Please feel free to link to this blog or use the handy e-mail tool at the end of each post. However, all contents of this page are copyrighted by Cindi Huss. Reproduction in whole or part without written permission from the author (Cindi) is prohibited. This includes all images unless otherwise noted.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

This is all you get

Howdy folks. Well, this is all you get of this work in progress because I don't want to give away the cow. Had to post, though, to prove I'm actually getting work done in addition to making cheese and hosting guests and volunteering to proctor standardized tests and meeting deadlines that don't have a lot to do with making art.


The small painting laying atop it is the study for the larger work. This is probably the last you'll see of it until I post it on my website (I'll post the finished work here as well) because I need some "virgin" work for some upcoming submissions.

Hope you all are being productive and creative as well--'tis the season!

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Cross Blogging

Just received notice that this great new blog in MA (my former habitat) posted an article on me. Thanks, Marcia! What a wonderful thing to come home to.

Just got back from a great great few days in Asheville, NC, (a few pics coming soon) with my mom and I'm getting ready for a birthday party this evening for Bernard Kaiman, the nearly 90-year-old force of nature in international folk and Scottish country dance in this region.

Work, as you might imagine, is still taking a backseat until tomorrow, when I will plunge in up to my elbows and wallow in fiber! Mmmmm, lovely!

Monday, March 16, 2009

Time out with Mom

Hey. I'm fitting in a little work here and there (like getting my taxes ready), but my Mom is visiting and the kids are home for Spring Break, so not doing a lot of creating (except in my head). Soon I'll be working on a landscape, though, so stay tuned. Also, will be visiting Glorious Asheville again soon, so should have some lovely pics to share then.

Hope your March is behaving like a lamb. We're enjoying our first Tennessee Spring immensely!

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

I Beat the Deadline!

Wending Onward
(c)2009 Cindi Huss

I made this 18" x 18" piece for the Surface Design Association's member exhibit, Surface Matters. This and a plethora of other surface design/fiber exhibits will hang at galleries in the Crossroads Art District in downtown KC, MO and will open in conjunction with the SDA's biennial conference (at Kansas City Art Institute and the Marriott Country Club Plaza) and run through the summer.

I finished it yesterday. Had a couple of very late nights (the latest was 4 a.m.), but it's done and sent! Woo-hoo! Here's a detail:

This hand-dyed bas relief includes needle felting and extreme quilting.

How did I pull this off? Through the understanding and accomodating attitudes of my wonderful family, especially my husband Bob. Jeg er så glad i deg, elskede.

Unauthorized Substance Tax--Hmmmmm

So since I'm new to Tennessee I was researching the various means of filing the various taxes I have to pay here and among the list of taxes I could read about was:


You can imagine how that might pique one's curiosity, so I clicked on the link and found out that taxable items in this category include:
  • Marijuana
  • Cocaine
  • Crack
  • Methamphetamine
  • Untaxed liquors and spirits (AKA moonshine)
Seriously!

So you can order tax stamps anonymously to put them on your packages of illicit drugs and alcohol so that when you're arrested they can only charge you with possession and sale, not tax evasion.

The information says that paying the tax does NOT make it legal to possess these goods. Duh!

Who owes the tax? Dealers, specifically defined as "any person who possesses one or more marijuana plants or more than 42.5 (not 42 or 43) grams of marijuana, seven or more grams of any other unauthorized substance that is sold by weight, or any illicit alcoholic beverage."

If I think about it, now the songs about revenue or excise men make more sense, but really? Anyhow, found it interesting, ridiculous, and, due to my fairly prudish past, unusual, so thought I'd share. Really has nothing to do with dancing or threads, but this is my News of the Weird of the day.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

I Heard It on the BBC (So it must be true!)

Today (12:55 p.m.) the BBC ran an article re: the auction of Yves St. Laurent's art collection, which went for twice what was expected. The "expert" interviewed said that over the past decade art has proven to be a better investment than stock.

Food for thought (and a big nose thumbing at the detractors who said art does not stimulate the economy!).

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Rollin', Rollin', Rollin'

Well, my poor oldest was home for a week with walking (well, perhaps "crawling" is more accurate) pneumonia, and now my youngest is working on a week home sick, too, with an as-yet-unidentified malady. Back to the doctor's in the morning, poor thing!

I've also been working on an inventory of all my business property so the county can tax me on stuff I already paid tax on. Oi! That's what I get for dotting my "i"s and crossing my "t"s.

I think these necessary time constraints have lit a fire under me in a way having expansive days with loads of time sometimes fails to do. I really appreciate the time I do have this month and I've been putting it to good use. I also really appreciate that I am in a position to be home with the kids when they need me to be without getting in trouble with my boss.

I've been working on the color study for Sharon's commission:



At this point I've ripped out nearly as much thread as is still in it, but I'm nearly done and pretty happy with the results. This is simply an attractive way to audition the various fabrics and threads I'll be using in her larger work. She'll get to keep this study, which is why I haven't simply done a running stitch and a chain stitch with each color. I've also been practicing my bullion stitch (see all those leaves around the pink flowers?) and a variety of fillers and accents so I'll be ready when I start the larger piece.

Just so you know where I'm going, here's the original conceptual study, more representative of the style of the final piece:



I finally sketched, chose fabric, and am experimenting on muslin for an 18" x 18" piece for the Surface Design Assoc. members' exhibit called Surface Matters. It is due, at its destination, by Mar. 1, so I'm cutting things a little close (pun definitely intended :-) ) but my heart is pounding, my thoughts racing, and my fingers itching to work on it every moment I can steal.


