r ‘Every Voice’ conference celebrates past, present and future of LGBTQ+ Tigers By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Thu, 26 Sep 2024 11:00:00 -0400 Princeton's first alumni affinity conference since 2019 welcomed more than 600 alumni and guests to campus Sept. 19-21, for “Every Voice: Honoring and Celebrating Princeton’s LGBTQ+ Alumni.” Full Article
r Study shows routes for recycling carbon dioxide and coal waste into useful products By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Fri, 27 Sep 2024 16:34:00 -0400 A new report led by Emily Carter and Elizabeth Zeitler *14 offers research and policy ideas, including carbon fiber replacements for rebar in construction and titanium in high-tech applications. Full Article
r Princeton Professor Ruha Benjamin awarded MacArthur ‘genius’ grant By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Tue, 01 Oct 2024 12:01:22 -0400 The MacArthur Foundation honored Benjamin for her critical analysis of how technology perpetuates inequality and for ‘championing the role of imagination in social transformation.' Full Article
r Nilufer K. Shroff will conclude her service as vice president and chief audit and compliance officer By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Wed, 02 Oct 2024 09:59:53 -0400 A leader in her field with over 35 years of experience, Shroff has transformed Princeton’s audit and compliance functions during her more than 17 years at the University. Full Article
r Mapping an entire (fly) brain: A step toward understanding diseases of the human brain By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Wed, 02 Oct 2024 11:00:00 -0400 An international team of researchers and gamers, led by Princeton’s Mala Murthy and Sebastian Seung, mapped every neuron and every synaptic connection in an adult fruit fly's brain, building a comprehensive “connectome” that represents a massive step toward understanding the human brain. Full Article
r Board of Trustees issues decision on Witherspoon statue By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Wed, 02 Oct 2024 12:00:47 -0400 Decision informed by report of the CPUC Committee on Naming. Full Article
r Princeton creates Office of Innovation to enhance ecosystem for research, start-ups, tech transfer and industry collaboration By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Fri, 04 Oct 2024 14:31:00 -0400 Craig B. Arnold has been named Princeton’s first University Innovation Officer and heads the new office. Full Article
r Princeton’s John Hopfield receives Nobel Prize in physics By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Tue, 08 Oct 2024 17:32:00 -0400 Hopfield, the Howard A. Prior Professor in the Life Sciences, Emeritus, and professor of molecular biology, emeritus, shares the 2024 Nobel Prize with Toronto's Geoffrey E. Hinton. Full Article
r Fifteen scholars named Presidential Postdoctoral Research Fellows By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Thu, 10 Oct 2024 09:57:00 -0400 The program, now in its fifth year, recognizes and supports outstanding scholars primed to make important contributions in their fields. The 2024 cohort includes disciplines spanning the humanities, engineering, the sciences and the social sciences. Full Article
r SPIA exhibit and programming are directing attention to nuclear weapons as a scholarly and policy issue By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Thu, 10 Oct 2024 10:21:00 -0400 “Close Encounters: Facing the Bomb in a New Nuclear Age” is on display at SPIA’s Bernstein Gallery through Oct. 25. Full Article
r Brooks, Gitai, Krienen and Skinnider win prestigious NIH awards By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Thu, 10 Oct 2024 13:50:00 -0400 Four Princeton researchers won major awards from the National Institutes of Health to support their blue-sky research. Full Article
r Saien Xie wins fellowship supporting revolutionary approach to energy-efficient electronics By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Wed, 16 Oct 2024 15:20:23 -0400 Xie, a materials engineer, won a 2024 Packard Fellowship for creating atomically thin materials. “Thinking and inventing down to an atomic level like Saien is doing, most spectacularly I should add, is the future,” said James Sturm, ECE department chair. Full Article
r Howard Stone named University Professor at Princeton By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Thu, 17 Oct 2024 09:09:00 -0400 Stone is a leading engineering scholar and pioneer in fluid dynamics research. University Professor is Princeton’s highest honor for faculty. Full Article
r Society of Fellows in the Liberal Arts welcomes new scholars By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Wed, 23 Oct 2024 13:45:00 -0400 A commitment to the liberal arts is at the core of Princeton University's mission. A new cohort of outstanding postdocs has joined the Society of Fellows for three years of teaching and research. Full Article
r Endowment continues to provide foundation for Princeton’s groundbreaking research, innovative scholarship and national leadership on college affordability By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Thu, 24 Oct 2024 12:00:00 -0400 In the Class of 2028, 71.5% of students qualify for financial aid and 21.7% of the class are lower-income students eligible for federal Pell grants. Full Article
r Internet researchers reach beyond academia to close major security loophole By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Thu, 24 Oct 2024 15:41:09 -0400 Princeton engineers and industry leaders have squelched a threat that had lurked for years in the internet’s encryption system. Full Article
r Chemist Giacinto Scoles, 'a superb scientist and an even better human being,' dies at 89 By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Fri, 25 Oct 2024 16:47:42 -0400 Physical chemist Giacinto Scoles, Princeton’s Donner Professor of Science, Emeritus, died in Sassenheim, the Netherlands, on Sept. 25 with his wife of nearly 60 years at his side. He was 89. Full Article
r Visual arts lecturer Lex Brown and historian Lucas Ramos awarded Rome Prize By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 08:46:00 -0400 The award supports independent research in the arts and humanities at the American Academy in Rome. Both Princeton recipients are undergraduate alumni. Full Article
r U.S. Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan ’81 and Nobel Prize-winning economist David Card *83 to receive top alumni awards. By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Fri, 01 Nov 2024 14:00:00 -0400 Princeton University will present the honors at Alumni Day, scheduled for Feb. 22, 2025. Full Article
r Election 2024: How Princeton's Vote100 encourages students to register, vote and be more civically engaged By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2024 11:01:00 -0500 Voting registration rates among Princeton undergraduate and graduate students have more than doubled largely thanks to the program. Full Article
r ‘Many Minds, Many Stripes’ conference sets 2025 date to celebrate Graduate School alumni By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2024 12:46:00 -0500 The conference has been scheduled for Oct. 9-11, 2025. All Princeton alumni are invited back to campus for the gathering. Full Article
r Two Dale Fellowship recipients pursue original projects after graduation By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 10:55:00 -0500 The Martin A. Dale '53 Fellowship provides grants for Princeton seniors to spend the year after graduation on "an independent project of extraordinary merit." Juliette Carbonnier and Collin Riggins are the latest recipients. Full Article
r Medievalist William Chester Jordan receives Barry Prize for Distinguished Intellectual Achievement By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 10:58:33 -0500 Jordan will also receive the American Historical Society's Award for Scholarly Distinction in January. Full Article
r Celebrate Princeton Innovation spotlights researchers who are patenting discoveries, creating start-ups and exploring other ventures By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 10:51:00 -0500 Full Article
r Veterans Day observance to be held at the Princeton University Chapel By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 10:59:36 -0500 The 9 a.m. service on Monday, Nov. 11, will also be livestreamed. Full Article
r Africa World Initiative hosts Nobel laureate Abdulrazak Gurnah in conversation and in the classroom By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 14:00:00 -0500 He reflected on literature, compassion, belonging, home and the "qualities which make us human." Full Article
r Academic Publisher Introduces Camouflaged Editions? By blog.chasclifton.com Published On :: Fri, 05 Jul 2024 01:21:23 +0000 I was one of the outside readers1 for a volume in Cambridge University Press’s enormous “Elements” series, The New Witches of the West, by Ethan Doyle White. (Link is to Amazon US) To find that title, go to the main … Continue reading → Full Article Uncategorized academia publishing witchcraft
r Step Aside, John Barleycorn By blog.chasclifton.com Published On :: Sun, 04 Aug 2024 21:31:56 +0000 See the Shaggy Parasol mushrooms? They were not there two or three days ago. Yet Lammas comes and they burst forth, full of fungal goodness. Here just north of the Colorado-New Mexico line, August is the heart of mushroom season. … Continue reading → Full Article Uncategorized Lammas mushrooms
r ‘The Super Natural,’ or How to Write about ‘Woo’ By blog.chasclifton.com Published On :: Thu, 05 Sep 2024 22:24:48 +0000 I blogged here before about things disappearing in my house — kitchen utensils, corkscrews, keys, etc. (See “Pixie Problems, or Working Things Out with the ‘Cousins’ (1)” and Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4.) Things have been better since then. … Continue reading → Full Article Uncategorized academia Goddess paranormal writing
