Learning From My Art

Tacking my Shirts and Skirts quilt.

No one taught me how to make a quilt.  When a friend showed me the book from the Whitney Museum of the Gee’s Bend Quilts that were on display there from 2002-03,  we decided to make our own.

We were both out of art school for some years.  I had stopped making art, wondering if I would ever feel the pull to start again.

She lived on Long Island and I lived four hours away not far from our farm.  We started collecting fabric from thrift stores and when I would visit her I’d bring the Singer sewing machine my mother bought me for my twenty-third birthday and we spend the weekend making quilts.

The quilts I saw in that book, which I now refer to as my “bible” stirred something inside of me. Besides their striking colors and individualistic uniqueness, they shouted confidence and integrity. Each with its own voice, soft, or loud, they were all bold.

I know now that my reaction to those quilts was much the same as my reaction the first time I watched the Bennington Beledi Tribal Bellydancers.  It was that “in your face” attitude.  The quilts and the belly dancing each had something I didn’t have.  But once I had seen it, I wanted it.

Unlike myself, they were not afraid to be looked at, not afraid to be seen.   They knew their own worth and they didn’t care what anyone else thought.

I learned to make quilts by making them.  One piece, one quilt at a time, I figured it out as I went.

The idea of getting a quilting frame never entered my mind.  From the beginning, almost 20 years ago, when tacking my quilts,  I hung them from the ceiling and one by one pulled a needle with yarn through the three layers of quilt and tied it on the back.

A few years ago someone (I don’t even remember who) told me that she saw someone tacking a quilt by pulling the yarn through the whole quilt as if sewing it in giant basting stitches, then cutting and tying the yarn.

My first thought was that that’s not how I do it.  And then, for the most part I forgot about it.  Except sometimes when I was tacking my quilts, it would come to mind.

Then last month, when tacking my quilt I thought of it again.  And this time, instead of pushing the idea  away, I tried it.

Not only it is quicker, but it makes it easier to keep my tacking lines straight and evenly spaced.

I just pull the yarn through, from back to front and back again over and over as if sewing, then cut the yarn and tie it.

I think what amazed me most was how long it took me to do it.  I know it was my ego that held me back. I wanted to do it my way, even if it wasn’t the best way.

One of the things I have always loved about making my quilts is that I’m the only one who can make the judgement about what it is “right” and “wrong”.  Because I’m not following anyone’s rules by my own.

I’ve always had issues about people telling me what to do.  I don’t like it.  It’s one of the reason’s I do well working alone and running my own business.  But it also can stop me from taking good advice, from learning.

I don’t want to be the kind of person who can’t change.  And the more confident I am, the less defensive I’ve become.

My art has always taught me about myself.   If a person is being authentic, how can it not?

When I think of how long it took me to adopt this efficient way of tacking a quilt, I’m reminded that I don’t have to shut myself in a room away from other people and ideas to create.  Because I’m better at picking and choosing what works or feels “right” for me. Better at saying no, so I don’t have to hide and push people and ideas away.

And I’m better at saying “yes” when something is good for me, even if it still makes me a little uncomfortable.

Gratitude for XL Plaid

 

My new iron

Besides sheets, extra large men’s shirts have the biggest expanse of fabric with out seams.  (Some long skirts are great too, but most of them are sewn together in long triangle pieces)  I got this 100% cotton, Eddie Bauer XL plaid men’s shirt for $1.75 at the thrift store and what a gift.   Except every time I unbutton one of these shirts and iron it smooth, I think of the movie “Silence of the Lambs”.  I don’t really want to get into the details, it’s too awful, but I imagine there are others out there who have seen the movie and can make the connection.

I used to love horror stories and movies, but I can’t seem read or watch them anymore.  Maybe they are like coffee for me, I’ve  had my quota for this lifetime.  But I tend to think that the darkness I sought out  in the safe world of books and movies  was a reflection of the unacknowledged darkness within myself.  Once I really became aware of  and began to deal with my fears, anxieties, neurosis, and obsessions, I started to look for the brighter things in life. It was as if the horror stories no longer served any purpose.  I had been there, and I wasn’t going back.

So the next time I’m ironing an XL men’s shirt, I’ll say “No thank you” when “Silence of the Lambs”  comes to mind and instead be grateful to the man who donated his shirt to the thrift store.  And I’ll begin to change the dark pattern in my mind to one of gratitude.

Full Moon Fiber Art