06/16/2008

Making plastic bag yarn/yarn from a tube

Now, whilst I need to keep some things a secret - like the patterns to some of my corals so that I can continue to make a living. (rants: Can't believe how bare-faced some people are about ripping off other artists' designs and ideas. YOU KNOW WHO YOU ARE!) I do want to share my craft knowledge with other people and get them passionate about free materials. And by free, I mean just lying around, unwanted stuff; old clothes, worn out pillowcases, sacks, plastic bags etc.
So here's how to make them into yarn. The fabric yarn is great for kids to learn finger crochet, as it's chunky and grows quickly and the plastic bag stuff works well for outdoor pieces they might like to make.

Watch the slightly bitmappy video that I've posted on youtube and then have a go yourself.

Don't blame me if your fellas end up with Daisy Duke shorts!

06/06/2008

Guardian G2 Arts section article

I'll be the woolly-fibre fiddler mentioned!
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You can read the full article by ferreting around in last week's recycling, or by clicking here.
Mine are the wall mounds.

06/02/2008

I'm a lax blogger!

It's wonderful to be SO busy with all the events coming up, but it does mean that I just don't get time to tell everyone about them. So apologies for being so tardy!

First! Did you know that 8th June is World Ocean Day?
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There's a link here to the petition. Sign it and you'll add your voice to the many others asking the UN to recognise the day and bring about a greater awareness of the oceans' plight.

The summer is busy, busy, busy. There's the Hayward, (Darling!)  opening on the 11th June, with a private viewing on the 10th (ooer!)

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Where you'll be able to see two of my reefs in my wall reef series; pink and green. And also a smack of my jellyfish.

On the 13th June,  I'll also be 'engaging people in craft' at the Southbank's symposium, 'The Art and Craft of Saving The Planet'. I really can't wait to spend a day with so many like-minded people (whom all happen to be at the pinnacle of their chosen field.) I feel priviliged to have been invited to take part. It promises to be a unique gathering of very exciting uber-boffins! Oh, and nervous wee me!
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Please come along and see what we're all up to. And make sure you say hi when you're there.

Then finally, after Much, Much, Much anticipation, it's WOOLFEST!
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Anyone and EVERYONE who has any fibre fiddling urges is going to be there. And as it's my birthday just a week before, I'm heading that way with NO restrictions on my purchasing.
It will be fibre gluttony in it's most beautiful form.

I can't wait.

04/23/2008

New York, New York: Part I

It's been a while since I posted, but those of you who know me, know it's because I've been crocheting my way across the beautiful state of New York.
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My main reason for being in NYC was to set up my artwork in the WFC (World Financial Centre) for the IFF. Yep - it was a festival of abbreviations!
Picture_15 Here's a snapshot of my plastic creations through the tendrils of my jellyfish cloud. It's all hovering over the Chicago crocheted coral reef. (Unfortunately my crocheted work didn't feature in this exhibition in the end.)

But the opening was a great place to meet other artists.
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Here, right to left; the breathtakingly-talented Helle Jorgensen, putting on her coral hat; the mathematical machine knitter, John K, into whose brain I can't wait to pick, plunder and delve deeper; the wonderful Molly, without whose determination, good humour and hard work (not to mention resilient liver) the show wouldn't have taken place; and my gorgeous husband, Andy.


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Another wonderful high of the trip was hanging out with the beautiful Subway Hooker. Oddly, even after two cocktail-filled nights out with this intelligent and funny lady, the only thing I can show you is her card and an embarrassingly-large bar bill (only because I haven't yet found a way of photographing mojito-induced hangover thuds). But take it from me, it was FUN!

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I don't know if it's some fibrey pheromone that I give off, but fellow fiddlers were literally coming out of the walls around me. Even the barman at our hotel turned out to be a class act on the sewing machine.  Not only does Nate make the meanest PINTS of margarita (oh yes, I was drinking them by the pint) but his stitchery is bewitching.

I'm hoping that the little crochet demo that I gave him and Kelly at the opening will inspire him to go 3D, too. Far too good an artist to be pulling pints.


Part II soon.

xx

03/25/2008

Time to pack!