r Lunacy — A Pagan Music Classic Reissued By blog.chasclifton.com Published On :: Tue, 10 Sep 2024 19:21:01 +0000 Download links (Spotify, YouTube, Apple) here. Learn more about the Pagan History Project here. Full Article Uncategorized music Paganism
r Animal Sacrifice: Are They Doing It Wrong? By blog.chasclifton.com Published On :: Tue, 17 Sep 2024 22:17:45 +0000 The New York Post had two articles recently on apparent animal sacrifice in the Jamaica Bay area of Long Island (politically in both Brooklyn and Queens). “Animal Sacrifices on the Rise in Queens with Chickens, Pigs being Tortured in ‘Twisted’ … Continue reading → Full Article Uncategorized African religion animals Asatru Heathenry New York sacrifice
r I Will Be Interviewed for the Cherry Hill Series. Meanwhile, Check Out These! By blog.chasclifton.com Published On :: Fri, 27 Sep 2024 02:56:49 +0000 Register here for the live cast I am not a Pagan teacher, Witchcraft influencer, or anything like that. Usually i see myself as the person approaching a panelist at an American Academy of Religion session, saying, “Would you consider turning … Continue reading → Full Article Uncategorized acade academia Pagan studies religious studies
r Angela Puca on the Origins of Today’s Pagan Samhain By blog.chasclifton.com Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 19:28:13 +0000 Let the velvet-voiced Dr. Puca explains how the festival of Samhain gained its present form — and remember, Samhain is a season, a -“tide.” Full Article Uncategorized Samhain
r 2024 October Membership Drive: Preserving fan history By archiveofourown.org Published On :: Fri, 18 Oct 2024 00:05:50 +0000 Do you remember that one fanfic that kept you reading until dawn for the very first time? Or the fan art or video that led you to dig out all the works its creator shared? Have you ever tried to look into the stories of the authors who wrote fics before you were even born? You can find all this and more on Fanlore - the wiki for fanworks, fan creators, and fannish history!Fanlore is a project run by the Organization for Transformative Works (OTW) with the goal of providing fans a place to record and share their histories, experiences and traditions. Fanlore records both the history and current state of our fan communities – fan works, fan activities, fan terminology, individual fans and fannish-related events. You can read about what fandoms were like in the olden days and document memorable events in your own fandoms, all on Fanlore! Check out the wiki’s New User Portal or join the Fanlore Discord server to connect with other editors and users.We would not be able to preserve these cherished pieces of fandom history without the generous donations of our fellow fans and volunteers who work tirelessly behind the scenes to keep all our projects running. As always, we have some shiny new donation gifts!You can choose to display your love for fandom with some of our new thank-you gifts. For a US$40 donation, we have a new sticker set featuring popular AO3 tags. You can show off a bumper sticker saying "my other car is a ship" for a donation of US$50. For a donation of US$75 or more, you could carry home your groceries with a white and red shopping bag or you can announce your love for AO3 with our rainbow kudos pin. You can also set up a recurring donation and save towards the gift of your choice. Select the gift you want, and if the total for that donation doesn't reach the amount needed for the gift you selected, future donations will be applied to the gift you’re saving for. Those of you in the U.S. might also be able to double your contribution via employer matching: contact your HR department to find out if this is an option for you.A donation of US$10 or more will also allow you to become a member of the OTW. OTW members can vote for the Board of Directors – the OTW’s governing board. Donating now and checking the “I wish to be a member” box will make you eligible to vote in the 2025 OTW Board Election.We hope that many of you will take this opportunity to donate and become a member to support projects like Fanlore, Open Doors, Legal Advocacy, Transformative Works and Cultures, and the Archive of Our Own. Your contributions help keep our projects successful for new and long-time fans alike! Full Article
r October 2024 Membership Drive: Thanks for your Support By archiveofourown.org Published On :: Mon, 21 Oct 2024 00:01:34 +0000 The Organization for Transformative Works's October membership drive is over and we are delighted to say that we are finishing with a total of $214,698.86 raised. We are particularly pleased that 6020 donors chose to either take up or renew OTW membership with their donation, far exceeding our goal of 4,500 members.These donations came from 6,955 people in 86 countries: thank you to every single one of you, as well as to all of you who posted and shared the news about the drive! The OTW would not exist without its users all around the world, and your continued support for us is our absolute pride and joy! We are so glad to know that our ongoing mission to support, protect, and provide access to the history of fanworks and fan culture continues to resonate with the people that matter most of all: the fans themselves.If you were intending to donate or join and haven't yet done so, don't worry! The OTW accepts donations year-round, and you can always choose to become a member with a donation of US$10 or more. Memberships run for one calendar year from the date of your donation. If you donate now, you'll be able to vote in next year's OTW Board election, which will take place in August 2025. Our exclusive thank-you gifts are also available whenever you donate! The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan-run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website. Full Article
r Open Doors Announces New Import of Fanzine Works By archiveofourown.org Published On :: Sat, 02 Nov 2024 16:04:58 +0000 The AO3 Fanzine Scan Hosting Project (FSHP) is a partnership between the Open Doors committee and fan-run preservation project Zinedom through which fanfiction and fanart originally published in print fanzines is imported to the Archive of Our Own. Fanworks can be imported to AO3 with the consent of either the creators of the works or the publisher of the fanzine in which the fanworks were published.Today, Open Doors is pleased to announce a list of collections that it has created since September 2023 to house fanworks imported through the FSHP. A collection has been created for each fanzine from which one or more fanworks have been imported, but these collections do not contain every work from each of these zines, and many so far only include one work each in cases where Open Doors only has permission to import that particular work. For full transparency, Open Doors plans to continue to announce collections as they are created that may or may not grow with additional fanworks as additional permissions are obtained from more creators in the future.As of August 2024, Open Doors has created the following collections to represent fanzines from which it has imported works: A Portfolio of Poetry and Portraits Amazing Grace Astray in the Wilderness Beyond Dreams Broken Images California K/S Contact CrosSignals Daring Attempt Enter-comm First Time Gateway Guardian Happy Tails IDIC In the Wilderness KaleidoScope KisMet KSX Legacy Legends Naked Times Nightvisions Nome On the Edge One Shot Partners Potpourri Pushin' the Odds Quantum Chain Scattered Stars Sehlat's Roar Southern Star Spock's Arthropods Strange Justice The Complete Rack The K/S Press The Rack & All the King's Horses All the King's Men Three Eleven Universe Beyond Whalesong Within the Mirror For answers to frequently asked questions, please see the FSHP page on the Open Doors website. If you'd like to give Open Doors permission to import any of your fanworks that have been previously published in print fanzines, or if you have any other FSHP-related queries, please contact the Open Doors Committee.We'd also love it if fans could help us preserve the story of any fanzines in which they may have been published on Fanlore. If you're new to wiki editing, no worries! Check out the new visitor portal, or ask the Fanlore Gardeners for tips.Thanks for your interest in preserving fannish history for future generations of readers!- The Open Doors team Commenting on this post will be disabled in 14 days, on 18 November. If you have any questions, concerns, or comments regarding this import after that date, please contact Open Doors. Full Article
