Another month and therefore another Art Quiltie exchange!! I am loving making these and have been getting back some really great quilties!!
I started with some floral fabric paper I made a while back. I die cut two leaves (TH) from green cotton fabric, a flower (TH) from red felt and a center (SX) from yellow felt. I watercoloured the leaves so they would coordinate more closely with my paper, dried them and then stitched them to my 4" x 4" piece of fabric paper using green thread in my sewing machine. I positioned my red flower over the leaves and stitched it into place using red thread. I added the yellow center, stitched it into place with yellow and added some french knots by hand using yellow embroidery thread. I cut a piece of yellow fabric for the back and stitched it to my batting using straight lines in a plaid design and then stitched the front and back together using a wide zig zag stitch using yellow thread. It was my first time trying this on art quilties and I expect I could have had my stitches just a bit tighter but I am happy with how it looks. On final examination I thought it needed a bit of a 3D embellishment so I stitched on a small butterfly charm!!
Therese
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Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Chunky book page - copper wire owl
Joined a chunky book page swap with the theme of Copper and Wisdom. I recently finished this owl card and thought that owl fit the theme and went looking on line for copper owls! Wow! There were a lot of fantastic copper owl designs so I made a few sketches and headed to my craft room!
I decided to use some heavy copper wire for the structure and lighter weight copper wire to tie the pieces together which is how some of the ones I found had been constructed. I chose some black buttons for the eyes and started forming the structure for the owl's head. I folded my wire hard to create the beak and then created a circle on each side to accommodate my buttons and finished off with the ends creating the pointy ears that most of them have. That looked pretty good and the buttons fit inside them nicely.
One of the sketches I had made had a heart shaped body. Being a bit partial to hearts I decided that mine would have a heart body too. I made a hard corner in my wire and then curved the two ends into a heart shape and added a swirl on each end. That would give me a good place to tie him together. Some of the ones I had seen on line had large beads in their bodies but I decided on another heart for the middle of mine. I created the heart the same way I had created the body - just made it a bit smaller and made sure it would fit inside the other one.
Using the light weight wire I started by securing the top of the head on one side, wired in the button for the eye and then wired the bottom of that space so the button would be in the right place. Next, I wired the head piece to the body making sure that my beak was directly over the bottom of the large heart. Wired the beak in place and then moved on to the other side of the body and wired the head to the body on that side. I had to play with it a bit to get the second button to be in the right place in the loop but just a couple more loops was good enough. I then wired the top of the head on that side. Next, I wired the bottom of the body, added the little heart and wired it into the same section. Moved on to the top side of the little heart where they met the body. Looking good!!
After a bit of checking it out, I decided it needed piece that went from ear to ear and completed the top of his head so I wired that piece in. That was much better!!
I added teal sequins in the eye sockets using glue dots and then added smaller copper ones over them. That finished off the eyes nicely. I did have a 4x4 on my work surface as I worked to make sure that I did not create him too large for my page. Once my owl was finished I used a hammer and flattened him out by tapping all the intersections of wire to ensure that my connections were tight and that the wire structures where laying next to each other. I found this watercolour background paper in my stash, trimmed it and stitched it to my 4" x 4" of blue cardstock. I decided to expand on the wisdom theme by stamping "be kind" on the lower left hand side. My handmade stamp positioner ensured that my words were exactly where I wanted them to be. I attached my owl to my page by using large glue dots behind the eyes and ran wire around the middle of the little heart connection through the page several times.
I am super happy with how he worked out!!! He will be off to my partner in tomorrow's mail.
Therese
I decided to use some heavy copper wire for the structure and lighter weight copper wire to tie the pieces together which is how some of the ones I found had been constructed. I chose some black buttons for the eyes and started forming the structure for the owl's head. I folded my wire hard to create the beak and then created a circle on each side to accommodate my buttons and finished off with the ends creating the pointy ears that most of them have. That looked pretty good and the buttons fit inside them nicely.
One of the sketches I had made had a heart shaped body. Being a bit partial to hearts I decided that mine would have a heart body too. I made a hard corner in my wire and then curved the two ends into a heart shape and added a swirl on each end. That would give me a good place to tie him together. Some of the ones I had seen on line had large beads in their bodies but I decided on another heart for the middle of mine. I created the heart the same way I had created the body - just made it a bit smaller and made sure it would fit inside the other one.
Using the light weight wire I started by securing the top of the head on one side, wired in the button for the eye and then wired the bottom of that space so the button would be in the right place. Next, I wired the head piece to the body making sure that my beak was directly over the bottom of the large heart. Wired the beak in place and then moved on to the other side of the body and wired the head to the body on that side. I had to play with it a bit to get the second button to be in the right place in the loop but just a couple more loops was good enough. I then wired the top of the head on that side. Next, I wired the bottom of the body, added the little heart and wired it into the same section. Moved on to the top side of the little heart where they met the body. Looking good!!
After a bit of checking it out, I decided it needed piece that went from ear to ear and completed the top of his head so I wired that piece in. That was much better!!
I added teal sequins in the eye sockets using glue dots and then added smaller copper ones over them. That finished off the eyes nicely. I did have a 4x4 on my work surface as I worked to make sure that I did not create him too large for my page. Once my owl was finished I used a hammer and flattened him out by tapping all the intersections of wire to ensure that my connections were tight and that the wire structures where laying next to each other. I found this watercolour background paper in my stash, trimmed it and stitched it to my 4" x 4" of blue cardstock. I decided to expand on the wisdom theme by stamping "be kind" on the lower left hand side. My handmade stamp positioner ensured that my words were exactly where I wanted them to be. I attached my owl to my page by using large glue dots behind the eyes and ran wire around the middle of the little heart connection through the page several times.
I am super happy with how he worked out!!! He will be off to my partner in tomorrow's mail.
Therese