Showing posts with label Nelda McComb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nelda McComb. Show all posts

Monday, September 20, 2021

A Whisper Quilt Project 09-20-21

A Whisper Quilt project is like the childhood game of "Whisper" where the 1st child sitting in a circle whispers something to the second child.  She then repeats the whisper to child number three, who in turn whispers it to number four and so on around the circle.  It was great fun to see how much the whisper had changed when it came back to the first child.  With quilters the first person in the privacy of her sewing space makes a small quilt and then shows it to the second person, letting them keep it until the second person has made a quilt based on the first.  She then returns the first quilt to the maker and shows her own quilt to person number three who will base her quilt on that inspiration.  Nobody else will see the quilts except the maker and the next person on the list.  Our art quilt group in San Diego started our project over two years ago, but the pandemic rather slowed us down.  Instead of passing our quilts to the next person we started e-mailing pictures to the next person.  Only seven of the members participated and we all took an inordinate amount of time to make such small quilts.  However, we finally had our "reveal" at the in-person September meeting.  It was interesting to hear the explanations of why each quilt developed.  

The only “rule” is that it should be approximately 18” X 24”, either portrait or landscape orientation.  Any fabric or technique is acceptable.  The quilt must be quilted and have finished edges.

       

Andrea Bacal started us off with this view of cone flowers based on a picture she had taken.  



This is my quilt, based on Andrea's coneflowers.  Butterflies love coneflowers.  I had intended to add the white dots they display using white puff paint, but I forgot!  This is all fused with the orange/yellow of the wings one piece with the cutout black veins fused on top.  



Michalee Sloan was next.  She based her hidden tiger on the colors in my quilt with lots of green as in the background.  The leaves are made individually and tacked to make a 3-D jungle.  


Ellen Spellman followed with her delicate embroidery inspired by the intricacy of the hidden tiger and foliage.  She accented the blue in the tiger. 


Carol Sebastian-Nealy picked up on the geometric, but used squares instead of rectangles, repeating the vertical quilting.  Now called "matchstick", but was called "channel" quilting in the 70s. 


Deb McKay printed her own fish, repeating the five images and included the horizontal line from Carol's quilt. 

Nelda McComb started with a blue background as in Deb's quilt and created a whimsical view of her recently retired husband catching a fish.  

Here are the quilts pinned up in order at our meeting. 



It was an interesting project, but might have gone better without the complication of the pandemic and not being able to pass the actual quilts to the next person.  

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Friday, August 20, 2021

A Quilt Exhibit 08-20-21

Last week when I met friends from SDiego at the Newport Beach Library to see a small quilt exhibit I took pictures of every quilt.  But somehow missed a few of the labels.  So, if you know the unnamed artists please let me know so I can update this blog. 

The artists, mainly from the Los Angeles/Orange County area, are members of the group "Quilts on the Wall".   The quilts are 36"L x 24"W using black & white and one other color.



                                         

                                "Purple Mountains Majesty"  Andrea Bacal 2020 


"Macaroni Meeting"  Nelda McComb 2020



"Fractured Forest"  Ann Turley 2020


"Focus"   Carol Nilson  2020


"High Score"  Janet Tranbarger  2020


"My Lexus"  Karen Markley  2020

DETAIL

And an even closer detail.  Clever!

"2020"  Charlene Tuch 2020


"No Division"  Jennifer Beatty 2020


"Hope"  Janice Willis 2020


"No Hugs, No KIsses"  Karen Markley  2020

"Wish I May, Wish I Might"  Judy Crotts 2020



'I Miss Walter Cronkite"  Karen Guthrie  2020


"Hang in There"   Sally Freeberg  2020

 DETAIL.

"Flowers" Julie Schlueter  2020

"French Zebrinas in Victoria's Garden"  Stephania Bommarito  2020
(Wonderful lace in this piece. Del)


"Bright Times in the Humdrum"  Sharon Oblinger  2020
(This piece is not a rectangle, but wonky. Del) 

(Missed the label on this one.  Please identify)

"Floral Rhapsody"  Marilyn Gourley  2020

"Ripe Berries" Sharon Jaeger  2020


"Topography"  Janet Farmer  2020


"Fantastic Forest"  Bunny Mauldin  2020


"Hygieia"   Tara Ritacco  2020
(Don't know why I cannot edit this picture.  This is the best I can do.)

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Friday, August 13, 2021

Friday Food 08-13-21

Wednesday I met three friends who drove up from San Diego to view a quilt exhibit at the Newport Beach Public Library and to have lunch.  Two of my friends have quilts in this showing of about 30 quilts from the Quilts on the Wall group.  I hope to post some pictures  over the weekend, but I am still quilting on a quilt that has a looming deadline, so I need to work on that most of the time.  

Andrea chose the restaurant because she seems to find restaurants that are good and different.  We went to Cappy's Cafe on Pacific Coast Highway at the north end of Newport Beach.  She told us it was a biker and surfer hangout and I had my doubts.  We ate outside and my seat faced the back of the building which has a fantastic mural of the beach, a big wave and surfers.  I almost felt I was actually looking at the ocean.  There is no real ocean view since the cafe is on the inland side of PCH.  There were barefoot diners, maybe surfers, and the bikers were bicyclists.  Very casual and quiet.  The service was a little spotty, but the food was great. 

Nelda had the Mahi Mahi tacos with a side of beans. 

Andrea enjoyed her Ruben sandwich with a side of onion rings.

Deb and I each ordered the Prime Rib Melt with au jus.  I had a side of excellent coleslaw and Deb chose the onion rings and let me have a taste.  If you go to Cappy's DO have the onion rings, they are excellent.   There are extensive breakfast selections and I imagine the place is packed in the morning, especially on weekends.  Their hours are 7am to 3pm - 7 days a week. 