r Open Comment Period for AO3 Terms of Service Updates By archiveofourown.org Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2024 15:00:52 +0000 In order to make AO3's rules clearer to our users, we intend to update the AO3 Terms of Service (TOS) in mid-November 2024. Once this occurs, all users will need to agree to the updated TOS to continue using AO3. The full text has been posted for public review, as well as a detailed explanation of what has (and hasn't) changed:AO3 Terms of Service: 2024 Update Guide AO3 Terms of Service: 2024 Draft AO3 Terms of Service FAQ: 2024 DraftSummary of changesAs part of reorganizing the TOS for better clarity, the new TOS is structured differently than the old one. A detailed explanation of what was changed and why is available in the update guide. These are the highlights:We've clarified the Content Policy, but we haven't changed what works are or are not allowed. If your fanwork was allowed on AO3 before, then it is still allowed. The TOS has been split into three pages (General Principles, Content Policy, and Privacy Policy). This should make it easier to find what you're looking for when you want to know about a specific part of the TOS. We've simplified the language throughout the TOS and removed redundant or overly specific phrases and passages. When longer explanations would help to provide clarity, we've added new questions to the TOS FAQ instead. We've updated the descriptions of how we and our subprocessors collect and process user information (including personal information) in the Privacy Policy. The Abuse Policy has been generalized to provide the AO3 Policy & Abuse committee with greater flexibility to determine how to address TOS violations, while still providing protections for fanworks in accordance with AO3's mission. The "Underage" Archive Warning, which is used for works that depict or describe underage sex, is being renamed to "Underage Sex". This does not change the meaning of this warning or how it is enforced. When the TOS update occurs, all works with the "Underage" Archive Warning will be recategorized automatically to display the new "Underage Sex" Archive Warning label instead. If you have a work that carries the "Underage" warning and you don't want it to display the "Underage Sex" label, you can replace it with the "Creator Chose Not to Use Archive Warnings" label at any time.You can read the proposed changes and comment here on this news post with any questions, suggestions, or feedback you might have about the new TOS or TOS FAQ. Comments will remain open until November 18th, 2024. After comments close, the Board of Directors for the OTW (the Organization for Transformative Works, which is AO3's parent organization) will vote on the proposed changes to the Terms of Service. If the Board votes in favor, the Terms of Service will be updated and all users will be required to agree to the new TOS to continue using AO3. To make your opinion heard prior to the Board vote, make sure to submit your comments here before November 18th. ETA: We appreciate that all of you have many ideas, but please keep in mind that the Policy & Abuse committee handles AO3 rules, not AO3 features. If you have ideas for a feature (for example, improvements you want to see to Search and Filtering), please contact the Support committee about them instead. We won't be responding to feature requests on this news post. Full Article
r October 2024 Newsletter, Volume 194 By archiveofourown.org Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 15:56:17 +0000 I. AO3 TERMS OF SERVICE UPDATEPolicy & Abuse, Legal, and Accessibility, Design & Technology have been hard at work regarding an update to the AO3 Terms of Service. Among other things, this update involves clarifying wording in both the Content Policy and the "Underage" Archive Warning. This update will not affect what fanworks are allowed or not on AO3, nor will it affect how this Archive Warning is enforced.In conjunction with Communications, a public call for feedback was posted and comments will be accepted until November 18. Please refer to the news post and Policy & Abuse's proposed changes for more detail.II. OCTOBER MEMBERSHIP DRIVEDevelopment & Membership worked with Communications to announce the October membership drive! With the help of Translation, the news posts were translated into 28 languages. Finance also posted the 2024 Budget Update in anticipation of the membership drive.The October membership drive raised almost $215,000 USD from 6,995 donors, 6,020 of whom chose to be members! Development & Membership is now verifying addresses, packaging premiums, and heading to local post offices with the help of their new regional shipping specialists.III. ELSEWHERE AT THE AO3In September, Support and Systems were handling issues related to downtime and site slowness. Systems has posted a post-mortem of events and analysis on their official AO3 account, which details the causes and effects of some of the issues.Due to downtime and other factors, Support received 4,151 tickets in September, around double their usual monthly count. They ask for your patience as they work through the high volume of tickets.Policy & Abuse received 2,264 tickets in September. They also have an incoming class of new volunteers and look forward to training them.Also in September, Tag Wrangling volunteers wrangled over 430,000 tags, which amounts to over 1,000 tags per tag wrangler. They also finished their last recruitment round of the year and began inducting their latest batch of volunteers.Open Doors announced the import of older works from due South Seekrit Santa, an exchange devoted to the Canadian television series due South. They also finished the last details from the West of the Moon archive import, an archive for hobbit-centric gen fanworks. They continue to work on other import projects and documentation for the AO3 Fanzine Scan Hosting Project.IV. VARIOUS OTW ACTIVITYCommunications is happy to see their email delivery service has been steadily gaining followers since its launch. The service recently passed 1,000 subscribers and now has about 1,100 subscribers!Fanlore ran a Video Game-themed month in October! You can check out featured articles on their Tumblr.Development & Membership's convention outreach division organized a table for Confabulation Fan Convention at Chicago, USA. OTW volunteers had a blast talking about their experience volunteering, fan vidding, and exploring world landmarks!Legal has responded to a number of user queries this month, including queries about YouTube counter-notices, shadowcasting, UK legislation, and academic research on fandom. They also dealt with some apps that are confusing users into believing they’re associated with the AO3.TWC has been preparing two special issues: Centering Blackness in Fan Studies and Sports Fandoms to be released in the coming months.V. GOVERNANCEBoard and the Board Assistants Team (BAT) organized Board's fourth quarter public meeting on September 29. They had 55 attendees and answered 9 questions. The official minutes for this meeting were voted on and published on the OTW website.Official Board turnover happened on October 1, and incoming Board members are getting settled in.Board and BAT have been participating in several projects and policies related to the OTW Organizational Culture Roadmap. BAT has also been working on procurement documentation, OTW website updates, and various cross-committee tasks. They’ve been assisting the Board on several ongoing projects, including Whistleblower Policy FAQ documentation and responding to external questions directed at the Board.Strategic Planning is working on compiling internal sustainability plans from all committees as part of the plan’s internal sustainability goal. They're also reaching out to the committees responsible for the Paid Staff goal as those implementation goal dates approach.VI. IT'S ALL ABOUT THE PEEPSVolunteers & Recruiting has been hard at work training their new recruits and getting them settled in, saying farewell to one of their chairs, Cyn, and welcoming Eevee as the new co-chair. They also conducted recruitment for 3 committees in October: AO3 Documentation, Elections, and Fanlore.From September 22 to October 22, Volunteers & Recruiting received 149 new requests and completed 135, leaving them with 62 open requests. As of October 22, 2024, the OTW has 924 volunteers. o/ Recent personnel movements are listed below.New Committee Chairs: Eevee (Volunteers & Recruiting)New Communications Volunteers: 1 TikTok Team LeadNew Development & Membership Volunteers: 1 Shipping SpecialistNew Fanlore Volunteers: 3 Discord ModeratorsNew Open Doors Volunteers: Brianna Dardin (Senior Technical Volunteer) and 1 Administrative Support VolunteerNew Policy & Abuse Volunteers: Emka, iwasnttrainedforthis, megidola, Trinity, and 3 other VolunteersNew Translation Volunteers: AnneHelena, Aquiles T. M., hans, Helpi K, Jaya, Luki, tritongue, and 2 other TranslatorsNew Volunteers & Recruiting Volunteers: Alisande and 1 other VolunteerDeparting Directors: Kari Dayton and Michelle SchroederDeparting Committee Chairs: Cyn (Volunteers & Recruiting)Departing Board Assistant Team Volunteers: 1 VolunteerDeparting Fanlore Volunteers: 1 Policy & Admin Volunteer and 1 Graphics DesignerDeparting Open Doors Volunteers: SonoSvegliato (Import Assistant), Brianna Dardin and 2 other Technical Volunteers; 1 Administrative VolunteerDeparting Strategic Planning Volunteers: Arly GuevaraDeparting Tag Wrangler Volunteers: Eevee (Supervisor role only), Lysippe, and 7 other Tag WranglersDeparting Translation Volunteers: Elintiriel (Volunteer Manager role only) and 1 other Volunteer Manager; Nachali, Parul Hunnargikar, Summerfanreader, and 4 other TranslatorsFor more information about the purview of our committees, please access the committee listing on our website. The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan-run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website. Full Article
