On the Highway: Catching Material Collage Fish at The Nationwide Quilt Museum


On August 1-3—in a really roomy, light-filled, and temperature-controlled (it was very sizzling exterior) classroom off a facet hallway of The Nationwide Quilt Museum—a fantastic cloth collage college of sea-life was within the making as twenty college students let unfastened with their materials, scissors, pins and glue to create nineteen very colourful fish, and one seahorse. In photograph above, splendidly untidy (messy however not scary) piles of material and scraps unfold on the tables of Lynn Gross and Corrie DeCamp.

In weblog posts final week and the week earlier than, I gave overviews of my 12-quilt “Specimens” exhibit at NQM in Paducah, Kentucky—put in and hanging till November 19, 2024. The museum additionally organized for me to show a category whereas my present was on show. The format we settled on was a three-day workshop, which is simply sufficient time to sink our cloth collage tooth into an ideal topic for a sizzling summer time week—fish. Fish imagery lends itself to a sure playfulness and flexibility to quite a few inventive types and coloration palettes.

Me and my class on Day Two, often a troublesome day for the reason that pleasure of Day One has handed and power is beginning to ebb—however not with these of us—they swam via all three days fairly swimmingly. 😉

I really like instructing this class as a result of it permits me and my college students to throw all warning to the wind and lose ourselves within the play of coloration and sample. There’s numerous data to cowl in simply three days, so there’s no time to dawdle in getting began, and this class jumped proper into the deep finish of creativity.

As all instructing mornings start, there have been every day demos and Q&A, main my college students via the material collage course of. Under are a couple of fishy quilt examples hanging on the classroom wall, so as to add to different quilts of mine we might speak about within the museum gallery.

To get a quick-start in a category comparable to this, I recommend beginning with one in all my fish patterns, which all however two college students did. In order I proceed with displaying you all of the unbelievable work completed in such a short while, I’ll hyperlink to the patterns utilized in case you’re impressed to attempt your individual hand at catching a fish, or two.


Let’s start on the finish

By the tip of Day Three, Rosemary Bradley (above), progressed to the third draft “sparkle” netting stage of her, “Sargasso Gold.” “Goldie” (beneath), was given a really floral therapy by Mariann Nixon.

Pals Char Cool and Julie Harris (above left to proper), pose for last pictures with Julie’s fish, “Gulf Stream Traveler.” Under, Char and I had been caught in motion, consulting on her, “Solstice Serranid.”

You’ve seen a couple of outcomes, now see their beginnings and progressions within the slideshow beneath:

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Catching the waves with, Wavelength”

This fish sample caught the eyes and curiosity of 4 of my college students (following beneath), however by the tip of sophistication it was arduous for even me to guess at their beginnings. It’s one of many issues that I discover nice about instructing this class—no two fish would be the similar, it’s not doable. Since we work free-hand and don’t create templates, it signifies that every collage—even generated from the identical sample—will robotically, to at least one extent or one other, range in form and association of materials because of the cloth choice and whims of every creator.

Dana Ryan’s fish (above) has discovered its background and is heading out of sophistication. Corrie DeCamp’s rosy magnificence (beneath), is chilling for a bit longer.

Marie Johnson (above), used her fish to be taught the mixing of values inside every coloration group. Norma Harned (beneath) melded daring designs in her materials to create a cohesive fish physique.

The artistic move of “Wavelength” in slideshow beneath:

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Dipping into the goldfish bowl

Carpe diem, carpe carpem. Sieze the day, sieze the carp. My college students did each. Simply over 1/3 of the category selected my, “Carpe Carpem” goldfish sample, to base their fish design on. However as you’ll see beneath, they had been something however the identical ol’ carp.

Chris Pagano had a various stash of materials (above)—with sheers and stretchy sparkles added to quilting cottons for the beginnings of her collage.
Marilynn Morrow (above) and Sweet Hassenstab (beneath) are buddies that met years in the past, doing their cloth factor. Each began this class with the identical Carpe sample, however instantly wildly diverged of their cloth selections and inventive visions.

Superbly glowing gold-fish collages created by Lynn Gross (above) and Laurie Kern (beneath).

Superbly wealthy and succulent non-gold-fish collages by Lyn Frostman (above) and Michelle Jackson (beneath).

The making of the wonderful evolutions of “Carpe Carpem”  in slideshow beneath:

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After which there have been 5

Rounding out the collection of my fish patterns is, “Spiny Lionfish.”—a fish that’s extra fin than physique, however an alluring fin it appears to be.

These lion-kings are expansive with their radiating appendages—a regal magenta and purple fin in Barbara Wendel’s specimen (above), whereas Nancy Hutchison’s royal fellow (beneath), flaunts his peacock plumage at us.

I missed out on a last photograph of Cindy Cripes lionfish (above), which I’m bummed about, since final I knew, he was morphing right into a catfish. In the event you look shut on this man’s again, you’ll see one of many “cats” Cindy added as the times went on.
Each Marilyn (above), and Sky (beneath) took off in their very own instructions when it got here to pattern-making. Marilyn Smith’s sturgeon collage goes to be as wonderful because the sturgeon species is, and Charla Sky’s seahorse got here into being so properly and shortly (I didn’t even get a starting photograph), it should have been a fantastical imaginative and prescient she’s dreamed about.

And right here’s the in-progress pictures of the ultimate 5 sea creatures:

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An enormous thanks to my attentive, hard-working, and pleasant class, and to all the stunning and useful of us on the museum. I completely loved the fabric-filled days, education a couple of fish-lovers, visiting my quilts, and staying cool—on the Nationwide Quilt Museum in Paducah, Kentucky.
Due to the crew at The Nationwide Quilt Museum for serving to make each my exhibit and sophistication so successful. Pictured above—subsequent to me and “Kaloli Moondance”—are employees members (left to proper), Bonnie Schrock, Becky Glasby, Rachael Baar, and (not pictured) Laura Hendrickson.

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