Showing posts with label Elizabeth Barton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Barton. Show all posts

Sunday, February 5, 2023

Elizabeth Barton quilt in TCQC 02-05-23

Here is another of Elizabeth Barton's quilts, one that hangs frequently in my viewing spot so I can enjoy it every day.  It resurrects memories of lovely trips through England and Wales.

"Chimney Pots"  Elizabeth Barton - Georgia  2005  50"W X 39.5"L
Hand dyed, painted, stamped, screened, discharged fabrics. Cotton, silk, rayon, wool, furnishing fabrics. Machine raw edge and turned applique, machine piecing, machine quilting.

She utilized fabrics she had created herself, using many different techniques.  The fabrics are as interesting as the chimney pots, poised like a choir at the top of the quilt.

Elizabeth with some of her quilts in 2006.

You can watch an interview at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YgB1J6VpEk0

I don't know when this was recorded, but recently.

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Sunday, January 22, 2023

Quilts by Elizabeth Barton in Thomas Contemporary Quilt Collection 01-22-23

Here are two quilts by Elizabeth Barton that I posted in June of 2009.  She has lately been doing more painting that quilt making, but I recently saw pictures of an exhibit of both her paintings and quilts which opened today 01-22-23 at the Athens, GA, Botanical Gardens.  It will run until 03-05-23.  You can see more of her work at www.elizabethbarton.com  There are other Elizabeth quilts in TCQC, click on her name on the sidebar to see them.  


"Red Gate" Elizabeth Barton 2003 39"W x 63"L
Cotton fabrics - hand dyed, screen printed - Machine and hand pieced, appliqued & stitched.
This is one of several quilts Elizabeth has based on her pictures taken in Whitby, an old fishing village in Yorkshire, UK. She says in one of her artist's statements, "I love the signs of age on old buildings and steps - the soft signs of the wear of many feet - the way the roof lines gently curve and the houses lean together." The photo she used as inspiration was taken many years ago and she felt it haunting her - it was 30 years before she made this quilt.
I had a thick folder on Elizabeth Barton's work before I ever saw one of her quilts "in-the-fabric". I had been looking at two different quilts on her website and knew I would buy one of them. Then in 2004 San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles featured Elizabeth in one of their exhibits and both quilts were included. I drove up to see my friend Mary and we visited the museum. I knew immediately which quilt I would choose. Elizabeth felt that since I had actually seen the quilt first in San Jose that the museum should have their profit, which I thought was an amazingly generous thing to do. Since then I have purchased three more E.Barton quilts directly from her and coveted quite a few more! I also count her among my quilt making friends around the world. A very special lady.
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Sunday, June 21, 2009

Elizabeth Barton Quilt in TCQC 06-21-09

"The Gatehouse" Elizabeth Barton 2004 37.5"W x 24.5"L

This quilt was on Elizabeth's website and it 'spoke' to me loud and clear. The colors are so very appealing - red-orange, golden yellow, several greens and teal. And that wonderful slatted fence, which I think must be a silk screen as I have seen it in other quilts she has made.

She told me that it was a larger quilt that didn't work, so she trimmed huge strips off the sides - until it satisfied her. They also satisfied lucky me. Later, perhaps when I was in Georgia to take a class with her, she gave me one of the strips she cut off. When I show the quilt to a group I think it is educational to also show the 'discard'. We sometimes think that the entire quilt that we make must stay that way, however, I know of at least half a dozen quilt makers who have reduced the size of quilts, even after they are quilted. And in every case, I agree with the artist - a little judicious trimming has improved the quilt.


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Friday, September 3, 2021

Friday Feet 09-03-21

I am tired of Friday Food, so I will go back and repost some Friday Feet.  I really enjoyed doing feet for quite a long time, but since the pandemic started I don't go anywhere to see anyone's feet.  Just mine and KoKo's!   

