Showing posts with label Lyric Montgomery Kinard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lyric Montgomery Kinard. Show all posts

Friday, December 31, 2010

Fiber Nation 2010

This year is wrapping up, today is the last day! It's been a FAST year for me! One of the things I am most pleased about 2010 is the creation of The Fiber Nation. It was an idea that had been rolling around my brain for quite some time, but didn't have a name so I trudged on with my personal blog Journey of a Fiber Artist until inspiration came to me.
#6 “The Cream and Sugar / Lovers” 2002
35”h X 25”w
Susan Shie
In 2010 I learned how to edit a video and put it here on the blog, I learned how to write a pattern (and that it's not ever as easy as you want no matter how simple the pattern seems to be!) I also broke out of my shy shell a bit, and approached people for interviews/information.
A few highlight posts for me from 2010:
I'm so excited for 2011! My goals for The Fiber Nation this year are:
  • Work to offer more technique driven content
  • More essays concerning topics that touch on issues we fiber artists face
  • More interviews
  • More videos!

I would love to be able to sit down and plan out ahead of time topics for the blog posts. However, so far I have not been able to work that way. Perhaps I'll give it another go in 2011. Of course I have personal goals for the site here: work on taking more professional images for the blog now that I have a full photo box/light set, as well as increasing readership which is happening slowly but surely!

I am feeling very positive moving into the new year! I look forward to seeing The Fiber Nation grow more this year!
Ricky Timms, Alex Anderson and Ami Simms
Spring 2010 Market in Minneapolis
What about you? Do you have any resolutions/plan for 2011? Did you see any of your 2010 resolutions come to pass?

Monday, October 11, 2010

My Top 11 Fiber/Quilt Art Blogs

I am diligently working on a free holiday pattern that I think a lot of you will like - can you believe it? I went traditional on this one! So look for that within the next week or so - want to give you plenty of time to get it done for Thanksgiving, the start of the 2010 holiday season.

But today I want to share with you the top 11 blogs I read often. Eleven? you say, well yes. I was going to go with ten, but I couldn't cut it down, so I went with 11 - a nod to Spinal Tap for those of you that "get it"! Here they are in no particular order!

Artfabrik

MTestaBanner.jpg Fiber Art and Quilting Lyric Art

 Virginia A. Spiegel

 Fiber Reflections

 Quilting is a Fine Art

 Janet's Fiber Artistry News

 Sue Bleiweiss

 Pokey Bolton 

FACFE
Fiber Art Calls for Entry

 There's my top 11 - what blogs do YOU read? 

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Questions on Being a Working Artist

As a full time artist working from my home studio, I am sometimes an oddity at social gatherings. There are questions that I am asked nearly every single time I meet someone, and they find out what I do. I understand that I live differently than most of the population more than likely, so I understand their sometimes probing questions, and try to answer them the best that I can.

I have always been a very unscheduled free spirit artist, I created when I wanted to create. Or when I felt “inspired”.  Now I almost laugh at myself for that. I read a book recommended to me by Jane Davila called The Creative Habit: Learn it and Use it for Life by Twyla Tharp. Let's just say, I won't be waiting for my “muse” to force my hands into a creative frenzy any longer. I now write my morning pages every single day, which is a excellent writing/art tool that I learned from The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron.

I am trying very hard, to create a manageable schedule for myself, that allows me the time to get the articles for here completed, as well as art pieces, exploration and learning. Fortunately, for the most part, all of these aspects can be related and be used to aid the others! I am still working hard to keep myself focused. Examples: 1. I am trying to put most/all housework to the end of the day or early evening, just as someone who went to a job all day outside the home needs to do. 2. I don't take as many phone calls, and when I do, I try and always used my hands free piece so I can keep going on about what I was doing. 3. I stopped bringing my laptop (with it's web pages, and Facebook and email) into the studio, unless I am down there writing on it! 4. I keep LOTS of lists right by my machine, and pin up the goals for the day each day. 5. I am FORCING myself to NOT give into my inner critic (i.e. I'm NOT giving into fear anymore!)

Then I started to wonder, do other work from home artists have the same answers to the questions? How different can they be? Do I work differently than everyone else? Do other artists have the same difficulty I have with staying focused at times? Up until recently, all of my focus was simply on creating, and experimenting with different techniques and trying new things in the studio.

So, keeping in mind that I am not going to let fear stop me, I approached several artists/designers that I admire and follow (on their blogs, I'm no stalker you know!) and posed the questions I receive often to them! First let me introduce you to them:


Jane Davila: A fiber and mixed-media artist, living in Connecticut. Her latest book is Jane Davila's Surface Design Essentials for C&T Publishing. You can see more about and from Jane at her website: www.janedavila.com, and on her blog at www.janedavila.blogspot.com.


Lyric Montgomery Kinard: A fiber artist, with award winning wall quilts and wearable art pieces. She currently lives in Cary, North Carolina with her husband and five children. Her blog Lyric Art is a constant stream of eye candy for me!


Teri Harris Lucas: Is an amazing domestic machine quilter (on her Bernina 1080), pattern designer and tester for Benartex, and had been seen on Quilting Arts TV (Episode 503) Her blog is Terrificreations and as you will see there, her quilting is stunning!

Melanie Testa: Textile designer and fiber artist, and graduate of The Fashion Institute of Technology in Textile/Surface Design.. She is the author of “Inspired to Quilt: Creative Experiments in Art Quilt Imagery”, Interweave Press, 2009 and Quilting Arts Workshop now offers “Print, Collage, Quilt” a DVD companion to the book. Her blog “Every-Single-Day” is a treasure trove of tips, tricks, tutorials and just plain prettiness!

