you do together, as the
Sondheim song goes.Sharon's challenge this month, to notice the little things was another springboard for a lot of thoughts.
Here are some bits of the stream of thought bit....
A small crack might be the sign of a deeper rift.
A detective looks for small clues that will help complete the picture of the crime.
An artist or photographer will focus on a small part/area and transform that in to the whole of the work
A finishing detail on a couture garment may be an indication of the quality of the whole garment.
I didn't say they were earth shattering, it is just some of the things that came to mind!
My first reaction on seeing the colours was "camouflage" and this resulted in this train of thought, camouflage, leaves on hats, ferns, bracken, the young fronds of ferns (bracken) which contain the form of the whole plant be it a small fern or a huge tree fern. I couldn't find the photograph I took of ferns so I looked in flickr and there I found this
perfect picture.
(which was much better than mine anyway)
I asked for permission to use it as a base and Nancy generously said yes. She has some wonderful pictures in her album it is well worth a browse.
I ran the photograph with the painted wood script in PSP9 to give it a more stitchy look and then printed it onto cotton.
Next step was it pick out some details to embroider. I used variegated threads to echo the lights and shadows of the original. The stems are couched and then split stitched. The insides of the curle are french knots, bullion stitch and detached button hole band (I didn't do TAST for nothing!!!)
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At first I was going to make it into a post card but because I was stuck indoors with today's awful weather I played a bit. I dug out my encaustic waxes, at first I tried making fern patterns but it all loooked to heavy so I ironed it off onto a piece of material but then decided I like the remaing wax better so this is now the background for the piece. I found the whispy yarn and added it to give that tangly feeling you get when walking through bracken.This is the scan
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and this is the photograph, neither are quite "right". Neither of them show the texture.
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For me, just the word "bracken" transports me the Lakeland hills. Memories again!!