r Wool Applique Chicks - I Love Handwork!!! By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Fri, 13 Mar 2015 04:18:00 +0000 I started this project in October, 2014, so I would have a nice handwork project while traveling for a month in Europe. I love it!!! A bunch of pre-cut threads and trims, a small package of mixed seed beads/buttons/sequins, a folded piece of felt with various sizes of needles, embroidery scissors, Sue Spargo's book, and 16 wool chicks already stitched to the background wool fit very nicely into a 12 x 9 inch zippered, mesh bag.... perfect to tuck into my backpack! I stitched on the airplanes, in people's homes, and with my beady/quilty friends! At the end of the month, 8 chicks were finished. You can see them here. Since then, I've been busy making a Travel Diary quilt, and starting another very challenging "Shimmer" quilt, which will be the subject of the next post. However, once in a while, the Chicks are just the right break from machine sewing. Working on them makes me happy and peaceful. The new ones are in this post... As you can see in the photo below, I still have 2 chicks to embellish, plus one that might need something more. When all of them are finished, it will be time to decide what to do with them. My idea so far is to make them into a small wall quilt, hand quilting around the chicks, maybe adding a few flowers between some of the chicks. I'll wait to decide, keeping all options open until the chicks are finished. Most of the chicks are girls, but so far 3 of them seem to have a bit of testosterone... can you tell which ones are the boys? You'll need to click on the above picture of all 16 to enlarge it enough to find the boys. If you feel like making a guess, let's give them numbers starting at the top left with 1 and going across row by row. As you can probably tell, the one below is definitely a girly girl! By the way, the lace trim on the above chick is vintage lace from LaDonne Weinland, an Etsy vendor. It was white, which was too "strong" a color for this piece. So I painted dye on it!!! These are the pieces I painted. To give you an idea of scale, the lace is just under 1/4" wide. The chick, from the bottoms of her feet to the top of her crown, is exactly 3 inches tall. Threads! People ask me where I got all the threads I use for these chicks. Here are some answers... Variegated pearl cotton. I'd estimate that over half the stitches (all the beaks and feet, most of the edge stitches, tails, and top-knots) are pearl cotton, size 8 or 12. I like using threads that are subtly variegated. DMC and Valdani are two brands of pearl cotton that come in a ball for $5 to $7 per ball. I have purchased some Valdani balls from Sue Spargo and some from this site. But most of my perle cotton comes from African Folklore Embroidery ... Leora Raikin, the owner, packages hand-dyed, variegated, pearl cotton on cards of three colors, each color about 10 yards in length, for $5. She has a HUGE selection, from which you can have 24 colors for only $40!!! I love the colors, the subtle changes of colors in the variegation, and the quality of the thread. Here's a page that shows her colors in size 8 pearl cotton... mind boggling! My photo does not show the full amount you get... only how it is packaged, 3 colors to a card! Embroidery floss. For finer stitches and details, I often switch to regular embroidery floss. Again I gravitate toward the variegated colors. DMC has put out a lot of new variegated skeins in recent years. If you have an older supply of solid colors, you might want to check out DMC's 24 new colors. Here's an Etsy seller that offers them. Or, if you are in the Seattle area, Nancy's Sewing Basket (on Queen Anne hill) stocks all of them. They are much more subtle than previous DMC variegated floss choices, more like hand-dyed. Anchor has also added nice options to their line. I also buy hand-dyed embroidery floss when I see a skein that appeals to me. Again, I like the subtlety of it. Other threads. Sue Spargo offers a line of variegated silk threads in beautiful colors, which she calls Silken Pearl. I bought some of them from her during the class, and have enjoyed using them. The sheen of the silk is a lovely contrast to the more matte quality of the pearl cotton. In her book, Sue recommends using a wool thread to applique the wool chicks to the background wool. Since it is quite expensive, I used 60 weight cotton applique/sewing thread by Metler, which I already had in a range of colors. It works fine. If I didn't already have the Metler thread, I probably would have bought a set of Genziana wool threads on bobbins on Etsy, here. This wool thread is a bit too fine for embellishment work, but it's great for wool applique. Novelty yarns, metallic threads, chenille, dazzle threads, etc. all have their occasional use as well. As I tend to like more matte and less bling, I don't often use these threads. But it's fun to experiment with them. I did use chenille on one of the above chicks... can you find it? Full Article applique embellishments floss pearl cotton Quilting Sue Spargo thread thread embroidery wool
r Exhibition of My Beadwork... April 1 - May 3!!! By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Thu, 26 Mar 2015 00:49:00 +0000 Beadlust an exhibition of bead and fiber works by Robin Atkins This is the first solo exhibition of my work! I am very pleased and honored that the La Conner Quilt & Textile Museum offered me a show in their new Local Artist Exhibit Program's first-floor Landmarks Gallery. There are 28 pieces in the exhibition, including beaded quilts, books, dolls, and framed art. Several of the pieces are new and have not been exhibited previously. Below is one of them, a beaded and embroidered collage using some of my hand-dyed, re-purposed fabrics. Every Child Should Have Her Own Tree, hand-dyed, beaded, embroidered fabric collage I hope some of you will be able to come see my work, as well as the work of the other two featured quilt artists in the upper floor galleries. Exhibition Information: Where: La Conner Quilt & Textile Museum, 703 2nd Street, La Conner, WA When: April 1 - May 3, 2015. Museum hours are 11-5 Wednesday through Sunday (closed Mon. & Tues.) Contact Museum: 360-466-4288; web www.laconnerquilts.org Info about the exhibit: http://www.laconnerquilts.org/beadlust---robin-atkins.html Other exhibits: The work of Denise Miller and Nancy Ryan is on the 2nd & 3rd floor of the museum; Robin’s work is on the 1st floor Exhibition Events: Opening reception at the museum: April 1, 4 to 7 pm; all three artists will be there; free admission Demonstration at the museum: Robin demonstrates process and techniques of bead embroidery, April 1, 2-4 pmWorkshop: Robin teaches Improvisational Bead Embroidery, May 2-3 in La Conner http://www.laconnerquilts.org/improvisational-bead-embroidery.html A couple of readers have contacted me asking if the above work, or any of the other pieces will be for sale... Nope, afraid not... exhibition only, although the museum's excellent gift shop does carry my books. Full Article art quilts bead art exhibition Bead Embroidery Beadwork improvisation indigo dyed fabrics Quilt Museum
r Grandma's Flower Garden - 3/4 Inch Hexie Quilt - Time Study By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Mon, 20 Apr 2015 00:33:00 +0000 As followers may recall, I started hand stitching hexies for a Grandmother's Flower Garden quilt in March, 2012... three years ago. Watching my friend, Christy, basting sweet, reproduction fabrics around paper forms, making little stacks of 3/4-inch hexagons, I just couldn't resist! These Beadlust posts show the various steps to making the quilt top and the start of hand-quilting in more detail than this post. Although I'm still hand-quilting, the end is in sight now. I'm hoping to finish in time for our County Fair in August. In this post, I thought it might interest you to look at how much time it takes to complete each of the steps in hand piecing and quilting a 3/4" hexie quilt, and the total number of hours involved. I'm basing time estimates for all of the repetitive steps on how long it takes me to do a large number in one sitting, after having practiced... in other words, at my best speed. Step 1 - Planning the Quilt and Getting Fabrics - time: 20 hours I decided to make a version of the traditional 1930's Grandmother's Flower Garden quilt that is less common than the one with a path or ring around each of the flowers. I chose this design. Note the green hexie leaves, which form a vertical-horizontal grid. The final size is 72 x 92 inches, a comfortable size for a twin bed, a total of 4,694 hexies. I wanted to use as many different fabrics in this quilt as possible. flowers = 280 different print fabrics with any background color except green or white. leaves = 150 different print fabrics in green flower centers (repeats OK) = 25 different solids double border = 1 print + 1 solid Although I had collected 30's reproduction fabrics for a few years, I certainly needed more. From a selection of fabrics given to me, fabrics purchased in an eBay auction, and my stash, I found enough to make each of the flowers unique. Although there were not enough greens to make the leaves unique, I had about 60 different green prints, such that each is not repeated more than 3 times in the quilt. So, in the end the quilt includes more than 360 unique fabrics! Step 2 - Wash and Iron all of the Fabrics - time: 15 hours Yikes! A few of the fabrics I wanted to use were already washed; most were not. Knowing it should be consistent, and worrying that the reds might bleed, I decided to pre-wash and iron all of the fabrics. Doing this step in stages, as I acquired fabrics, I'm not really sure how long it took, perhaps quite a bit more than the above estimate. Step 3 - Cutting and Trimming all of the Hexies - time: 28 hours For each of the 4,694 hexies, I cut a 2" square of fabric, and trimmed off the four corners. Of course, I cut and trimmed in multiples, except for a few that I fussy cut individually. Again, since I did this step in stages, the above time estimate is a bit rough. Step 4 - Basting the Fabric to the Paper Hexie Forms - time: 235 hours Once I learned that using YLI quilting thread for basting makes it go much faster than using regular sewing thread, I was able to baste 20 hexies per hour. Step 5 - Stitching Hexies Together to Make Flowers - time: 105 hours Averaging 2.5 complete flowers per hour, it took me about two and a half 40-hour-work-weeks to whip-stitch all 238 full and 42 partial flowers. There are 14-17 whip-stitches per 3/4 inch seam. Step 6 - Stitching a White Hexie Ring Around 130 of the Flowers - time: 130 hours On average, it takes me 1 hour to whip-stitch 12 white hexies around each flower. Step 7 - Layout Flowers for Quilt