The day was a break from the pandemic..  We all wore masks except when we ate and I keep hoping that all those other diners were vaccinated and covid free. 

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Thursday, December 17, 2020

Southern California Contemporary Quilts Part 3 12-17-20

 Nelda is a member of Art Stream, a small art quilt group in San Diego that I also belong to.  It was so interesting to watch this quilt come together and to see how she solve any problems she ran into.  It is 29" L X 31.5"W




Another recognition of the SCalifornia fire hazard was created by Pam Palmer-Lowe.  It acknowledges the women from prison fire crews who put their lives on the line despite their incarceration.  Their colorful identifying uniforms are in stark contrast to the blacken forest. 




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Saturday, October 13, 2018

Quilts at PIQF 10-14-18

Pacific International Quilt Festival is an annual show presented by the Mancuso brothers in Santa Clara, CA, near San Jose.  I used to attend every year, but for several years have had scheduling conflicts and have missed it.  It is quite a good show with hundreds of quilts in the judged competition and many, many special exhibits, from the World contest down to people like the ArtStream group from San Diego. The Art Stream group has only eight members and we have been working on this exhibit challenge for about two years.  Some members finished their quilts well over a year ago and I finally finished mine last month.  There is always a poky person in every group, isn't there?  Anyway the quilts were finished and I drove them up here on Tuesday and was there when the guy crew hung them and I pinned up the labels.  Easy job.  

I had some trouble editing the pictures I took, but I seem to have succeeded at last and post them below with titles, artist, etc.,  This is our first exhibit in a quilt show, although we have shown quilts at San Diego galleries.   These quilts plus a companion piece from each member are scheduled for an exhibit at Visions Art Museum in 2019 from April 20 to July 7. 

The theme is "Urban Elements" and each quilt is 24" wide by 36" long.  I think the reason they look different lengths is where the sleeves are put on.  The area they are hanging is on the outside perimeter of the room and it bends, so they are not all visible at once. Here is the beginning on the left hand side. 

And here is the other end.  The labels are hung at different distances because behind the drapes is a storage area that needs to be accessed where the drapes meet.  So, I hung the labels so they are close to the quilt and not on a place where the openings are.  

"Checker Cab Company"  Deb Mackay   Hand-dyed (by artist) fabrics, linoleum cut printing with acrylic paint, machine quilting. 
"My grandfather owned stock in Checker Motors Company, but sold it after the October 29,1929, stock market crash.  My dad would tell me that we would be wealthy people if only his dad had kept the stock.  I have always had an affinity for Checker Cabs when I am in the city.  They have been an important moving element of the urban setting."

"Glass Ceiling"  Ellen Spellman   Hand-dyed (by the artist) and commercial fabrics,  machine piecing, machine and hand applique, machine quilting.  
"Contemporary architecture brings modern art to life in urban settings.  Frank Gehry's iconic buildings unfurl, bend, twist and soar from their urban roots, flaunting unusual materials and assembled in collage-like forms.  They stop me in my tracks and make me smile.  My quilts honors one of his ceilings, full of windows and curved to meet the sky, a ceiling to look up to in wonder.  I took liberties with the design, but the intent was to capture in some way the beauty and surprise of the original." 

"Summer in the City"  Andrea Bacal    Hand-painted (by artist) canvas mixed with canvas reproduction of artist's hand-painted canvas, hand-dyed (by artist) and commercial fabrics, machine piecing, fused applique, machine quilting.  "I had previously painted a canvas with textile paints, and wanted to use the images from it.   I had several images printed by Fabric on Demand.  I used this new fabric to create the piece, recreating the feeling I always have when listening to the 1966 Lovin' Spoonful's Summer in the City." 

"Birds in the City"   Del Thomas    Commercial, batik, and hand-dyed fabrics, fussed applique, machine quilting.   ""Since I am not an urban dweller and avoid cities, I tried to think of something in a city I do enjoy.  Sitting in a park and observing the natural environment surrounded by birds, trees, flowers, and water sources is my first pick.  So, all these are shown in my quilt."

"Reflections"   Carol Sebastian-Neely    Commercial fabrics (painted by artist), hand-dyed (by artist) fabrics, fused applique, painting on paper fused to organza to create mono print, machine quilting. "Reflections was inspired by a photograph of buildings looking down at the cool flowing waters moving below them.  Lights glowing under the surface.  Linear elements reaching skyward.  Tiny windows keeping life secrets within. 

"Rockefeller's Flags V - Atlas"   Nelda McComb    Commercial fabrics, embellished with ink, machine applique, hand quilting.   "Trips to NYC have inspired a series called Rockefeller's Flags.  The Center is lined with beautiful flags, hence the birth of six quilts extolling Rockefeller's flags."

"Midtown Massif"   Judy Warren Tippets    Commercial fabrics, embellished with pen,ink and specialty thread, fused applique, machine quilting.    "My inspiration comes from a photo my husband took in the High Sierra.  The massive granite ridge of the Minarets more than hints of a great city rising abruptly at water's edge.  Midtown Massif transforms the multi-pinnacled Minarets into a fantasized urban skyline."

"STOP"   Michalee Sloan    Commercial batiks and over-dyed fabrics, machine applique, machine quilting.    "I am always thinking about my art projects on my commute in the Southern California traffic.  Images of stop signs and stop lights became part of the graphic shapes as they are traffic icons.  Windows and scaffolding appearing in layers.  Red to emphasize the brake lights and stress often present in urban life."  
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PIQF ends tomorrow and I will spend the day looking at the quilts and trying to find places to sit down to rest once in a while.  When the show closes at 4pm I can take down the quilts and drive back to Mary's.  Then I will drive home to Placentia and my KoKo dog on Monday.  

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