Quilting sketch and felting study


Muslin mock-up

Started quilting the mock-up today. If it works as I hope it will, perhaps I'll have a quilt to play with. I've been wanting to give painting/dyeing after I quilt a try, so I could be killing two birds with one stone!

Also, just found out the article I wrote last year on two ways to audition quilting designs on paper will be in the July 2009 issue of American Quilter--woo-hoo! There's been a little confusion about the photographs and I've committed to making a small quilt for the article in less than a month, but it's all for the best in the end. I chose the fabrics for it yesterday.

These actually are some of the first fabrics I ever bought as a quilter but I've so seldom worked with true solids that I had plenty in my stash. For every fabric there is a season.

And again my friend Timna of Q Tailored Quilts will quilt it up at high speed since I'm on deadline, have a visit from my Mom coming up, and she quilted the undyed muslim version of the same quilt last year. Oh, what a relief it is!

In short, life is a tad hectic and the unexpected happens with mildly alarming frequency. In short, it's business as usual.

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Earth from Space

The Kingsport Public Library currently is showing the Smithsonian's Earth from Space exhibit. The exhibit is divided into several sections and several satellites provided the source imagery. I was a chaperone on my daughter's class trip to see the exhibit last week and my good deed was rewarded 10-fold by the oh-so-inspiring images. I was at a loss re: what to create for my 18" x 18" Surface Matters exhibit piece (opening in conjunction with the Surface Design Association's biennial conference). Now, not so much.

Anyhow, the on-line exhibit is great, but if you have a chance to see the exhibit in person please do. The images are quite large and vivid, the information provided about what you're seeing is interesting, and, unlike with the on-line exhibit, you can get right up close and personal. In addition, some of the images were dual images but you can see only one of them on-line. You can zoom in the on-line exhibit, but you can't see the entire enlarged image at once. So cool!

Anyhow, I promise pictures in my next post--all these text posts are a little dull, no?

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

I made cheese!

I'm on my way to bed, but I'm so excited I had to post. Made goat's milk cheese today and flavored it with Penzey's garlic salt. It's soooooo good! Had it on a salad of baby romaine with mixed raisins, a drizzle of olive oil, a squeeze of lemon, salt, and pepper. It was wonderful.

That's all. Nighty, night.

Thank you Rosemary, for the knowledge, the courage, and the milk!

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

I love what I do!

It's alchemy.

Magically some barbed needles and inspiration turn this:


Into this:

A painting in fiber.

But then the fun really begins--the quilting brings the whole thing to life:


Until a two dimensional picture becomes a sculpture for the wall:

Labyrinth II (c) 2009 Cindi Huss.
This is the 8" square (approx.) of the quilt that will show through
the matte. It will travel with
Meet SAQA's Artists
for a year, then the International Quilt Study Center
will acquire selected work from the exhibit
for its permanent collection.


Life is good!

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

My Plan Derailed

Isn't it wonderful?

Sometimes the things we trip over are just what we've been looking for, an opportunity we've been invited to recognize.

I've been dyeing my own fabric for several years now and I love it. Even fairly simple mottled patterns are just yummy:

See?!

There are only a few problems:
1. Sometimes I want a piece with a larger or smaller repeat than I got with the original.
2. Sometimes I want yardage, but more fabric/layers seriously affects the way the dye works on the fabric, so some patterns just aren't possible as yardage.
3. I'd love to sell the same piece over and over again--the most wonderful pieces are gobbled up--either by me or by a customer--pretty quickly . . . and then what?

I may have found the answer and have spent an hour this morning learning how to do this:

(Manipulated photo, a doubled, merged version of
the medium-resolution image of my hand-dye. )

Rather than taking care of this:


That's O.K., though, because this:


Will still be there this afternoon.

Anyhow, this little bump in my schedule was prompted by my finding a link to Spoonflower.com when I was peeking at Quiltblogs.com. They're in the beta phase of development right now so you can't sell your designs from their site yet, but hopefully that will come in the future.

I've asked some other fiber art folks about Spoonflower and have only heard good things, so . . .

My hope is that once they are out of their beta-testing mode I will be able to upload images for yardage that anyone could buy. Meanwhile, I'll enjoy using them myself--this is just the beginning of some good, clean fun!

Monday, January 5, 2009

Great Friends Do Great Things

I am constantly inspired by my friends: some are writing novels, one is becoming a mover and shaker in the DE classical music scene, several are homeschooling with wild success and abandon, and quite a few are making entrepreneurial and artistic successes of themselves. And so many friends have overcome illness, difficulty, or tragedy in their lives with grace, courage, and hope that I profoundly respect and aspire to.

Well, most of those great things are personal and special and I feel honored to be allowed into that intimate space. However, here's something I've been asked to share, so I will with a glad heart and busy hands.

My friend Lynda recently began the blog Knitting for Change. She welcomes all who are interested to participate in this project. Check it out to see what she has to say.

Some of us change the world in big ways, but all of us can change the world with quiet acts of kindness and small gifts of time.

So the next time you're sitting around wondering what to do or looking for a way NOT to feel guilty for spending the evening in front of the T.V., knit (or in my case, crochet) a hat, mittens, scarf, or even a sweater to pass on, and let Lynda know. Then we will see how powerful one small act can be--Together we can knit (and crochet) some serious change.