Top; Note Position on Each - time: 4 hours I didn't fuss too much about the layout, spreading out the flowers randomly, making sure the red ones were evenly spaced, and that no areas were overly dominated by one color. Assigning each row a letter and each position within the row a number, I marked each flower on the back (writing on the center paper piece). Step 7a - Half Flowers and Double Border All Around - time 90 hours This is an update, added Feb. 2018. (I can't believe I forgot this important step when writing the original time line.) To make 42 partial flowers to fill in the gaps around the edges of the top, I cut fabrics, basted hexies, joined petals, and then stitched the partials into the gaps. To make the outer border, I made 522 individual hexies, stitched them into rows, and then stitched the rows onto the top. Step 8 - Sew Flowers into Small Groups - time: 90 hours To assemble the quilt top, I grouped 8-12 flowers, and whip-stitched them into a solid piece. There were 30 pieces, which took about 3 hours each to complete. Step 9 - Sew Small Groups Together to Complete Quilt Top - time: 123 hours I first sewed the small groups into rows, then stitched the rows together. As the sections got larger, the stitching took longer, making it difficult to estimate the time with total accuracy. I did a couple of time tests at different stages of the process in order to figure the above total. I completed this step on March 1st, 2013, one year after basting the first hexie. Step 10 - Iron/Starch Top, Remove Papers and Basting Stitches - time: 33 hours Removing all the basting stitches and papers took a lot longer than I would have guessed. But when I look at the pile of basting threads, it begins to make sense. Step 11 - Assemble Quilt Layers, and Baste - time: 12 hours Christy and Lunnette helped me layout the back, batting, and top on the floor; then baste in a 4 inch grid. I think we pinned it first, then basted, then removed the pins. On our knees for most of the time, it sure was wonderful to have their help! Step 10 - Quilt and Embroider the Flower Centers - time: 70 hours Choosing a floss in a similar color to each flower center, I embroidered a flower. Intentionally, some of the stitches act as quilting stitches, while others slip between the layers and don't show on the back. Around the edges of the quilt, it took about 15 minutes per flower center. Toward the middle of the quilt, it took about 20 minutes per flower center. Step 11 - Quilt Flower Petals - time: 106 hours Quilting around the petals of each flower requires turning the quilt 270 degrees for each petal, which is why it takes at least 20 minutes per flower, longer toward the middle of the quilt when the whole weight of the quilt must be constantly shifted. There are 238 whole and 42 partial flowers. I'm figuring an average of 25 minutes per whole and 10 minutes per partial flower. Step 12 - Quilt Around White Rings - time: 65 hours Like quilting the flower petals, quilting around the outside edge of each of the 130 white rings requires turning the whole quilt as I work, which adds a lot to the time it takes. I believe quilting the entire top in a diagonal grid of straight lines would take about half the time it takes to follow the curved, zig-zagging path of the hexie flowers, leaves, and rings. Step 13 - Quilt Around Each of the Leaves - time: 79 hours Not only does this step require turning the quilt as I stitch 360 degrees around each leaf, it also requires knotting and burying the tail at the start and finish of each leaf. Also I'm changing color of thread to more or less match the fabric color for each set of 4 leaves. Around the edge, it takes about 9 minutes per leaf; toward the center 11 minutes per leaf. There are 474 leaves total, at an average of 10 minutes/leaf. Step 14 - Assemble Hexies for the Border Facing - time: 37 hours To face the double (print + blue) border on the back of the quilt requires 522 hexies. To sew them together, forming the border strips, takes about 1 hour per 14 hexies. Step 15 - Trim Backing and Batting; Blind-stitch Facing to Border - time: 13 hours There are 264 hexies around the outside edge of the quilt top. Since I have not done this step yet, the time estimate (blind-stitching 20 hexies together per hour) is somewhat rough. Step 16 - Remove Paper Pieces and Basting from Border and Facing - time: 10 hours Again, since I have not done this step yet, the time estimate is based on the time it took to remove paper pieces and basting threads from the quilt top. Step 17 - Blind-stitch Facing to Quilt Back - time: 13 hours Step 18 - Quilt Around Print Fabric Border - time: 13 hours Step 19 - Blanket Stitch Around Outside Edge of Quilt - time: 10 hours * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Total Time to Complete Hand-Piecing the Quilt Top: 873 hours This is equivalent to nearly 20 weeks or 5 months on a 40 hours/week job. It took me a year. Mostly the time flew by as I basted and hand-stitched the little hexies together. Always there was a new print to enjoy, a new stack mounting in size to admire, a growing quilt top to thrill me. Total Time to Complete Hand-Quilting: 428 hours Since this job isn't completed yet, the time is only a rough estimate, based on the times it took to do some of the already completed steps. In all, hand quilting will take the equivalent to 10 or 11 weeks of full-time work. I find the quilting rather very boring. After taking a break for more than a year, I started working on it again and hope to be finished by August this year. Audio books are the answer to the tedium for me. Total Time, Start to Finish: 1,301 hours With Steps15-19 still to complete, the total is a rough estimate. Still, it is obvious that making a quilt like this, start to finish, requires more than 1,300 hours or the equivalent of over 8 months of full time work. If I were to be paid only minimum wages (2015, Seattle, WA - $11/hr.), the cost of the quilt would be $14,311 + about $500 in materials, or a total of $14,800. Good thing I intend to keep and use it myself! UPDATE, July 4, 2016 By June, 2015, I completely finished one corner, an area big enough to photograph so I could submit an entry form to the 2015 La Conner Quilt Festival, sponsored by the La Conner Quilt & Textile Museum. On August 7th, 2015, I received notice that it was juried into the show. Wow! That sent me into high gear for sure. After working non-stop, 7 days a week, and an average of 10 hours per day, I inserted my needle into that quilt for the last/final time on Aug. 24th, 2015, just days before delivering it to the museum. It took me 3 years and 3 months, start to finish! I was surprised, honored, and incredibly pleased to find out it won the Curator's Award of Excellence, one of the top awards, which then qualified it to be shown at the museum for the month following the Festival. Note, the finished size is 71 x 93 inches, and there are 4,700 individual hexagons in it. Big work for both hands, but sooooo satisfying! In fact it was so satisfying that I've started another hexie quilt... Can you believe it? So far, I've made 733 hexie flowers for it! Although they are the same size hexies, there are no reproduction fabrics and the arrangement will be anything but traditional. Don't know why I love the hexagon shape so much... but it's certain that I do. Full Article grandma's flower garden grandmothers flower garden hand piecing hand quilting hexagon quilt hexies
r Exhibition of my Beadwork! By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2015 19:36:00 +0000 Bringing my beadwork to the Museum Many, many moons ago, when I first started beading, I made an important decision about my future beading career. I decided not to be in the business of selling my beadwork. That’s a huge and somewhat uncommon decision for an artist, because most feel that in order to justify the time it takes to do beadwork and the cost of materials, it has to be sold. Many also take sales of their work as a marker of their skill as an artist… “if it sells, then I am an artist; if I sell lots of it, then I am a successful artist; if a gallery takes my work, then my work is good,” etc. Demonstration prior to the Opening on April 1st. My dear friend, Liz, drove to La Conner for the opening! Those are tempting thoughts, aren’t they?! However, I had previously been a metalsmith, making one-of-a-kind silver and gold jewelry for 5 years. During those years, I experimented with various methods of selling my jewelry – craft fairs, home shows, commissions, galleries – and found that I hated all of them. Marketing my work, talking about it, looking in people’s eyes as they walked by my booth without stopping, answering questions about how I made something, knowing the person asking was also a metalsmith and might copy my ideas – all of that was like a millstone around my neck, depressing, daunting, and no fun at all. So, when beadlust jumped in my heart, I almost immediately decided I would not sell my work. Instead, I would make my living by selling beads and beading supplies, teaching others how to bead, and writing books about beading. It’s been a great pathway for me, almost always fun, challenging, exciting – and, it has paid my bills and given me the means for many beady adventures. To be sure, I have sold some of my beadwork, especially jewelry, here and there. But it’s always when opportunity comes to me, not when I’ve struggled to be accepted for a show. Twenty-seven years later, I am looking back down my beaded pathway with great satisfaction, pleased as punch about my initial decision. Twenty-seven years later, I also own a substantial stash of beaded objects that I’ve made over the years – beaded jewelry, bags, books, dolls, wall art, sculptures, and quilts. While many of them decorate my studio and home, some live in boxes, stored away