This is one of my all time favorite feet image!  Have no idea who it is, or why they would take this picture and post it online.  Don't remember where I found it in 2013.


Men's feet aren't usually very interesting, so I don't have a lot of guys in my files.  This is the fellow who fixed the leak in my family room wall in Jan 2012.  A copper pipe with a tiny hole - after about 40 years.  Weird.  But he was nice and did a good job. 


And there are some famous feet in the archive.  This is Elizabeth Barton's right foot in 2006. 

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Sunday, January 10, 2021

Elizabeth Barton quilt in TCQC 01-10-21

Over the years I have tried to post a quilt from the Thomas Contemporary Quilt Collection (TCQC) on Sundays.  But I've let that slide recently.  So, maybe I need to take up that practice again.  This Elizabeth Barton quilt is one of half a dozen of her works in the Collection and I currently have it hanging in the family room where I see it from my recliner.  It is a calm quilt, something I need in my life these days.  

 THE GATEHOUSE Elizabeth Barton - Athens, Georgia 37” W x 27” L ©2005

Using photographs and memories of her childhood in England, Elizabeth created this image which suggests the gatehouse of a great estate. The fabrics she dyes, paints, screens, stamps and discharges, give the scene a dreamlike elegance and the yellow trees mark the time as autumn. This piece started out as a much larger quilt which Elizabeth felt needed cropping and it works as a more intimate view of a timeless English estate. Hand dyed, painted, stamped, screened, discharged fabrics. Cotton, silk, rayon, wool, furnishing fabrics. Machine raw edge and turned applique, machine piecing and quilting.

One special thing about this quilt is the fence, which Elizabeth has used in several quilts. It is, I believe, a silk screen and lends itself to many different applications, but it is especially nice as the fence in this quilt.
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Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Sunday, February 18, 2018

Re- posting of an Elizabeth Barton quilt 02-18-18

As you can see this quilt was first posted in 2009.  It is a mainstay of the collection and has been included in many exhibits and programs.  I still love it and hang it in my house and loan it to my quilt- loving friend at other times.  There are half a dozen of Elizabeth's quilts in the TCQC, every one a jewel.  

Elizabeth Barton's "Red Gate" 12-13-09

"Red Gate" Elizabeth Barton 2003 39"W x 63"L
Cotton fabrics - hand dyed, screen printed - Machine and hand pieced, appliqued & stitched.
This is one of several quilts Elizabeth has based on her pictures taken in Whitby, an old fishing village in Yorkshire, UK. She says in one of her artist's statements, "I love the signs of age on old buildings and steps - the soft signs of the wear of many feet - the way the roof lines gently curve and the houses lean together." The photo she used as inspiration was taken many years ago and she felt it haunting her - it was 30 years before she made this quilt.
I had a thick folder on Elizabeth Barton's work before I ever saw one of her quilts "in-the-fabric". I had been looking at two different quilts on her website and knew I would buy one of them. Then in 2004 San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles featured Elizabeth in one of their exhibits and both quilts were included. I drove up to see my friend Mary and we visited the museum. I knew immediately which quilt I would choose. Elizabeth felt that since I had actually seen the quilt first in San Jose that the museum should have their profit, which I thought was an amazingly generous thing to do. Since then I have purchased three more E.Barton quilts directly from her and coveted quite a few more! I also count her among my quilt making friends around the world. A very special lady.

Sunday, October 22, 2017

Re-visiting an Elizabeth Barton quilt 10-22-17

I posted this quilt previously on 03-22-09.


