Showing posts with label Anna Grossnickle Hines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anna Grossnickle Hines. Show all posts

Saturday, December 18, 2010

tree wrapup

Can you imagine twelve different ways of depicting a tree in fabric?  For the last 12 days, that's been our challenge.  We set out to locate 12 quilts that would stimulate new ideas about quilting, and about  realistic vs. abstract representations of objects. Here is our "tree wrapup"...


Here are the links to the original posts:
Top row, L-R: An Evergreen Bias, by Debbie Grifka; O Tannenbaum, by Ricky Tims; A Christmas Tree, by Anna Grossnickle Hines
2nd row, L-R: Ginkgo Christmas Tree, by Ann Fahl; Santa Baby by Molly Shannon, based on a design by Janet Nesbitt; Ode to a Christmas Tree, by Lyn Mann
3rd row, L-ROh Christmas Tree, by Kellie Wulfsohn; Winter Deluxe, by Jane Sassaman; Baubles, by Louise Papa
Bottom row, L-R; Alpine Wonder, by Mary Lou Hallenbeck; Four Seasons, by Laura Blanchard; Sage Country Christmas Tree, by Laura Estes

Friday, December 17, 2010

The 12th day of Christmas trees

Imagine the lights on a Christmas tree, the northern lights, the fires to celebrate the solstice, moonlight on snow . . . now imagine designing and stitching original quilts that capture these winter lights.  Anna Grossnickle Hines has done just that, sometimes spending more than four hundred hours per quilt, and using more than eleven miles of thread. 

The Christmas Tree, by Anna Grossnickle Hines, in Winter Lights: A Season in Poems & Quilts


In this stunning Christmas Tree, each colored light is a tiny piece of fabric within a 1-inch strip. The strips are then pieced together in sections, using a method which Anna calls "twisted strip piecing".

There are 15 quilts in the book, and each one features a different winter holiday or festival.  In many cultures, people celebrated midwinter solstice rituals to encourage the return of the sun and its life-giving light. Such rituals centered around fire and light.  The spectacular "Solstice", shown below, is made with twisted triangles: over 8,450 of them, requiring more than 400 hours to piece.


We bought our own copy of Winter Lights, which is a work of joy. You can read about the design and construction of the quilts at Anna Grossnickle Hines' website: www.aghines.com.  The Winter Lights quilts are currently on exhibit at the Sangre de Cristo Arts Center in Southern Colorado (until February 5). Her newest book, called Peaceful Pieces: Poems and Quilts about Peace will be out in March, 2011. 


Image credits and links:  The images are shown with the generous permission of Anna Grossnickle Hines, who is the author of more than 60 books for children.
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