Creative Nudge – Ode to William

MorrisRug_550

Textile
inspiration
comes from so many places, and I wanted to share one of the
(many!) favorite inspirations from my
recent trip to India
.

While we were in Jaipur, we visited a rug factory. One of the rugs caught my
eye and I just couldn't stop looking at it, so I took lots of closeup photos so
I wouldn't forget the details. The more I looked, the more familiar it seemed,
until finally it hit me like a ton of bricks! This traditional pattern, done in
1000 stitches per inch, must have been the inspiration for some of William
Morris' designs
!

As we discussed the similarities between his work and the traditional rugs we
were reviewing, the story came out that he did indeed have a connection to
India.

You may recall that I was in France earlier this year. I was thrilled to pick
up a big thick pictorial encyclopedia of Morris' designs, at The Louvre
Bookshop! Yes I carried that and a couple other textile thumper books back in
my suitcase. So I've been studying Morris' work with greater depth over the
last 10 months.

When we started our business, one of my favorite companies was Rose &
Hubble, who did William Morris reproductions. Sadly, that company does not
exist any longer.

Every year, at least one company comes out with a contemporary or repro version
of Morris' classic designs. Most recently we've snapped up Claridge
Manor
by Yuko Hasegawa, and the William
Collection
from Kona Bay. Yummy! You can find these, and coordinates in our
Art
Deco & Nouveau, Steampunk & Victorian
category.

We are still inspired by William, but what inspired William to begin with?

My fellow traveler Pam Holland told me about Morris'
collaboration with Thomas Wardle
, who was experimenting with Indian silks
and natural dyes. They played around with Indian block printing, (which we
played around with in Jaipur as well!) and then Morris
stayed in Wardle's town
two years working on colors and processes that
would take his own experiments in tapestry, printing and wallpaper even
further.

One of the places you can
study his work up close
, is the Victoria
and Albert Museum in London.
(My favorite museum in the world…which is
saying something!) You can also visit the William
Morris Gallery
in northeast London.

If you are interested in learning more about historic textiles, William Morris
is a great place to start! The topic is deep and broad, and you can spend the
rest of your life wandering through museums looking for vintage textile
designs, but once you get to know William you'll spot his work (and his
inspirations!) in a heartbeat!

For
more of my photos of India, visit my photo page.

*********

We are accepting comfort
quilts for Colorado Flood victims
. You can drop them off or ship them to us
at:
eQuilter.com
5455 Spine Rd, Suite E
Boulder CO 80301

We will have another distribution in early November. We are focusing on the
evacuated community of Lyons, and also local teachers who lost their
homes/possessions.

Please note if your group is making a memorial quilt for Sandy Hook
Elementary
, we would like to receive them by mid-November latest. This is
for distribution on or near the one-year anniversary of December 13. We have a
contact there who will distribute them to families in the school and community.

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Creative Nudge – Prickly Kitty

Titus

Why is it that our pets
know that the one way to really get our attention, is to take a nap on a current
sewing project
?

This is Sophie's in-process project from Nancy Chong's Hawaiian
Quilt workshop from the CQC retreat this last weekend. Sophie chose the
Ulu Breadfruit design
, and an eye-popping batik/
hand-dye
combination. We picked out one of Nancy's
traditional designs
, folded the fabric into eighths and cut out the
applique like I used to cut paper snowflakes
as a kid. So much fun!

Then the applique " snowflake"
is pinned and then basted onto the background. Right now this project is stuck
at the pinning stage because there is
a big kitty
who is doing the feline version of sleeping on a bed of nails.
Ha!

If we can get the kitty to move, we'll baste the applique to the background,
and then begin the long process of needle-turn
applique. Sophie got some very nice personal attention from the teacher, and
therefore really wanted to be able to master the needle-turn
technique, but ended up in frustrated tears until she decided to do what
worked: finger-turn and finger-press the 3/16" edge of the applique,
before stitching.

I told her – don't feel bad! I've seen grownups in tears in some quilt
workshops too! When we got home the family asked her if she had a good time.
"I had a great time!" she responded. "I want to go back next
year!"

Tonight after school, she had her practice applique block out and was doing
her applique
practice stitching with a look of quiet determination on her
face.

*********

We are accepting comfort quilts for Colorado Flood victims. You can drop them
off or ship them to us at:
eQuilter.com
5455 Spine Rd, Suite E
Boulder CO 80301

We will have a distribution in the next week, (before I go to Houston) and
another one in early November. We are focusing on the evacuated community of
Lyons, and also local teachers who lost their homes/possessions.

Please note if your group is making a memorial quilt for Sandy Hook
Elementary
, we would like to receive them by mid-November latest. This is
for distribution on or near the one-year anniversary of December 13. We have a
contact there who will distribute them to families in the school and community.

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Aloha from the Black Forest!

Nancychong

This weekend Sophie and I are at a quilt retreat
put on by our state guild CQC. Nancy Chong is here teaching her
traditional Hawaiian appliqu? method. You may be familiar with her Hawaiian
quilt pattern designs from Pacific
Rim
, which we carry in our
category of Hawaiian Books and Patterns.

We are out in the woods of the Black Forest, east of Colorado Springs. You may
recall that there was a huge
fire
here in June. Our retreat center is untouched, but we couldn't help
but think about the fire as we left the interstate and drove east into the
trees.

