Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Sketch

Life at the Lake, 2011
Farber Castell pen and graphite on Strathmore paper

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Zentangle Beads


Eye Beads, 2011
Farber Castell pen and graphite on Strathmore paper

Monday, May 23, 2011

Zentangle Portrait


Portrait, 2011
Graphite on Strathmore paper

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Zentangles


Zentangles, 2011
Farber Castell pen and graphite on Strathmore paper
A couple more.....

More Zentangles


Zentangles, 2011
Farber Castell pen and graphite on Strathmore paper

I'm on a roll.....

Zentangles


Zentangles, 2011
Faber Castell pen and graphite on Strathmore paper
Here are some new zentangles. Creating these repetitive patterns is relaxing.

Patriotic Rug


Tribute to Liberty Rug, 2011
15" x 15", wool strips (3-6) on linen

Our Atha organization has a challenge for it's members each year. If we choose to participate, we have until our June meeting to complete the mat that meets the challenge. This year's challenge was a patriotic piece. I wanted to do something a little different, and I chose a picture from the cover of the 1934 July edition of The Saturday Evening Post. The cover has the painting, Statue of Liberty, by Joseph Christian Leyendecker. This is my interpretation of this magazine cover. Because my piece is the adaptation of another artist's work I needed permission to do this rug image. I received permission from The Saturday Evening Post to do this one rug.

Cat's Paw Rug


Cat's Paw, 2011
I was reading Gene Shepherd's rug hooking blog and he had several articles on cat's paw rugs. The cat's paw design is made of concentric circles or near circles. My design uses circles and my own dyed wool. I used his technique for hooking circles by starting with a tail at 12 o'clock, then a loop at 4:30, followed by a loop at 8 o'clock, and then the final tail in with the first tail at 12 o'clock.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Scrolls


Scrolls, 2010
This mat was done during a class with Betty McClentic, a certified McGown teacher, from Rhode Island. She taught us the fine shading of these motifs using swatches of wool. This was the first time I tried shading.
The swatches are wool pieces that were dyed to have gradations of color (light to dark). There are 2 sets of swatches in this mat. The upper right scroll and lower left scroll use the same color swatches. The upper left scroll and lower right scroll use the same swatches. Betty provided the swatches. The strip width is a #3 (3/32 of an inch) and the backing is Monks cloth.
The background was hooked after the class with a spot-dyed wool piece dyed by Beverly Mulcahy.

Rug Hooking

Just as with anything else I find interesting, I try to find whatever I can to read or watch to learn more. These are some of the books that I found helpful: Pictorial Hooked Rugs by Jane Halliwell Green, The Rug Hooker's Bible: The Best from 30 Years of Jane Olson's Rugger's Roundtable by Gene Shepherd and Jane Olson, Shading Flowers: The Complete Guide for Rug Hookers by Jeanne Field, Prodded Hooking for a Three-Dimensional Effect by Gene Shepherd and Virginia Stimmel, Hooked Rug Landscapes by Anne-Marie Littenberg, Hooked on the Wild Side: Everything You Need to Know to Hook Realistic Animals by Elizabeth Black, Rug Hooking Magazine, and Rug Hooker's News & Views (this is no longer published, but issues can be found at tag sales and on sites like Ebay).



Cat Rug


Cat Mat, 2010
I've been learning to rug hook over the last 2 years. I inherited my mother-in-law's rug hooking frame and wanted to try this art. I like the idea of making utilitarian objects that can be beautiful and last for generations. I've only recently been putting on a date and my initials, and I'm still working on the "beautiful" part. I've started dyeing my own wool and designing my mats.
I purchased this cat as a kit on line. This small mat was my first hooked rug. It was hooked on a linen backing with #8 strips of wool (1/4" wide). I chose this pattern because we have a gray tiger cat.
I now belong to the Wachusett Mountain ATHA rug hooking chapter. (ATHA stands for The Association of Traditional Hooking Artists.) The ATHA organization offers workshops and publishes a news letter that is printed six times a year.
Our chapter meets once a month and we share ideas that foster learning in this and other fiber arts. The group is made of caring individuals who are very willing to help and teach. I've met some very talented women, and I've already learned a lot from them.
A good introduction to rug hooking is this video by Gene Shepherd on You Tube. or this one by Deanne Fitzpatrick.