Sunday, 21 June 2015

Working in a Series continued

This post should be on Pages 'Working in a Series' but it's published in the wrong place.  It will make sense if you read the first part on the separate page.  Why does life have to be so complicated!

 Having looked closely at my own work and the work of others who inspire me it was time to start working with my own inspiration.  While I had looked at the shapes of the windows in St Ives I started to consider other shapes and how they relate to each other.




I started by making tracings from my photographs, concentrating on the main shapes.




One of the exercises was to work in watercolour and I made the sketches above exploring the colours I associate with St ives.  

I tried working in a grid layout using the roof shapes but felt a bit frustrated by the rigid arrangement.





Some more play followed with varied arrangements and colour schemes.  Of the four arrangements above I decided to concentrate on the one bottom left.


 The sketch above was taken into Photoshop and played about with.  




From working with sketches I moved on to working with fabric and have spent several days making improvisationally pieced units which are currently languishing on my equally improvised design wall.   The image below combines and compares two working layouts, neither of which resemble the sketches above but have been informed by them.

 

Excuse the weird shape at the bottom, it's not part of the design it's a door stop.  I have played around with incorporating definite house shapes using the white of the cottages that you see in St Ives but somehow felt the starkness of the white was too much.  The arrangement on the left, such as it is, has more of the feel I am after but there is a long way to go with the design.  It's neither one thing nor the other at the moment.  I have had to give this quilt a title before it's finished and went for 'Higgledy Piggledy' as I felt this describes the many rooves and alleyways in St Ives but I don't achieved that  think I've  achieved that atmosphere yet.

This course is about working in a series and while I may have gone off at a bit of a tangent working through this piece (because I need it to fulfill a brief for a challenge) I do have a lot of inspiration to take me forward with this series.

6 comments:

Gina said...

I missed the first post but loved seeing the way you worked through your ideas in this one. Is this destined for the FOQ?

Wendy said...

It is coming along nicely, once you get more triangles in, it will look more like your design. Have you thought about cutting some of your strips into less regular shapes? Misshaped triangles perhaps?

Anonymous said...

Love seeing your process. But I really love where you took this, I can't wait to see more. Wonderful Julie. xox

Heather said...

Fascinating to see the various studies and experiments you have worked through. I am sure there will be a wonderful quilt coming out of all of this.

Maggi said...

Your first post was so informative. It is good to see how you have progressed from the the very distinctive St Ives townscape to the abstract fabric pieces at the end. You are obviously getting a lot out of this class.

Emma said...

I read the first post as instructed, very interesting as is this one - going off on a tangent is what it's all about (as long as you pop back to the focus occasionally!) Higgledy piggledy is pretty hard to do but you're on the way, I think.