It's trepidatious taping time again. Should I use more duct tape for the corners of my box, or is 20m of hideously-inorganic, stinky sticky stuff enough to keep my jellyfish from escaping on their trip to New York?

It's always odd letting stuff go. Even worse when you have to de-construct everything you've made so that it fits into the box, desperately trying to make yourself remember how it should be put back together once you're in a foreign gallery.

I managed to get a few snaps before things were dismantled in the hope that it will jog my memory.(Would you believe that I'm taking these with a 5mega pixel Viewty camera phone bought to replace my old camera? Top tip - don't waste your £300-. It has a cavalier approach to focusing!)
Jellyfish_1_3
There are 16 football jellyfish flocking to the World Financial Centre.
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Their silk, bubblewrap, plastic and foam tentacles hold static and wave eerily at you whenever you walk past.
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Just to give you an idea of scale, some of the jellyfishes' tentacles drape up to 5ft beneath their bodies.

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I've been pouring over Claire Nouvian's book The Deep for inspiration.

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Just when I think I'm being a little outlandish in my embellishment, I find that Mother Nature has already been there, done that and is the mistress of frill, pomp and colour clash co-ordination.

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White_mantle_jellyfish Thus, my queen jellyfish, of which there are three, are heavily laden with crocheted mantles and tentacles beneath their glassy bells.

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And I didn't hold back with my 80's wedding confection of crocheted balloon ribbon and gift ties.

Blue_bottle_anemone_mound_2Or my anemone mounds, of which there are now not just blue, but orange, green, purple and clear versions sprouting across the side of a 2m wide crocheted urchin.


Plastic_bag_anemone
And of course, with the reaction my hula-hoop-woven anemone got in Chicago, I had to try one out for the plastic New York reef. Whilst the yarn anemone was soft, velvety and strangely comforting, this plastic-bag one is cold, hard and unforgiving. Even now its foam 'lips' are finished, it still reminds me of snorkelling in freakishly-cold currents, hanging over dead coral. It's not one of my favouritesChrissys_blue_joy_tree_forms.

So all the elements are packed, including 5 blue stars - the two seen here half-finished.



I'll take pictures when everything has been laid out and put in place for the show. So much of my reef's shape will be dictated by the space, its advantages and limitations.

The plastic reef will be in the World Financial Center, in a beautiful public space called the Winter Garden.

The display space is a gorgeous, curved, glass-fronted, store-front, about 38 feet long and 10 feet deep, that looks out onto the Winter garden. The whole thing will look like a giant aquarium.

All my yarn and fibre creations will join the IFF's main reef, displaying in the New York University's display windows on Broadway.

The windows will be finished for Sunday the 6th April. If you find yourself in New York, come take a look.


I've also finally finished my Gas Station Panel for the International Fibre Collaborative event on the 11th April in Syracuse.

Gas_station_panel 3 feet square and pretty hefty, it is of course, covered in coral! The link it has to oil consumption being that all the yarns and the backing fabric are plastic/oil-derived. It will be interesting to see how they cope with the elements. I'm assuming that they will not degrade in the rain, but whether they keep their colour under bright New York State skies will be another matter.

03/01/2008

IFF coral reef lectures and workshops at the Royal Festival Hall, London

I'm mad flat out here getting ready for The IFF's New York show and several other projects, but before that are the London workshops and lectures.

The Hyperbolic Crochet Coral Reef lectures by Margaret Wertheim of the Institute for Figuring take place at the Royal Festival Hall, on the Southbank, in London.

Margaret will give an intro talk about the whole project - the plight of reefs, global warming, plastic problem, and the crochet reef response -  then we'll all begin to do hyperbolic crochet. 

The IFF are putting up a new workshop schedule page online this week and will post more info there when they know it exactly. But this is the info thus far.

Lecture/workshop dates:   
Saturday 15th March: 2-5pm Workshop by Margaret Wertheim, with Inga Hamilton and Ildiko Szabo.

Sunday 16th March: 2-5pm Workshop by Margaret Wertheim, with Inga Hamilton.