"Gathering Storm" Elizabeth Barton 2006 44"W x 26.5"L
Elizabeth was working on this quilt in August 2006 while she was Artist in Residence at the Empty Spools Seminar at Asilomar Conference Center in Pacific Grove, CA. By the end of the session I knew it needed to be in the TCQC. Elizabeth dyes/screens/creates all the fabric in her quilts; and I particularly love her shibori and the way she uses it in her quilts. The towns and buildings she creates are inspired by her native York, England, which she still visits and still photographs. I posted her quilt "Chimney Pots" in January 2009 and there are still two more of her quilts in the Collection.
Here is a detail showing both her hand quilting and machine quilting. She likes to use shiny threads to add a little sparkle and she also uses a variety of fabrics including silk chiffon and sateen.
You can see Elizabeth's quilts and read her Bio on her website:
She also has an exceptional blog:
 
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Thursday, June 2, 2016

Another Del quilt 06-02-16

"Raging River"  Del Thomas  2015  20"W x 16"L
Commercial cotton, batiks, hand-dyes.  Cotton batting, cotton thread.
This was part of Surfside Quilters Guild 2015 challenge titled "It Is All About The Water" and received the prize for best depiction of the theme.  Lucky me!  There were four challenge fabrics and I added the Marcia Derse "weeds", the darkest brown batik, the grey hills and another blue.   The sky is a hand-dye by Elizabeth Barton that I have had for a decade.   The yellow was required.
 
My curves are not all smooth, I've lost my skills while I have not been making many quilts.
 
I enjoy putting bright unexpected prints on the back of my quilts.  The quilt is faced rather than bound and this was the first time I tried a new template given to me by Deb Mackay.  It makes a better edge on the inside than the way I have done it before. 
 
Hope I have everything on the label.  Notice the little peeps at the bottom. 
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Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Program for SAQA SCalifornia/Nevada 08-04-15

I'm doing a daytime program for the SAQA members in SCalifornia/Nevada region on Saturday.  It is at a private residence in  Los Angeles, so I won't  put the rest of the info here. But if you are a SAQA member and would like to attend, send me an e-mail and I will reply with more information.   DELQLTS@aol.com  I will be talking more about techniques than  telling stories about the  quilts, although I won't be able to resist a few of those. Here is one of the  twenty or so quilts I will be showing.


 "Chimney Pots"  Elizabeth Barton - Athens, GA  2005 50"W x 39.5"L
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Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Design Inspiration 05-26-15

In May of 2006, oh-my-gosh 9 years ago, I went to Athens, Georgia for a design/dyeing class with Elizabeth Barton.  It was a memorable trip and a fond memory.  I was thrilled with the trees and their uncountable shades of green.  Where I sat in class the sun shone through the gingko tree, accenting the scalloped edges of the leaves.  I keep looking at them, hoping to come up with a workable design.   Someday!
 

 
 
 
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Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Busy, Busy, Busy 03-31-15

I haven't finished unpacking and putting away things from my trip to Empty Spools.  Other obligations demand my time.  I finished a little abstract quilt for the Visions Art Museum challenge which I need to turn in tomorrow.   And the rest of my day has  been spent at the computer working on the Surfside Quilters Guild newsletter which needs to be posted this week.  I had thought I would work on it at Asilomar, but too many other things going on.  Too much FUN! 

I also have to meet the every-ten-days-deadline for Elizabeth Barton's online Master class which is a real stretch for me - both the  projects and the deadlines.  For these first three months I have been the last one to send her my pictures on each deadline evening. Our April project is about Color - hope I can figure it out and get it in on time.

Rocky Surf in Monterey Bay
 

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

The World Blog Hop 12-02-14

Several weeks ago I was asked by Alison Schwabe to participate in the Round the World Blog Hop.  She suggested that instead of my creative work I talk about the Thomas Contemporary Quilt Collection.  Which consumes a great deal of my time these days.  I thought it would be a good chance to share.  The caveat was that I had to refer to two other bloggers who would follow me.  This Blog Hop has been going on for some months and although I tried over two dozen bloggers I follow with varying degrees of constancy, I could not find anyone who had not already done it or else was unwilling to take on what seems like an impossible challenge.  So, this branch of the World Blog Hop will end with me. 
To backtrack on the blog you can go to Alison’s blog: 
Or to go forward check out:
A couple other bloggers involved will lead you on different courses:

The instructions for the World Blog Hop say we should include:
 1. What am I working on?
 2. How does my work differ from others of its genre?
 3. Why do I write/create what I do?
 4. How does my writing/creating process work?"