in cabinets. I feel a bit guilty about those poor babies. Shouldn’t I get them out, brush the dust off, and sell them? Oh yeah, I forgot, I hate selling/promoting my beadwork. All of the above is to introduce a fabulous and unexpected opportunity that came my way recently… The curator of the La Conner Quilt & TextileMuseum contacted me to ask if I would be willing to exhibit my beaded quilts and other beadwork in a one person show at the museum for the month of April, 2015. WOW! Would I be interested? You bet I would!!!! Twenty-eight pieces! Once I cleared the pieces for the show out of my studio, the nearly empty walls and display counter was depressing. Guess what happened? I opened up those boxes, and brought out things I hadn’t ever displayed, or at least hadn’t displayed for a long time. What great fun to see them every day this past month! I love it! Two days ago the show closed (waaa), and my work is back home again. Here it is, all piled up on my studio tables. Nice to have it home; not so nice to decide which pieces go back into boxes. Exhibition closed - beadwork back home again And then there is the question of what is to become of it in the long run. I am 72 years old. It might be time to start thinking about that. Some will go to my beady friends, and some to my nieces and nephews (if they want it). And, I’d die happy if I knew that some of the best pieces were in the permanent collection of a museum or two. Rosie, The Uncaged Hen, for example should be in a museum, don’t you think? Rosie, The Uncaged Hen Having the show in La Conner, seeing my work so beautifully displayed there, gives me the energy to start thinking about the future of my beadwork, to make a list of my all the pieces, place an "insurance value" on them, and start talking to acquisition curators about it. Although the idea of this task seems a little like “selling my work,” the show in La Conner makes it worth the effort. La Conner Quilt & Textile Museum Full Article art quilts bead art exhibition bead business plan Bead Embroidery Bead Jewelry beaded quilts beadlust Beadwork Quilt Museum
r Finished "Chicks" Quilt (Sue Spargo Wool Applique) By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Tue, 12 May 2015 22:30:00 +0000 A week of finishing!!! Oh my, it feels good to finish things, doesn't it?! Last October, I started the applique process, stitching chick bodies and wings cut from felled wool onto the wool background fabric. Seven months later, 16 chicks, embroidered with threads and beads, run free! Please click the picture to enlarge it, so you can enjoy the fanciful details. If you are new to this process, you can see the various steps and pictures of the chicks on these posts. Of course, they are inspired by Sue Spargo's exhibit at the La Conner Quilt Museum, by her book, Creative Stitching, and by taking a one-day class from her to get me going. Along the way, other books, embroideries, and drawings also inspired me. As you might guess, most of the chicks have at least a few beads. Here is one with the main motif embroidered with beads. And, here is one with just a few beads, the center of the "flowers," and one with no beads at all. Also note that I've quilted the piece with Danish Flower Thread in a shade which closely matches the background color. At first, I thought it would be pleasing to embellish the areas between the chicks with flowers, vines, and leaves using three close shades of the background color. Here is an example. It looks OK when you look at just four chicks with the flower/vine motif in the center. But when I had finished 6 of the areas (sorry no photo), some of them with larger spaces and larger vines/leaves, it looked too busy. It took away from the chicks. I couldn't tell if I was supposed to look at the chicks or the flowers. So I picked out the vines and leaves, leaving just the flowers, which weren't such a distraction. After sewing on the binding, the chicks seemed to need a little warming around them. So I added a line of stem stitch in variegated pearl-cotton in a magenta color. It pleases me! Oh, and one more thing... This is a quilt, designed to hang on the wall, with lots of details to enjoy as you view it up close. But what happens to wool felt when it is out in the open? MOTH DAMAGE and DUST are the enemies. My solution? Find, buy, or have somebody make a wall-mounted display case, with a hinged door. Hang the quilt inside the case, which remains closed except when somebody wants to take a closer look. The above, found on the internet, is close to what I have in mind, with a white background of course. What's next in chick-land? Well, my dear niece just got married... Here is the start of her wedding gift... I'll post a finished photo soon. Full Article applique art quilts Bead Embroidery display hand quilting Quilting Sue Spargo thread embroidery wool
r "Square Dancers" - Shimmer Quilt By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Sat, 16 May 2015 08:10:00 +0000 Kitty Sorgen, quilter extraordinaire, and Jenny Bowker, the pattern developer, are to blame for this madness! Shimmering Triangles Jenny calls it, and shimmer it does. In fact, it can be over done to the point where it's difficult to look at. But not Kitty's... Kitty, a member of our local guild and the best colorist I know, brought her shimmer quilt to Wednesday night quilting a few months ago, and WHAMMMO! I fell in love, bonkers, totally in love with her quilt. This isn't a great photo, but here it is, Kitty's shimmer quilt... It's so complex, at first I couldn't even figure out what was a block, squares looking like diamonds, color everywhere, blending in some places, shimmering in others. That day, on the spot, enough of us signed up and paid, filling a one-day class instantly. The class was on Feb. 21, 2015. Most of the students got a block finished in class, some even finished two blocks. Each block is 16" square (finished), and has 69 pieces. Below is one block, showing the construction of it. Me? Nope. I didn't sew a stitch. Long after the other students had finished arranging their fabrics on the design wall, I was still struggling with the concept, of how to get shimmer, but not too much shimmer, still arranging my fabrics (photo below). It was really difficult to imagine what would shimmer, what might be too contrasty and shimmer too much (for my taste), and what would have too little contrast and thus not shimmer at all. At home, I laid it all out on my work tables again, rearranging and rearranging the fabrics over and over again. The trick, in my opinion, is to work the diagonals. I began with a layout of focal fabrics, in my case "painterly floral prints," leaving space between them for the companion fabrics. Then choose companion "read as solid prints," placing them at the corners of the focals. Like Kitty, I decided to repeat the companions diagonally between two focals. I don't know if this even makes sense, but maybe you can see it in the layout above. Silly me, I thought sewing it, once I got all the fabrics placed, would be a piece of cake. NOT! Well, technically speaking, sewing it is OK. Although it does take some time and attention to detail to get all the half-square triangles square, and the points nice and pointy. But cutting the triangles is another matter. To make the colors and shapes flow, it's important to blur the line of the focal square by blending the design/color outward through the half-square triangles. Above is an example of one that worked pretty well, because you can only barely discern the square of focal fabric in the center of the block. And here is some fabric I turned into Swiss cheese trying to get triangles that would bring the focal fabric design outward, tricking they eye, making it look like a diamond rather than a square. (Sorry, I didn't take a picture of that particular finished block.) I make the half square triangles using paper piecing, with a free, downloaded template printed on 16 pound copy paper. Paper piecing has a learning curve, yes, but it does make for very accurate piecing, such that I didn't have to trim any of the finished blocks at all! Here is a picture of four finished blocks. You can see the way the companion fabrics repeat diagonally to form a 4-patch block between the focal fabrics. These two fabrics need to be close in value and color. If there is too much contrast, it draws the eye away from the focal fabrics and shimmering triangles. In the case above, I think the orange and pink contrast a little too much. Also on the left the lighter and darker green is also a bit too contrasty. Fabric choices are difficult and important... Any one companion fabric has to work with two focal fabrics and the adjacent companion fabric, which in turn has to work with it's two adjacent focal fabrics. Sound complicated and challenging? It is! It took many days (lost count) to finish the first half of the blocks (10 of 20)... and many more to finish the last 10 blocks... a bit character building. Many times, I told promised myself I would never do paper piecing or make another shimmer quilt again in my whole life! Here I've finished all 20 blocks. I've moved all the furniture out of the studio, and put it on the floor to "audition" border fabrics. Most of the shimmer quilts I've seen do not have borders, but I wanted to make it a bit bigger so it could be used for a bed quilt. This is how it looks all finished, before quilting it, 90 x 74 inches. Since the throat of my old machine is much too narrow to free-motion quilt a piece this size, I decided to get a professional to quilt it. But first I agonized some about how to do it. At first I thought it would be good to fussy quilt, making flowers in the companion fabric areas and vertical vines with leaves over the focal fabrics. This was my sketch for the idea. But then I saw a few quilts done like that, and the fussy quilting looked too busy, competing too much with the shimmer. So finally, I decided on using a double-leaf, free-motion edge-to-edge design. I named my quilt Square Dancers, because of the colorful costumes, movement, and squares. Now that it's finished, guess what? I started gathering fabrics for my second shimmer quilt. I want a spring-summer quilt for my bed in softer, lighter colors. It needs to be bigger than the first one, at least 36 blocks, to work on a queen size bed. Here are some of the fabrics I've found so far: These are mostly designs by Philip Jacobs, one of the Kaffe Fassett Collective designers. I love his colors and designs! I will use other fabrics in my stash, but more than half of the 36 focals will be like these. It will be fun to try this again, to apply what I've learned on the first one, to try to improve my fabric choices, always with the goal of some shimmer (but not too much) and good flow throughout the quilt. I'll also try to pick up my speed a bit, without sacrificing accuracy in the piecing. Expect a post about #2 shimmer quilt in a couple of months. Right now, I'm still gathering fabrics. Full Article design paper piecing Quilting shimmer