Elin Waterston: Fiber artist, surface designer, graphic designer and writer. Her print publication range from “Art Quilts at Play”, C&T Publishing 2009, “Art Quilting Basics” (DVD), C&T Publishing, 2008, “Art Quilt Workbook”, C&T Publishing 2007, and more, as well as articles in Cloth Paper Scissors! Her website www.elinwaterson.com features samples of her fiber art, as well as her graphic design (which shows in the website itself!) There's also a link to her blog on there.

Now on to the questions!


Do you have a schedule each day? If so, can you give us the run down of how your day goes?


Jane: Office/businessy work for the first 10-12 hours or so, followed by a couple of hours in the studio (on a good day), ending with a few more hours of computer work (I don't sleep very much).


Lyric: No schedule. I have five children and fit my work into their schedule. Hand work at hockey practice, sewing while they swim, piecing while they play, and painting while they sleep.


Teri: Each day varies as I work part time, teach when I can, take my dmil for appointments and work from home.


Melanie: I wake around 6, I do computer stuff over coffee, update my facebook fanpage, my blog,and I read other blogs and post at that point too. I try to complete this by 8 or 9. I start my creative day at that point. If I need to write an article, or create class content I will make a list and do that first. I find that if I limit my 'have to' list and make a completion time, say 3. At which point I am allowed to free for all it. I am much better off. When I do not have creative deadlines, I will start right in on printing, quiting, journaling or whatever the creative obsession of the week is.


Elin: No, I work when I can and when the spirit moves me.


Do you ever find it difficult to stay on track and not be distracted by laundry, dishes and other household distractions?

Jane: Fortunately (or unfortunately, lol) I can easily tune out household stuff. I'm lucky that my husband does all the cooking and most of the grocery shopping. My house is clean and tidy, but that stuff is not a huge priority. It gets done when it gets done.


Lyric: Yes of course. I only have short bits of time.


Teri: As each of these needs to be accomplished and I'm the primary person, by choice, for these I do my best to incorporate both the necessary functions of the house and quilting. Sometimes the quilting wins out, sometimes the other tasks win, depends on what's going on and what the deadlines are.


Melanie: Never. I make time to make art. Period. The rest gets done in good time because when I make art I am happy. When I am happy, I also clean the house without hesitation. My husband is also very supportive and lends a hand.


Elin: Yes, I'm easily distracted and not a good multi-tasker.




Everyone always asks, “Don't you get bored?” So...do you?


Jane: It hasn't happened yet, and I doubt it ever will. If anything, there's too much to do, think about, imagine, create, be, dream, wonder, plan, etc.


Lyric: No - I have such a variety of things going on all the time that if I am bored of one I can move to another.


Teri: Not really, I usually have several projects going on at the same time and easy access to these so I can switch as necessary.


Melanie: Nope. I think that when you actively engage in creative pursuits, more creative doors open and more experiments occur to you. We are talking about creating a creative practice. Literally. Practice being creative, set creative goals, ask what if. Allow your inner scientist to have time to come out and play.


Elin: Sadly, yes, I get bored very easily. But I work fast and bounce around from project to project.


What is the best part of working from home?


Jane: Not having a commute, having flexibility in my schedule.


Lyric: Being able to fulfill my primary responsibility as a mother and also fulfill my creative compulsions.


Teri: I can be flexible.


Melanie: Leaving home. I find that because I work out of my home I need to make dates to leave home. Meet friends, take myself out for coffee. Balance. I love having all my props and supplies right here, I love being able to pick up a creative pursuit at whim. I want to work from home, keep my studio in my home. But I also need to leave it all behind. Luckily I live in a city, Brooklyn. I can pick up and go to The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Moma, the botanical gardens, all a short train ride away. Or I can brew coffee and sit on my neighbors stoop and shoot the breeze.


Elin: Having my dogs with me!




What is the worst?


Jane: Work is ALWAYS there. I always think of something else that needs doing, an ad that's due and needs to be designed and sent in, a website that needs updating, a sleeve that needs to be sewn on, a project that needs to be finished, etc, etc, etc -- it's impossible to turn off when it's right there in the next room waiting for me so I end up working too much. Finding balance is really, really difficult.


Lyric: Needing to fulfill my primary responsibility as a mother while the creative compulsions have to wait. But it's all good. They grow very quickly.


Teri: I can be flexible.


Melanie: I guess you can flip the last statement to say, I feel trapped by working from home. But I took care of that by purchasing a laptop effectively allowing me to write articles and class content from the tables of coffeeshops worldwide :)


Elin: There is no worst.




Random question: How old were you when you first started quilting/doing fiber art?


Jane: I was 22.


Lyric: Around 27?


Teri: 24


Melanie: 19, I signed up for a traditional quilting class in my local town and fell head over heels.

Elin:  I was raised with a heavy emphasis on the arts and I starting sewing as a child, so there's been some form of fiber and art since childhood. I usually say I started for real when I was 30 though.


As you can see, everyone is different when it comes to working from home. It shows that pretty much any personality can work from home, which is a good thing.

I want to give a huge thank you to Jane, Lyric, Teri, Melanie and Elin for taking the time to answer these questions! You guys rock!

Saturday, June 19, 2010

What's to Come and Weekend Inspiration Photos

We all know that weekends seem to be the busiest days of our week, much as we'd rather be relaxing! I'll just give you a teaser about what is up and coming here at The Fiber Nation: Melanie Testa, Jane Davila, Elin Waterston, Lyric Montgomery Kinard.......

But for now, enjoy and maybe stash away these inspiring photos of the weekend!