We are going to be in Spirit Level which is on Level 1 of the Royal Festival Hall. The rest of the festival hall is closed to the public that day so anyone attending will enter via the office entrance and will ideally have to let us know in advance that they are coming - so that we can have a list of names. So if you book it will be an enormous help in managing the event. We have set up a special email address for people to reserve a place on the workshop - ukreef@southbankcentre.co.uk

This is the IFF's page to show what will go on at the workshops. This describes the Chicago/New York workshops, but the London ones will probably follow the same format.
http://www.theiff.org/workshops.html

The full exhibition opens on the 10th June through to 18th August, The Hayward Gallery, Southbank, London. (The Hayward don't seem to have listed it on their site yet.)

Both myself and Ildiko Szabo, are listed as contributors on the IFF's website
http://theiff.org/reef/reef3.html#


Hope to see you there!
Inga

02/20/2008

Lovely fibre fiddlers make the world go around

Q: What does this world need?
A: More people that spend time fiddling with fibre and wrapping the world in their yarn loveliness.

I contacted crocheting glamourpuss Amy Lamé
Amy_lame on her London show. (Yeah, Danny Baker says it's his, but we all know Amy's satin ribbon hairbands hold it together) to chat about some of the crochet projects I'm involved in.

AND WOW, LADY! Does she have a fabulous project of her own, happening?

Step up, Pom Pom International!

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A movement to create the biggest pom pom in the world and use it to promote peace love and understanding.
Ahhhh, pom pom fuzziness. Tell me that it doesn't draw you in like a small child, fluffing the soft fibres against your cheek and nuzzling into it.

Amy's initiative invites you to create your own pom pom and send it to be joined into the giant ball of LURVE.
Pure genius.


I've decided to make my own pom pom for the project out of yarn I've spun myself.

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Mrs Moon and I carded it from merino, local wool, angelina and the most beautiful, ethically-traded silk sari waste

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and banana fibre, bought from ethnic crafts. This is Anees' bulk buy site, but I found him through ebay where he sells smaller amounts.

Other WIP:

My fibre studio is being refurbished and I can't get in there at the moment - beyond frustrating - but I'm working on more stuff for the IFF (check out the page they've put up about me).

My nipple for the nipple project.

The GIANT reef panel I'm making for the gas station project in Syracuse.


How could I be happier? A wonderful husband (He's always top of my list) and a world filled with pom poms, nipples and coral.


Fibre bliss.

x



02/04/2008

I'm the luckiest fibre fiddler alive!

I may be only 37, but boy, I feel 370 lately! I've been laid up on the sofa with a wonderful mixture of phlebitis, (the drugs for which, in turn, triggered my angioedema) and now a liberal dose of the killer flu. If I were a horse, the knackers yard would have been called weeks ago. But I am part of the wonderful world of fibre and I may be falling to bits, but life is great.

Surprise packages have been arriving thick and fast.

1st came Jimbo's chophook. Picture_3
Jimbo is a guy living in the States, by Deadman's Crick, carving crochet hooks from the wood in his orchard and old chopsticks and selling them to fund the building of his cabin.
I came across Jimbo through ravelry and instantly fell in love with his handiwork, but on reading his blog, was also struck by this man's gentleness and generosity.

His friend's daughter has Friedreich's Ataxia, and wanting to raise awareness of the condition and the need for research into a cure, Jimbo decided to set up charitable auctions of his hooks online. Jimbo has also donated a travelling hook to the cause that will pass from fibre fiddler to fibre fiddler, creating crocheted wonders to auction and raise cash, whilst all the time being blogged about.
I've added my name to the list and eagerly await the travelling hook's arrival. Meantime, Jimbo sent me my very own chophook, with which I'm crocheting away. It's beautifully smooth and incredibly easy on the hands, as it's easy to hold. I'd also recommend it to people who maybe have problems holding smaller hooks. Go on! Get involved!


2nd came a bag of soda ash, from her Royal Highness, The Skein Queen.

Picture_4 She'd read about my dismal forays into banana fibre dyeing and suggested that I was using the wrong mordant. If this little bag enables me to create the sort of colourways she's selling on Etsy then I shall eternally grovel at her royally-slippered pieds.