But since I am talking about collecting I will come up with some new questions.
 1. How did I start collecting contemporary quilts?
 2. How has the Collection grown in the past almost 30 years?
 3. How do I choose additions to the Collection?
 4. What about storage and record keeping? 
 
1.  I was collecting antique and vintage quilt in the 70s, but in a rather unorganized way.  I still have those dozen or so quilts.  I had purchased three or four “contemporary” quilts, mostly at guild auctions, and went down to Vista in 1987 to see the first Visions quilt show.  It was an eye opening experience.  I was amazed that there were so many quiltmakers creating such artful work.  I immediately switched to collecting only what are now called “art quilts”.  My first major purchase didn’t happen until 1993 when I took a class with Ruth B. McDowell, whose work I had admired for a number of years.  Her quilt “Conversation on the Porch” (54”W x 37.5”L) came home with me and remains one of my most favorite quilts.

It is machine pieced (the old-fashioned way, right sides together, sewn, opened, pressed, sew on the next piece) and machine quilted.  You can see her current work at www.ruthbmcdowell.com

However, I consider the first piece in the Collection to be “Straight Furrow Log Cabin” by Judy Mathieson which I bought at auction in 1985. 


It is 20”W X 14”L and is constructed of raw silk which absorbs the light instead of reflecting it as would cotton, giving it a different feeling.  The Collection is “contemporary quilts” not “art quilts”, so there is a variety of styles, sizes, and techniques in the 288 quilts currently in the Collection
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2.  For years I have heard the expression “Two is a pair, three is a collection” and I suppose that is true.  Years ago someone asked if they could use some slides of TCQC quilts in a presentation they were preparing to do.  They needed a name for my collection and I decided on Thomas Contemporary Quilt Collection – if I had known how many times I would have to type it I might have just called it Thomas Quilts or even TQuilts!  Everything started in 1985 and there have been years I collect a few new pieces and years, such as 2014, when I added a dozen quilts.

3.  When I was purchasing the first quilts in the Collection I hadn’t thought about having a formal collection, I just bought quilts I liked.  Eventually I had to come up with some parameters for the additions.  First of all, the quilt has to “speak” to me – gain my attention and make me want to go back and see it again… and again…..  Secondly, can I afford it?  I am not independently wealthy, so I need to use some discretion when I consider the dent in my bank account.  Some quilts I love, but cannot afford.  Third, do I have a place to store it?  Quilts that are framed or stretched cannot be rolled or stacked easily, most requiring a carton or crate that I don’t have room for.  So, I only buy quilts that can be rolled and stored on shelves or stacked flat on shelves.  I have made some exceptions to this rule, but only a few small pieces.  One of which is “Discombobulated” created in 2002 by Jill Rumoshosky Werner (2”W  X 9yards L). 


Although this piece has all the requirements for a quilt – three layers, machine quilted, bound edge (with hand finishing) - it challenges viewers’ conception of quilts and quiltmaking.  It resides coiled in a box on a shelf.



The fourth consideration is a little difficult to define, let’s call it longevity.  Could I live with this quilt hanging on my wall?  If I could keep only one of the quilts would this be one possible choice?  Would it continue to hold my interest in another twenty years? “Chimney Pots” (50”Wx39.5”L) by Elizabeth  Barton  would certainly be high on my list.  She made it in 2005 utilizing fabrics she had created herself, using many different techniques.  The fabrics are as interesting as the chimney pots, poised like a choir at the top of the quilt.


  
I would also have to consider Linda Colsh’s “Ewe Alone” (26” square) which she made in 2007.  The mystery draws me back – why is she standing there in the snow, what is the building plan saying?



