Going to teach a 3 credit drawing course next semester and excited about it. Drawing has been part of many of the various courses I have taught in the past but I’ve never taught a straight drawing course—what luxury!
Schoodic Surf
Spinning
Was going through some old files this weekend and came across things from when I first started working with fibers. I had been given an old walking wheel that my grandfather said had been his mother’s in Nova Scotia, BUT. . . he always enjoyed a good tale and as the wheel had been made in NH by Azel Wilder, I have never been positive of it’s true provenance. Still, he had had it and I was excited to get it.
Great wheel by Azel Wilder from my Grandfather
Click Images for full view
Now I needed to learn to spin. My friend, Wallie, made sure of that. We lived in Philadelphia and she found a lecture in a library, “just over the bridge’, in NJ. Given by fiber artist, Pam Pawl, it was all about spinning and its cousin weaving. Out of that meeting, a group of us formed the South Jersey Guild of Spinners and Handweavers. I was the guild’s second president.
I got a drop spindle, hand cards and some wool and learned to spin. Next was sending to New Zealand for my Ashford Spinning Wheel kit which I sanded, finished and put together. We had meetings at members’ homes, held Sheep to Shawl festivals, weaving shows, and learned to dye our own fiber. I made wonderful friends and learned my way around South Jersey.
Along the way I acquired a 4 harness counter balance loom and began weaving. Later a small Harrisville loom and a large AVL loom joined my world. Samples of my weaving are on Flickr.
My first loom – had its limits but I loved it!
I’ve sold the AVL but still have the others. They are stored away but you never know. I still spin!
Newspaper clipping of a Spinning/Dying event we held. So much fun!
Loom has found a home
About 2 years ago I posted a single post announcing an old PA Barn Loom I had (in need of much repair) which I would gladly give to anyone willing to come get it.
Yesterday the loom left on its way to Kentucky with weaver, Ann Fife, to be restored and end up in Granville, TN where it will be used in weaving demos. Ann owns Ann’s Old Mill Restaurant in Fountain Run, Kentucky. —Also, check her out on Facebook!
Power of the Internet—I would never have found such a good home for this loom with out it!
Campobello-2013
Finally posting the paintings I did in Campobello this summer. This was my first experience with Plein Air and I loved it. These six paintings are the result of four mornings on Campobello and then many hours back in the studio. Not only did the light change as time went on and the tide go in or out as I worked but on several days the famous Fundy Fog would come and totally obliterate the view, leaving me with little or nothing to see. It was a challenge to analyze what I wanted to paint and develop that as the world changed in front of me.
The first image is the painting I started before the mist stole it away. Might just get hooked on mist for a while . . .
Workshop Paintings
Just uploaded images from my oil painting workshops, this winter/spring. View here.