Tuesday, 30 March 2010

Journal Pages


I have been having a wonderful time creating journal pages in other peoples journals !
I am involved in the Travelling doll Project that is something members of ADO (Art Dolls Only) are participating in. We send around our doll and a journal to several other doll artists in various parts of the world. At the moment my Team - Team Bambola are on our second round. We are a large team of six, so it will take some time.
This is a strange experience- working my way into others books and of course adding to their tremendous art dolls.
So far I have filled 10 pages of Paula's journal and 10 pages of Lisa's book
Here is a sneak preview of some of the pages . Paula's journal first.




Pages from Lisa's journal.




I have added so much to the pages they are becoming so much fatter ! I do love layering and applying bit and pieces. I can't resist doing books like this.
Its important to tell them a bit about me and the place I live in and to let them know what makes me tick ! Colour, lots of it in all forms of medium - paint, pencil, dyed fabrics - got to add fabrics . I also like to add small things that I have made and surprises to make the girls smile - little mini bags that hold a post card that has been cut into jigsaw shapes - an embroidered brooch that I have created from novelty fabric - tiny books with covers made from scanned images of my real antique purses that I collect- oh lots of things go in my journals.Photos - torn papers, treasure from shops like Libertys of London. And then of course there is the ramblings of a 'just little bit crazy textile-oholic' who loves shiny bits .

If you click on the images they should enlarge so you can read the pages up close.
We don't get our journals back until the end of project ( about July/August so this really is a sneak peek for Team Bambola.
Enjoy !!!

Sunday, 14 March 2010

Antique Textiles - to restore or conserve ?

I came across this beautiful old picture frame last week at a car boot and couldn't resist buying it for just a £1. Do you blame me? Even though its in a really sorry state !


The paper label on the back states Goodyers 174 Regent Street London and it stands with back stand and has the glass still intact. The back is in a cotton brocade, and is in good condition. The front is embroidered silk damask and has seen far better days. The silk is rotten in many places and has lost the weft or warp. The stitching is blended satin stitch and has couched metal thread applied . Metal braid has been stitched to the inner and outer edges.

I considered the frame to be 1900s or even earlier. I've done a bit of research on Goodyers shop in Regent Street and they seem to have been around in the mid / late 1800s early 1900s, can't find much detail on them.
As the embroidery was on such poor condition I decided that it would be too great a job to restore it . Shame but there you go. Silk is tough stuff but once it goes into this poor condition there is little that can be done. But I did want to do something with this stunning piece of possible Victorian work. (Its of course possible that the frame was made and assembled in this time using a much earlier piece of embroidery. I have some pieces of waistcoat from 100 years earlier that resemble the work on this piece ! )



I do respect textile work that has been done in the past and try my hardest to keep original pieces intact but this was beyond repair - I'm just trying to justify to myself taking it apart !
So thats exactly what I decided to do. Take it apart - thats a bit like writing in a book - something you are taught as a child never to do and that never goes away , does it !
Before taking anything off, I knew that I would keep the back covering and would rework the front in my own embroidery at a later date. The piece of embroidery that I would remove I would use on a dolls outfit. So I had plans for the future. That helped determine how carefully I would dis-assemble the frame.

I carefully prised off the backing board from the front frame. The glue used is the old fashioned rabbit glue that cracks over time but seems to set solid.

I then very carefully cut the main fabric from the board around the edges with a sharp scalpel.

Inside the frame the edges have been bound with cotton cloth that looks to be about 1850s in design.

Underside showing stitching.


The only part that I damaged whilst removing everything was the outer metal thread braid, it ripped badly but the inner braid came off okay and is still very useable.
The silk is badly worn as I have said but I do want to try and use it. It needs backing with something to hold it together . Not sure at this point what I will use to stablize it. Any suggestions would be very gratefully accepted. Any ideas on age of piece would be interesting too.
I always wonder with old needlework about the people who made it and the ones that used the item. It does seem as if antique pieces have life still in them and I am sure it will be happy to be conserved and used for something else instead of just being thrown away.
I will let you know how I get on with this wonderful job sometime in the future.I hope I can do justice to the craftmanship used in this once fine piece of emboidery.

Friday, 12 March 2010

Paper Clay dolls

A quick post to tell you what fun I'm having using Paper clay for the first time. I'm using Creative Paper clay that I have purchased from lovely Lin at Altered elements.
I had a 16 oz block and managed to get 6 dolls from that amount, heads arms and legs, I'm doing cloth bodies on them. So mostly I have done clay over cloth but some I have made the arms and legs and head first and then attached by gluing and sewing the body on.


They take a short time to dry if you put them in the boiler cupboard . Then I painted with acyrlics nd vanished over the top to seal and protect the paint.



This is my first one , and I m now dressing her. I'm trying to get an aged effect and look , a bit like an Elizabethan doll.
freakylittledolls.blogspot has a great tutorial to follow for anyone wanting to start with paper clay.