"Ewe Alone" DETAIL


Or perhaps the marvelously detailed “A Rash of Flamingoes” (100”Wx 52”L) made by Ruth McDowell in 2000. It is an amazing work of art and of sewing skills.  


4.   Back in 1985 I had not thought about having to keep records or how to store 288 quilts.  Although I have tried several programs specially made for quilt artists, I keep track of things on an Excel spreadsheet.  It isn’t the best way, but one with which I am familiar enough to make it do what I need to do.  Storage is handled in a variety of ways.  The 12”X12” are stored in Mylar sleeves in acid free boxes made to hold vinyl phonograph records – they are just the right size.  Medium sized quilts lay flat on shelves in the storage cupboard and larger quilts are rolled around “stuffies”, covered, tagged and stored on shelves in the storage cupboard. (The “stuffies” are described in Robert Shaw’s book “Art Quilts: A Celebration” published in 2005 by Lark Books.)  I keep files on each quilt, including info about where it has been shown and bios of the quiltmaker.  Someday the quilts will go to a museum and they will want to know as much as possible about each piece in the Collection. 

I continue to add works to the Thomas Contemporary Quilt Collection by looking at artist’s websites, attending exhibits and quilt shows and reading books about all types of quilts.  The Collection includes quilts from the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Belgium, Switzerland, England, France, Germany, Austria, Kenya, South Africa, and Egypt.

One of the most recent additions is “Summer Walk” 
(66”W x 29”L)  by Elizabeth Busch – it is the cover quilt for Quilt Visions 2014
“The Sky’s the Limit” and will continue on display at Visions Quilt Museum 
in San Diego until Jan 4th.




I do, by-the-way, make quilts myself, but have been preoccupied with TCQC for the past few years.  This past summer there were quilts from the Collection at the Texas Quilt Museum in La Grande, TX, and Ruth McDowell quilts at the Quilters Hall of Fame in Marion, IN.  I also do programs for quilt guilds and other organizations, showing and talking about art quilts and the Collection in particular.  DELQUILTS@aol.com

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If you are interested in participating in the World Blog Hop, just drop me an e-mail and I will send you the instructions. Sometime within the next week, please.  Del


Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Exhibit Entrance Vision Art Museum 10-29-13

I don't think it is right to show a lot of pictures before the exhibit even opens.  I showed a few installation shots the other day and tonight you are seeing the entrance to the gallery. 


"Red Gate" Elizabeth Barton - Athens, GA 2003  39"W x 63"L
Here is the copy from the Gallery Guide:

"Based on her pictures taken in Whitby, an old fishing village in Yorkshire, UK, near where she grew up. The inspiration photo haunted her - it was 30 years before she made this quilt.  Elizabeth uses her own artist created fabrics and has a unique style and technique that make her quilts easily recognizable.    Hand dyed cotton fabrics created by the artist.  Hand and machine applique, piecing and quilting."
Hope you can see the exhibit, it is fabulous!
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Sunday, May 26, 2013

Quilt National '13 05-26-13

This was the last day of the opening events for Quilt National 2013 in Athens, OH. What a great weekend it has been with so many of this year's artists attending.  Here are a few people pictures.


Karen Rips - Thousand Oaks, CA - with her quilt "High Water Mark" 29"W x 46"L
 

Del Thomas in front of Jan Myers-Newbury's "Tilt-a-Whirl" 89"w x 63"L 
One of the artists thought I looked perfect in front of this quilt and took a picture with my camera. 
 

Elizabeth Barton - Athens, GA - talks about her quilt "Legacy" (44"W x 62"L).
 

Kris Sazaki carried this great purse embellished with flattened bottle caps.

Elin Noble - New Bedford, MA - talks about her quilt "Fugitive Pieces 11" which won the Quilts Japan Prize.  45"w x 65"L

I'll be on the road heading home tomorrow, but haven't decided on a route yet. 
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Sunday, October 14, 2012

Elizabeth Barton quilt in TCQC 10-14-12

This small quilt was purchased at the San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles fundraising auction in 2010.   It is one of five of Elizabeth's quilts in the Collection and not even the smallest. 

