The answer was yes! The width of one A3 sheet of paper was enough to make a sketch folio with two pockets at the front and two on the inside.

    I can't wait to fill these little folios with drawings.

     

  • Leather Journal

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    When I make things, they need to have a purpose. I might want a leather pouch to store an almanack for example. Or else I get consumed with the desire to possess something beautiful and feel compelled to make it myself.

    The latter was the case with this beautiful hand bound journal. My friend Kate came over to visit recently and she was sewing a journal to use at Uni. I fell in love immediately. The veg tanned cow hide was beautiful as was the stitch on the spine binding the pages to the cover. I was filled with must make!

    Luckily for me Kate was happy to barter some leather for an avocado button I had made. You can turn avocado pips into pendants, buttons and earrings with a small knife and a bit of imagination.

    When I first started making the journal I got very excited. I was having so much fun and it was so easy. I'd already ear marked money from next pay to buy some leather and was trying to figure out which paper would be the best to use for the pages. Not too heavy and not too light. Something with texture and durability. I imagines making lots of journals and selling them.

    And then it took longer than I anticipated. And it got trickier that I first thought. And after that I decided maybe one was enough after all 🙂

     

     

  • Slow Making

      IP - Vest 1

    I’ve known about the Slow Food movement for years.  It’s the one where you take time to cook delicious food and eat leisurely meals.  The other night while crafting with friends I heard about the Slow Music movement.  It’s where bands play a series of gigs in a town over a period of weeks, getting to know the place and it’s people.  It got me to thinking about the way I make.  And guess what?  It’s slow!  

    The vest I’m wearing in that picture took me over a month to make.  It was a slow process as I returned to it when I had a moment or two to spare and when I had figured out the nest step in the process!

    It took time to sort through my fabric stash and find the burgundy wool I had machine felted a couple of years ago for my winter coat.  There wasn’t enough for that project so it’s been sitting there, waiting patiently for its moment to shine!  It only took a day to create the pattern (tracing around a favourite top) and cut it out.  Fast making for me!

    Then I got nervous and left it pinned, ready for sewing.  Always that nagging doubt, “What if it doesn’t work?”  Eventually I gathered my courage, dived right in and sewed.  And it didn’t quite work.  So it sat there for a bit while I figured out what to do to fix it.  Not too hard in the end – just a nip and a tuck here and there.

    And most of it wasn’t too hard – I just needed time to mull things over and space to be okay with things not working out as expected.  That’s the beauty and the curse of the handmade.  You can make what you want but it doesn’t always turn out how you imagined.  Sometimes though, it’s better.  Like my gorgeous new vest!

    IP - Vest 2

    Next, the big question.  How to adorn it?  I wanted something bold, colourful and natural.  Time spent dreaming and searching through my crafting stash came up with some wool roving for needle felting.  The tree was needle felted on the Winter Solstice while beeswax candles burned in the window and my gorgeous girls played happily around me.  That memory and experience are now part of my vest and I’ll remember that moment every time I wear it.

    Once the tree was done I had to figure out how to finish the front.  I knew I wanted to appliqué leaves to match the tree on the back but wasn’t sure what to use.  Once I decided to use what I already had in my stash, it narrowed the choice.  I ended up sewing on a leaf made from vegetable tanned, kangaroo skin on the front.  The buttons are made from a fallen foraged branch of a Red Bloodwood tree comes from a local park.

    I really love the mix of crafting skills that went into creating my unique new garment.  It’s a great reflection of the the crafts I like to do – sewing, leather craft and woodwork.  It has been machine and needle felted as well as hand and machine sewn.  Traditional and modern techniques, hand and machine.  It’s all in there somewhere!

    It makes me happy that I used things I already had in my craft stash to make it.  The magic art of making do with what you already have.

    And I adore this vest.  It fits me beautifully and is a reflection of the maker that I am.  One who works slowly, in a variety of crafts while using natural materials.  

    So here’s to the Slow Making movement.  One where we make the things we need, slowly.  Where we enjoy the process along the way.