r Beading + Quilting - a Happy Marriage! By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Wed, 20 May 2015 18:38:00 +0000 It sure was a lovely surprise one day last fall when a representative from the Bead&Button Show called to ask if I would be interested in sending my beaded quilts for exhibition at the 2015 show in Milwaukee, WI. Would I be interested? Of course I would!!! But since I'm more of a beader and don't have that many beaded quilts, I suggested they also contact my brother, Thom Atkins, who has made a mind-boggling number of beaded quilts in the last 10 years or so. Brother-sister exhibition... how fun is that! You can see all 22 quilts in the Artisan Area of the Exhibition Hall if you're attending the show, May 27 - June 8. For those who can't make it, here are my quilts, the ones in the show. When you click on the first picture, you can see a slide show with full-size pictures. It's really special how,in recent years, quilters are interested in beads, and beaders are playing with quilting, both finding ways to expand their creativity! And it's super fun to show with my bro! Full Article bead art exhibition Bead Embroidery Bead Journal Project Bead&Button show beadlust Beadwork hand quilting Quilting thread embroidery
r Wool Applique + Thread Embroidery + Beads = Happy Quilts!!! By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Thu, 24 Sep 2015 02:36:00 +0000 Oh dear, busy me, four months since I've posted here. Lots of quilting, a little beading, some travels, and recently several sets of house guests have made "retirement" a bit of a joke. For now, since the La Conner Quilt Festival is just around the corner (October 2-4), my subject is one small exhibition on the first floor at the Museum, which is currently up, and will remain through the Festival. Last year at the Festival (and again this year!) Sue Spargo taught workshops on her wool applique embroidery methods. Those of us who were lucky enough to get in were invited by the Museum to exhibit our finished pieces. These marvelous creations are the subject of this post. Uneven lighting makes it difficult to get good photos, so please forgive poor color or tone on some of these photos. In case you are unfamiliar with Sue's work, below is an example of her work. Students in her class could choose to make chicks, circles, or flowers. Most chose the chicks. Eight of her students are showing their work in the current exhibit. My vote for the most awesome-creative piece goes to Bunny Starbuck for She Has Flown the Coop! Here it is: Having put my chicks all in neat rows similar to Sue's example, I find it amazing that Bunny's mind took the idea and made a whole different story of it... a coop full of chicks, with two in line on the roof ready to follow the one already in the air. Don't you just love the way the lines divide the space?! Note Bunny's use of whispy yarn to suggest little chick feathers, her use of snaps for eyes, the one chick turned full front, the one with a bead-tassled braid and glasses, and the one with beaded loop fringe and a gathered yellow ribbon (?) yo-yo. I love them! I'm in awe, Bunny! Below is Chicks on Parade by Dorie Benson. It's so fun the way they are so close together, with two of them going in a different direction, just as you might see in a little cluster of chicks. If you click the photo to enlarge it, you can see some of Dorie's excellent stitching and hand quilting! The next one is Chicks by Glenys Baker, who not only did all 36 chicks but also made a second quilt featuring circles (shown further down). Awesome work, Glenys! And next is Birds of a Feather Can Dance Together by Lorraine Jones. The fun of the title is matched by the fun of Lorraine's embellishments, including her border treatment. (You'll have to see this one in person, because the light from a table lamp, made the lower corner of the photo look terrible.) I guess most of us like to "swim the other way," as you can see in the next piece, Chickadees, by Carrie Unick. I thought many of Corrie's embellishments were especially fun and creative, so I've also included a couple of detail photos. Last of the chicks is my piece, simply named Chicks. It was so much fun, that I made another small piece (also in the exhibition), shown at the top of this post. Both are displayed in shadow-box type frames to protect them from dust and moth damage. Glenys Baker, in one year, made not only a 36-chicks quilt (shown above), but also a 48-circles quilt, Circles. How she keeps thinking of new embellishment variations I can't imagine. Yet each of her circles is completely unique! Her choice of border fabrics is perfect for the quilt, complimenting the flow of color among the circles. I love the fun color combinations and the way the beads enhance her embroidery on Nancy Anders' Bodacious Blooms, a joyful wall quilt if ever there was one! (Again, I couldn't quite get the color right in the photo, so you'll just have to go to the Museum to see it in person.) The name of Roberta Roberts' flower quilt, Memories, invites us to look closely at the flower with three ladybugs. I don't know the story, but I can tell there is one here... and I love that. Her embellishments are varied and fun as well. There you have it... 10 quilts by 8 students who learned some methods of wool applique and embroidery from Sue Spargo, last year at the La Conner Quilt Festival. I'm so grateful to be one of them! Full Article applique Bead Embroidery exhibition hand quilting La Conner Quilt Museum Quilting Sue Spargo thread embroidery wool
r What! Again? Another Hexie Quilt Started?! By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Mon, 28 Sep 2015 20:54:00 +0000 If you're a Beadlust reader, you know I worked for three years (more than 1,300 hours) to hand piece, hand embroider, and hand quilt Mama's Garden, with 4,700 3/4-inch hexies, a true labor of love. A big push this spring got it finished in time to enter into the International Quilt Festival in La Conner, WA. Hooray, hooray, the judges accepted it into the show!!!! This coming weekend, October 2-4, all you quilting enthusiasts will find it rewarding to make the effort and get to La Conner (WA) for the Festival, where you will see an excellent selection of quilts and fiber arts, plus a variety of interesting vendors! Here is the information. Head first for Maple Hall, a huge 2-story building, filled with quilts, at the corner of 1st Street (the main drag) and Douglas Street! Bring your camera, because photos are allowed (at least in the past they were). What do you think? After all those hours, would it be crazy to even THINK about making another hexie quilt, another one with 3/4-inch hexies? Well, then I guess I'm crazy, because the irresistible call of the hexie hooked me again. And why not re-use the same paper pieces? This one will not be traditional, and will definitely NOT be hand quilted. It will be hand pieced, using small left-over fabrics (I refuse to call them scraps), cotton prints (but not batiks). I have no idea how I will arrange them, how big it will be, or anything else about how this new project will develop. The first step was to cut out sets of 2" x 2" squares (6 per set) to make flower petals. So far, I've cut about 130 sets. Here are 80 of them, ready to baste onto the 3/4" paper hexie pieces. From very small pieces, I cut single 2" x 2" squares to make flower centers. These I've already basted to the paper hexie pieces. After basting some of the petals and centers, I started choosing centers for the petal sets. This part is fun! I enjoy "auditioning" various centers until one of them seems right. I'm avoiding high value contrast between petals and centers, because I might want to do a color study with them (no borders). When the urge gets really strong, I allow myself to start stitching the hexies together to make flowers. This quilt will probably have about 650 flowers! I've cut 130 so far, each different. I cut flower petals from all of my small pieces, every one. My preference is to have all 650 flowers different. Sooooooo, if YOU have some small fabric pieces you'd be willing to donate, I'd love to have part of you in my quilt. This is what I need: For petals - 2" x 12" strip, or 4" x 6" piece For centers - 2" square (only one per fabric design) Quilting weight cotton prints only, no batiks. One petal set per fabric design (no duplicates). Prefer small to medium scale prints. Mail to: Robin Atkins 1785 Douglas Road #4 Friday Harbor WA 98250 THANK YOU!!!!! Full Article exhibition grandmothers flower garden hand quilting hexagon quilt hexies La Conner Quilt Museum paper piecing quilt festival Quilt Museum thread embroidery