3rd to arrive was a package all the way from Geneva.

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Stuffed to the gills with squidgy balls of lurid and spangly acrylics perfect for the Coral Collective Hospital Project. Thank you Seamus!


Another day, another package. 4th came Ilidko's wonderful corals and their patterns. This woman is like yarn on acid! I asked her if she could see her way to helping me with a pattern or two for the Coral Collective Hospital Project.

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She sent six! And they're SO beautiful. I'm indebted to her for her help. Visitors are going to love crocheting her designs.

And then there's Debi's package. Debi is over here in Norn Iron for a while and we're loving having her. She's always surrounded by a gaggle of women at the Guild meetings as she pulls Oak Hammock Farm fleece after fleece from her bags for us to ooh and ahh over.

I've dyed up some in luscious greens.Picture_8

But as well as her lovely natural fleeces, she's like my cheap yarn pimp, bringing bulk buys of acrylic back from the States for me. This stuff is so nasty it could power a small town with its static. PERFECT for mad coral creations.


So now, all I have to do is clear the backlog of work that's sitting awaiting me after my desktop absence. Argh! There's never enough time to take in all the fabulousness of our fibre community. I need to duplicate myself.


Thanks to EVERYONE!

01/18/2008

Inspired by the drawings of Ernst Haeckel

1900's man 2000's woman.
Science and art.
Close, intricate study and freeform imagined.
Pencil and crochet hook.

Who would have guessed that we would have such a connection in our passions?
I dream of a time machine and just an hour to pore over these scientific glories with the man who drew them. Until that day, I shall just try to bring a minute part of his genius into fibre being.
Picture_4 I salute you, Ernst!

12/19/2007

The Coral Collective Hospital Project

I've spent a lot of time in waiting rooms and clinics over the years, clutching Andy's hand and worrying desperately. I always vowed that when they found out what was wrong and my time in those places was done, then I would set up a project to say thanks to the doctors & to help others in that situation. Something a bit different that made a difference.

Well, before a short stay in hospital last April to SORT IT ALL AAAAT, the idea hit me, and the Coral Collective was born.

It's taken a while to get the idea straight in my head (being involved in the IFF's reef inspired and re-organised my thoughts), as did chatting to fibre activists such as frau fiber.

Roughly, the Coral Collective is:
To provide the clinic with a basket of small bags, each containing a fibre (yarn, wool, felt) project with instructions of how to turn that fibre into a coral.
To then turn those corals into a piece of artwork for the clinic wall to brighten the lives of those who attend and work there.
To create a common 'thread' (excuse the pun) between the individuals attending the clinic and people across the world, so that they may realise that they're not alone.

So I submitted my idea to the clinic last month and they gave me the go ahead.
And then I submitted a funding proposal to the lovely people at Lush, whom I've been working with Christmas decorations on - And they said YES!

So I had an idea, permission & funding!

Next, I needed stuff to put in those project bags; yarn, crochet hooks, knitting needles, scissors, a way to keep the scissors safe, etc. Step in the wonderful generosity of people. And boy, this just gets better and better.

Yarns have already begun to be donated.


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Next came the corks to keep the scissors safe. Thanks to Jane's and her husband's livers!

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Now, I know that I can find crochet hooks and knitting needles in charity shops for very little, so I wasn't worried about getting hold of them, but the scissors were nagging at me. They were going to take a large chunk of the funding, meaning that I could provide fewer project bags.

Step forward the local airport security team.
Now, I don't know about you, but everytime I go through an airport, I salivate over the 'sharps' box (which often contains my own confiscated needles).
I made a few enquiries and found out that these sharps are donated to charities, so I chanced my arm and asked if I could be one of those charity projects.

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They said "Yes", too! I have enough little pairs of scissors to keep this projects going for ages.

And now I've got nothing holding me back except the time to make the instruction leaflets with pics of made up coral. I've started a few easy ones.

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So watch this space.
It's my plan make this so successful that it rolls out into clinics everywhere. If it's something you would like to install in a clinic close to your heart, then please do contact me as I'll happily work with you on it.

And a GREAT BIG THANK YOU to everyone that's helped and donated! You're all wonderful!

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