Overcome creative challenges with expert tips on starting with textile art, building a stitch practice, generating ideas, finding your voice, and realising your vision.
Cas Holmes is a textile artist loved by art teachers. Using techniques that can be replicated in the classroom, she is an ideal to use with students.
She brings the beauty of diverse Argentinian landscapes indoors.
◈ Unique wall fiber art scenery tapestries of different moods and seasons 2024 🖼️ ◈ Currently available in size S M L XL and XXL if you need a larger size or your own design, please contact me. I will be glad to help you 😊 ◈ Handmade wall hanging woven panel wall decor. The tapestry is made on a hand loom. 🧶 ◈ All tapestries are measured together with tassels and hanging stick. ◈ Please note that as this product is handmade, sizes and shades may vary slightly. The work is made by weaving using different weaving techniques and textures to create this unique tapestry. ◈ This handmade wall decor is made with love and imbued with positive intentions. We use traditional weaving techniques, acrylic, cotton and wool threads. All my work is done in a smoke-free and pet-free environment, so each wall hanging can be considered hyporallergenic 🍀 All the twigs I use are gathered from the ground and are the brunches that fell down naturally. ❤️For more lovely art work and kits please check: https://www.etsy.com/shop/HomeArtWeaving https://www.pinterest.co.uk/Oksana_Serotyuk/ Instagram : oksana_serotyuk
Hi I’m Hazel, I live in Cornwall. I moved down just before Covid, very lucky me! And spent lockdown cutting Cornish Landscapes and really getting into my printing. My background is. . .
Make a super-simple landscape art quilt with free-motion thread sketched embellishments, regardless of whether you’re a beginner or advanced.
Explore scalleja's 7476 photos on Flickr!
I’m not a sketcher or very good at drawing.but I do make some rudimentary sketches for most of my landscape quilts. These are very broad and simplistic ideas of the way I want the art quilt to flow and appear. Much of what I use the sketches for is to figure the proportions of the Read the full article...
Claire Louise Mather: Springtime, detail Textile artists and nature so often seem to go hand in hand. It is not always the case that textile artists have nature as their primary inspiration, but more often than not you will find the connection there, it is a connection of intent. There is something about the physicality of textile work that seems to draw artists time and again to the natural world as canvas. Sky, earth, ocean, and all the permutations between, have fascinated and continue to fascinate textile artists. There are so many interpretations and projections of the natural world, all of which are valid, intriguing, adding always to the burgeoning vocabulary that is contemporary textile art. Claire Louise Mather Claire Louise Mather: Memories of March One of those contemporary textile artists who have the natural world as a central pillar to their creativity, is Claire Louise Mather. Claire uses a combination of photography, collage, and textiles in her work in order to reflect on her own observations of nature. She is intrigued by all aspects of the natural environment, from the slow cycle of seasons, the constantly changing weather patterns, the slow grinding down of surfaces, all are part of the environment that she wishes to be part of, and in taking part, to also project back through her work, and out into the world of the viewer. Claire Louise Mather: April Dawn Claire often visits and revisits familiar spots in the environment in order to record and enjoy the changes that so often go unnoticed in the natural world. It is these changes that in many respects show us that we are alive, show us that movements are always cyclical, that birth is part of decay, and decay is part of rebirth. This is an artist that has photography as an integral part of her initial work. She uses the camera as an ongoing sketchbook, detailing experiences of surfaces, textures, landscapes both large and small, all of the details that go eventually to make up her compositions. Claire herself says that her work is "an exploration of drawing with stitch," one of constant experiencing of surfaces and textures. Texture, colour, and pattern are always visible in the artists work, and it is a combination that has no real end as each new composition is a new exploration, a new discovery of an always changing landscape. And that of course has to be the most exciting in its appeal to the artist, a landscape that both unfolds and renews within a constant cycle, giving an endless scenario of change and familiarity. Claire Louise Mather Claire Louise Mather: Yorkshire, detail With that in mind, enjoy the work of Claire as she both works through her fascination with, and intrigue over, the natural environments that she so effortlessly makes her own. More of Claire's work can be found at her comprehensive website: http://www.sewsaddleworth.com/ All of the imagery of Claire's work shown in this article were generously supplied by the artist. If you want to use the imagery elsewhere please ask her before doing so. Thanks. Claire Louise Mather: View From Long Lane
by Misik Kim I saw the image of Lin's challenge, that comes to mind first was gray color. I felt comfortable, like the landscape of t...
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