Wednesday, October 6, 2021

Catching up with Textiles and Tea, Thyme, and pasties from scraps

Yesterday's Textiles and Tea featured Michael Rohde, a chemist turned weaver, who's been active for decades in textiles.

He's very much a devote of the exact, the calculated and the grid. He used to make rugs, and has switched to tapestry. He dyes his yarns and uses very meticulous calculation to get exactly the shade he wants.

Interestingly, when asked about his influences, he talks only of his technical teachers in weaving, not of the fine arts, ideas from which are very evident in his work. 

As you see the pictures, you'll spot borrowings from Josef Albers, Georgia O'Keeffe,  and Chuck Close, among others. I cracked up when he was talking about small tapestry looms and referenced Archie Brennan only in relation to the little pipe looms he created!

Archie Brennan is a towering figure in the world of tapestry design and development, revered by seriously fine tapestry designers, including Sarah Swett and Rebecca Mezoff. 

It's all about where you put your focus, I suppose. Anyway here he is, not many images, he was pretty talky.




Here are the Google Earth images 


he zoomed in to copy for this piece


And here's another blown up pixel idea in action

This below is interesting, cochineal dye used here





So there he is, and there's more on his website. He has two studios, one for large one for small work.

Meanwhile closer to home I arranged to get the Fit tires inflated later by my lovely neighbor, who doesn't know he's getting an apple pasty once they've cooled.


They look like Halloween masks in a way. I found a couple of pastry scraps in the freezer and thought I'd use some of the apples I'd diced and frozen.

While I was out I noticed a little offshoot of the thyme plant, probably a root which had traveled several feet, and suddenly sent up a new plant.  You might call it the march of thyme..


So now there's a thyme plant in the kitchen, very handy. I'll refrain from any further terrible thyme jokes. But the kitchen clock is right up there on the right, okay, I'm done.


13 comments:

  1. Is it your ritual to always have tea when you watch these videos? I hope so although I can see you taking notes and letting that tea go cold.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes to both, the notes are mental, but picking and catching n saving the screenshots militate against hot tea.

      Delete
  2. Meticulous is required for so many crafts. A porcelain artist friend has meticulous formulas for not only his porcelain clay, but for his colors.
    I had a thyme plant that overwintered several brutal winters, until we realized what it was and "took care of it" by clearing out the undergrowth that protected it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, meticulous is a given. But it's not the whole point of the work. That's my sense of this man's work. For him, being exactly as planned is the whole thing.

      My thyme has been outdoors doing well for maybe 15 years. It's protected by the surrounding pachysandra. Which is probably why it's thriving.

      Delete
  3. Tis the thyme of the year for apple pastries. :)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hmmm - thyme to stop and smell the thyme. Nice to have herbs growing inside. None of my windows are really sunny enough.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No more thyme for jokes! Let's hope she does well on the windowsill.

      Delete

Thanks so much for commenting. I really appreciate your taking the time, and taking part. Please read the comments and see if your question is already answered!