 
"Village Street #1"  Elizabeth Barton - Athens, GA 2009  15.5"W x 13.25"L 
Hand dyed cotton shibori, rayon and cotton threads, cotton backing.
 
This detail shows the shibori dyeing and Elizabeth's machine quilting.
 
There is no label, instead she has hand stitched her name on the front...
 
...and also hand stitched the quilt title on the front.
 
The back shows the faced binding and the machine quilting. 
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Saturday, May 7, 2011

Happy Mother's Day and stuff 05-07-11

 
I hope you all have a lovely Mother's Day.

Yesterday's foot belongs to Elizabeth Barton.   I have some other "famous feet", but the pictures were taken before I had a digital camera.  Someday I will resurrect those pictures and scan them into my computer. 

I don't take many magazine these days.  Not just because I'd like to reduce the amount of trash I add to the world, but because I can't seem to part with them.  I still have full years of QNM, American Quilter, Threads, etc., which I rarely even dust anymore.  But last year I started taking the Machine Quilting Unlimited magazine and have enjoyed it a lot.  The newest issue, for May 2011, is full of great article by quilters I respect and admire.  I especially enjoyed the article by Jenny Bowker about her "Starter Scrap Quilting".  But there are also articles by Joan Sowada, Eileen Doughty, Carol Taylor, and others.   Editor Kit Robinson is doing a good job - Thanks!

Oh, I forgot yesterday to say that it was my 1300 post on this Blog.  Amazing.
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Friday, April 15, 2011

More April Program for Surfside QGuild 04-15-11

 This is pretty much an arbitrary selection of small quilts from the Collection.  I tried to select pieces that illustrate various techniques and styles.  I believe I have talked about all of these in my Blog on various Sundays - check for the artist's name in the sidebar for more information.

Top row:  Calla Lilly - Aileyn Renli Ecob 2009, Liberty - Kathleen McCabe 2009, Amidst the Fire - K.Grace Howes 2009,  4 fiber artist trading cards, Pomegranate #2 - Dijanne Cevaal 2006, Blue Butterfly - Bonnie Sabel 2009.
Middle row: I Know a Rhino - Ami Simms 2006, (below) Red Nest - Claire Fenton 2006, Tillamook Rooster - Terry Grant 2009, Oregon Junco - Terry Grant  2007, Fantasy Flowers 1 - Julia Zgliniec 2010.  


Top row: Boundary Waters #30 - Virginia Spiegel 2007, Checks & Bars Jumble - Sue Benner 2009, House - Sally Sellers 2007, Night Fire -  Elizabeth Barton 2007,
Bottom row: Vest Pocket Tour II - Joan Schulze 2001, Gentle Reminder - Linda Colsh 2008, Don't Piss Off the Fairies - Ruth Powers 2008, Happy Birthday, Del - Judy House  2003.

You might notice that all of these small quilts have been created since 2001.  Prior to that, artists did not make many small quilts and, to be honest, I wasn't interested in such small pieces.  Realistically, selling nine 12x12 quilts at $100/each is much easier than selling one 36" square quilt at $5000.  I would like to support as many quilters as I can, so I started buying smaller quilts that fit within my selection parameters. .     

This is the folding design board that Mabel Huseby created for me and I have enjoyed it and use it whenever I can.  It was an "ha-ah" moment when I discovered that the small quilts could be pinned up before I left the house and the board simply unfolded at a meeting to display the quilts.  I also pin up a short description of each piece.
The two slats slip out and then fit in the horizontal sleeves to hold the board rigid.  

Here is the board folded with the handle and the closing tabs on the left, fastened with Velcro over the edge.  If you are interested in the pattern for this Portable Design Board you can contact Mabel at mabelh2@msn.com