Yesterday brought the first violets
And neighbor's flowering almond
And squirrels busily eating my Japanese maple leaf buds
Today temps in the 80sf.
And a complete Sock One of Pair Nine of the Sock Ministry. Socks 5-8 have been well received.
Leaving me in need of a different form to work on while I get my second sock wind.
Anyone who was around here during the Great Paper Bead Caper will recognize that rolling up paper has got me again.
This time it's tubes for weaving into a couple of things I need, including a bathroom basket for bottles and a bedroom wpb. That sentence has some weird rhythm going.
Here's some great YouTube enabling ideas
These are based on using newspaper which I don't have. But I do have a few old magazines and a catalog or two. I might use paper bills rather than recycle,. We'll see.
Anyway here's the action
Materials all set up
First tube rolled on the stick thing. Then, a cup of tea later
Caution: one tube is a gateway to frenzy. Like paper beads, which I made by the hundred, there's no stopping place until your fingers refuse to go on.
This is a cool idea for working with kids. I've taught beadmaking to all ages. Kids tend to be more adept, nimble fingers, but adults, with constant encouragement and supervision and patient demonstration, can do it, too.
Then I rested my hands and watched an excellent Textiles and Tea, with Tommye Scanlin, tapestry weaver, my wheelhouse.
She was an art teacher who came to weaving by making frame looms with her students, later moving to the rigid heddle and always teaching while creating wonderful tapestry art.
Here are paintings, which nowadays she creates as part of her tapestry design process
And she weaves tapestry journals, daily weaving about her day. Each year she adds a new warp to the previous year's output and continues
She's a wonderful artist, and generous in her acknowledgement of her influences, including Archie Brennan and Susan Martin Maffei, longtime partners in life and art.
"adults, with constant encouragement and supervision and patient demonstration, can do it, too" -- hahahahahahaha! I've seen items woven from paper but didn't know people could do it on their own! Fascinating!
ReplyDeleteI do like her work, especially the weaving of the rocks.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great way to use the bright colors of catalogues. Awaiting photos of your WIP.
ReplyDeleteI like the idea of paper weaving. Be sure to post photos of your work.
ReplyDeleteI immediately found the rolled paper projects video with Shannon Greene and I am going to watch the whole thing. We've got two little guys coming this weekend to stay and I'm hoping maybe this is something we can do. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteOh good, Mary. I bet they'll be good at it. Better have glue sticks rather than liquid glue, to secure the ends. Otherwise your rolling stick/skewer/knitting needle gets sticky and it's hard to remove the tube.
ReplyDeletePam, you won't escape pictures! Bwahahaa..
Is there a way to stop squirrels from eating tree buds?
ReplyDeleteBeautiful socks
Weaving rolled paper looks interesting.
This is the first year they've done it. They used to eat the thorns on the old cherry tree all winter.
ReplyDeleteMom cut all her paper into long, thin triangles and rolled the beads around a toothpick.
ReplyDeleteThat's the classic way to make beads. It makes sn oval shape. If you roll straight strips you get barrel beads. It's interesting to mix them.
ReplyDeleteoh oh - do I see my influence in the making of paper beads? Not that I would ever be guilty of enabling! Will be interested to see where you go with it.
ReplyDeleteLovely to see pictures of the spring flowers because they're not showing here yet. I'm just happy we're not in Manitoba right now!
80? No wonder you mentioned summer. We still haven’t had THAT day, that amazingly wonderful spring day. We often get it in March, but not this year, and now we’re in mid-April.
ReplyDeleteSquirrels around here are courting these days. They chase each other a lot! I guess playing hard to get is attractive to squirrels.
ReplyDelete