r Quilters, Beaders, and Embroiders are the World's Most Generous People! By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Fri, 09 Oct 2015 05:09:00 +0000 The quilting community is awesomely generous!!! Thanks to all who have sent me scraps for making hexie flowers: Lunnette Higdon Hertel Judy Lynn Nancy Anders Kris Phillips Carol Holland Bobbi Pohl Debbie Schnabel Sue Shufel Phyllis Petersen Thom Atkins Sabine Keichel Yvonne Morrill Sylvia Griffin Christmas Cowell I really understand and appreciate that it takes time to sort through your scraps, selecting some that you feel might work for me, packing them to send, getting them to the post office. In some cases, you even took time to cut them into 2" squares for me... WOW! Bless your hearts! The most interesting thing is that all the fabrics I've received so far are ones I might have picked myself, yet so far there are no duplicates. As of Oct. 19th, I have cut petal sets for about 650 flowers (from my own scraps and fat quarter stash, as well as scraps I've received from other quilters), all of them unique! That's about 90% of what I need to make the quilt, and certainly enough to keep me busy for a looooooong time. It will probably take me a year or so to baste and stitch all of the flowers, although I admit to going at it with a lot of gusto. Full Article hand quilting hexagon quilt hexies scrap stash thank you
r Tips for Cutting Fabrics for a Hexie Quilt By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Fri, 09 Oct 2015 06:50:00 +0000 I'm making 3/4" hexies, which means each of the six sides measures 3/4 of an inch. For these I need to cut 2" squares. (At the end of this post there is a table showing the size of fabric squares that corresponds to each of the standard sizes of hexie paper pieces.) To make each hexie flower, I need 6 squares for the petals and 1 square for the center. This is how I cut them. The first thing I do, is sort my scraps into piles by size. The easiest to work with are strips. These I iron, sort by approximate width, and stack 6 strips high, aligning the top and right side edges. Then I cut each stack of 6 strips to exactly 2" wide by slightly more than 14" long. From each one of the strips, I will get one set of petals and one center. After cutting 5 stacks of strips (a total of 30 different fabrics), line them up next to each other as shown above, and cross-cut 2" squares through all of the strip piles at once. Now, pick up the piles of 2" squares, and place them in stacks, alternating the orientation as shown above. Next, use dressmaker's shears to trim the corners off of each of the piles. Each pile has 6 fabrics, so you are trimming 6 at a time. Re-stack them as shown above. Note that there are only 6 piles in each row. The 7th pile in each stack, I have set aside to use for centers. These I keep separate from the petal sets, selecting a center for each petal set later in the flower-making process. The final step is to separate each of the piles into 6 separate piles, one for each of the fabrics. You will end up with 30 singles piles, or petal sets, each with 6 of the same cut and corner-trimmed fabric, enough to make 30 hexie flowers. Certainly there are other, and even possibly more efficient ways to cut fabrics for hexies, but this way works well for me. Some quilters recommend using the squares without trimming the corners. I tried it that way, but went back to corner-trimming because I like not having the extra bulk toward the centers of each hexie. I'm especially glad I trimmed the corners on my Grandmother's Flower Garden hexie quilt, because it was that much less to stitch through in the hand-quilting process. Sometimes, the fabric scraps are not strips, or would more effectively be cut as a chunk rather than strip. Basically it's the same process. I stack 6 different fabrics, aligning the top and right hand edges. From this stack, I cut a 4 x 6 inch block, and then cut that in half to make two 2 x 6 inch strips. I align the strips the same way as the 14" strips above, cross-cutting several at one time, and finish the same way as described above. Fabric Cutting Guide for Different Sizes of Hexies 1/4" hexie --- cut 1" squares 1/2" hexie --- cut 1-1/2" squares 3/4" hexie --- cut 2" squares 1" hexie ------ cut 2-1/2" squares 1-1/4" hexie - cut 3" squares 1-1/2" hexie - cut 3-1/2" squares 2" hexie ------ cut 4-1/2" squares 3" hexie ------ cut 6-1/2" squares 4" hexie ------ cut 8-1/2" squares 6" hexie ------ cut 12-1/2" squares A very handy, and more complete cutting guide is available from Paper Pieces, which is where I get my pieces. Nope, I don't cut my own; too boring, and I really like the precision of die-cut paper pieces! For a lot more helpful tips on making a hexie quilt, please see these posts: Grandma's Flower Garden - 3/4 Inch Hexie Quilt - Time Study Hand Quilting a Hexie Quilt Hexie Quilt - Embroidery Quilting in Flower Centers Hexie Quilt - Paper Pieces are GONE + Tips Hexie Quilt - To Fix or Not to Fix Hexie Quilt Top - Almost Finished Hexies Galore - Grandma's Flower Garden Grandma's Flower Garden Quilt - I'm Doin' It! Full Article cutting fabric hexagon quilt hexie flowers hexie quilt hexies Quilting tips tutorial
r Brother & Sister: Both Quilters & Beaders By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Sat, 14 Nov 2015 05:39:00 +0000 My brother, Thom Atkins, is a very talented quilt and bead artist! He's written a popular book about how to make beaded quilts. Recently he sent me a wonderful birthday present - a box of his scraps to use for making hexie flowers for my in-progress, hand-pieced, hexie quilt. Forty-nine different fabrics makes quite a stack of flowers. Here they are again, this time arranged on a flat surface (click photo to enlarge for details). It's way fun to play with the flowers, re-arranging them in different ways, re-stacking them, and then spreading them out again. All the while I was cutting, basting, and stitching these flowers I was thinking about Thom, about our history and our mutual love of stitching. I recognized most of the fabrics. One was in a quilt we made 19 years ago for our mom's 80th birthday. Some were from blouses, dresses, shirts he made for himself and his wife. Some were from pillows and other home decor he made for their home. Some were from his early quilts. Most of them brought up a ton of memories for me! I always like (and sometimes love) things that Thom makes, and yet I've also noticed when we are in a fabric store together, we do not gravitate toward the same fabrics. I wouldn't have guessed that I would use almost every one of the fabric scraps he sent. There were a few that were too glitzy, had a stronger metallic look than I like. But 90% or more could have come from my own stash. That's how much I like them.... leaving me to conclude that we are more alike than I thought. Here we are as kids... book ends. Me 16 months older than him. What's it like when brother and sister, close in age, are both quilters and beaders, both of us entering our quilts in shows, both of us teaching workshops and writing books? Are we competitive? A little, but not very much in my opinion. I admit to being a little "nervous" when he took up bead embroidery a few years after I make it the focus of both my art and my career. In artistic matters, he has a quicker learning curve than I do, rapidly achieving excellence in any medium he tries. The fact that he likes bling and representational, while I like matte and symbolic, makes our work look different, which helps. We're also very different in our approach to quilt designing. While I am heavily influenced by traditional quilts, his quilts are all "art quilts." Most of his are heavily beaded, while mine are mostly not. Right from the start, he usually has a complete "picture" in his mind of what his quilt will look like when finished; whereas I rarely have a clue what mine will be like until I'm nearly finished with it. Nor have we had issues with our teaching. I mostly teach beaders, emphasizing bead embroidery techniques rather than projects. He mostly teaches quilters, concentrating on methods for sewing beads onto quilts. There are enough teaching opportunities for both of us to accept as many gigs as we can handle. What's the best thing about our mutual passions for beading and quilting? Well, we talk on the phone for hours at a time about our current projects. Our conversations would bore everybody else in our families to death, but for us it's exciting to share our ideas, challenges, and victories. We do it often! It seems each of us has always respected the artistic sensibility and skills of the other. It's great to have somebody you can count on to say, "That's really wonderful," when you show them your latest work. We also share information about photography, opportunities for showing our quilts, inspirations, promotion of our books, and countless other related things. We help each other to solve problems and to grow artistically. It seems pretty ideal; was it always like that? If you've read my first book, One Bead at a Time, available here as a free download, you know that Thom grew up favored to be the artist in the family, showing his talents at a very early age. My bend was more academic, although I had no clear pathway. After majoring in art in college, Thom rapidly became established as an artist. After majoring in English and psychology, I muddled around in a couple of careers for many years. I didn't discover my passion for beading or start to think of myself as an artist until I was 46 years old. Until then I always admired Thom's art, but didn't relate directly to him about it. I'm glad it is different now; glad we are both talented and creative... together! Full Article art quilts Bead Embroidery beaded quilts hexagon quilt hexie quilt One Bead at a Time Thom Atkins