Anyway, we are super excited to spend a weekend focusing on Hawaiian quilts!
Paul's parents live in Hawaii, and I've been traveling
to Hawaii yearly
, for 19 years. I always make sure to find an exhibit of
Hawaiian quilts when there, so I've seen a lot of beautiful island-inspired
quilts over a couple decades. When I took my first Hawaiian quilt class in the
90's, I had a teacher who threatened to kick me out of class if I didn't use
the traditional solid fabrics. Nancy likes solids, but I see lots of students
are using beautiful batiks, hand-dyes and tonal prints, with some luscious
results. Half of the quilters took the class today, and we'll be in tomorrow's
class. Today I am giving Sophie some lessons in hand appliqu? so she won't be
too overwhelmed tomorrow. It can be challenging even for experienced grownup
quilters!

Many thanks to all of you who have sent in quilts for the Colorado Floods! On
Monday afternoon I will talk to my old friend Cathy who lost her home, studio
and portfolios in the Lyons flood. Cathy has been a leader of the artist
community in Lyons….before it was destroyed
and evacuated
. She is going to set up a special distribution for our
quilts, to go to those who had terrible flood losses.

If you are sending or dropping off quilts in the near future, please let us
know so we can set a date that will include your quilts. You can email Dana in
customer service at [email protected]

If you need more time let us know, and we can arrange a 2nd distribution date
for those later quilts. So please email or call by Monday noon so we can make
plans to get your quilts to those folks as soon as possible. I will attend the
distribution and take photos.

You may also recall that last December I went with Kathy Price and Mission of Love down to Guatemala on a
Cleft
Lip/Palate surgery trip
. They are on their way down to Guatemala for
another surgery week, supported by the money that eQuilter (and our customers)
donate to their medical and disaster relief missions.

Mission of Love is still planning
to rebuild a home in Moore,
Oklahoma
, for a family who lost their home and their 9 year old son. You
can contribute directly via PayPal
on their site.

Now I have to get back to my Quilt Retreat! My fellow quilters are wondering
why I am on my laptop, instead of working on my applique project!

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Creative Nudge – Plum Dandy

GangesPurple_550

I am a Purple Person. I have always loved Purple,
Plum, Violet, Amethyst, Berry, Eggplant, Mauve, Heather, Lilac and Lavender
.
This time of year I am really happy to drag out my plummy lipstick, purple
corduroy pants, and heather sweaters. It's like comfort food. But no calories.

My best friend in junior high was a purple person. Back then nobody wore
purple, at least not in my town. Only people who were a little hippyish wore
purple. I admired my friend for her bravery.

But then movie 'The Color Purple' came out. We became aware of Jenny Joseph's
poem "When I am an old woman, I shall wear purple…" which was
written in 1961, but became popular in the 1980's. The Red Hat Society
followed, and then it seemed like we were
all wearing purple
.

In color psychology, the color purple is associated with creativity. It was
long associated with royalty, and also represents spirituality.

Tyrian Purple, mentioned in texts dating back to 1600 B.C., was produced from
marine mollusks. It took 12,000 shellfish to extract 1.5 grams of the pure dye.

Rome, Egypt, and Persia all used purple as the royal standard. Purple dyes were
rare and expensive; only the wealthy had access to them. Emperor Aurelian
forbid his wife buy a purpura-dyed silk garment, because it cost its weight in
gold.

In an election year, purple represents a state that is evenly balanced between
both political parties. It is a mix of cool blue and hot red, and the blending
of the two represents peace.

My childhood friend who wore purple in junior high is now a law professor and
medical ethics consultant, but she is the most stylish and humorous academic I
know. She is not a quilter but she
loves cats so much
, she could be a honorary quilter. We
traveled to Spain
together a few years ago, and she was amazed when groups
of quilters came to meet us in the different cities we visited. What did we
wear on our trip? Purple of course!

What is *your* comfort color?

eQuilter has just received a shipment of Oliver
Twist hand-dyed threads
, including lots of luscious purple, plum and
lavender spools, and hanks of yummy green, teal, charcoal and sunset orange
silks. We are expanding our line of Oliver Twist threads, thanks to the
enthusiasm of quilt artists like Marianne
Williamson
.

We are accepting comfort quilts for Colorado Flood victims. You can drop them
off or ship them to us at:
eQuilter.com
5455 Spine Rd, Suite E
Boulder CO 80301

Namaste….
Luana

p.s. the photo above was the sunrise over the sacred River Ganges, on our last
day in India.

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Creative Hero

I am inspired by creativity from many different mediums… not just quilting, not just fiber art, not just painting and drawing…. but also fashion, graphic design, cooking, and music.

One of my creative heroes is musician Jake Shimabukuro, who is performing in a few days here in Boulder. He grew up in the rich cultural sea of Hawaiian arts and traditional ukulele music, and completely reinvented the image of a previously maligned instrument. (think Tiny Tim and "Tiptoe Through the Tulips")

If you have some time, explore online videos with Jake playing jazz, flamenco, rock and classical music on his 4-string ukulele. It will blow open any preconceptions you might have had about this unassuming instrument.

From his first viral video, to his current rock star status, Jake took something something simple and traditional, and totally made it his own. And wow, does he OWN it!

I see it as a parallel to what has happened in the quilting world over the last few decades. First there was a recognition of the value of vintage patchwork and traditional applique quilts, and collectors began to drive up the value and appreciation of the artform. (Hawaiian quilts were coming on the collector's radar screen about that same time.)

Then a few pioneering creative people started using "quilting" as a medium to explore a new artform. Most of those early quilt artists are nearing retirement age, and we have lost a few of them already. There was a second wave of contemporary quilters who stretched out the term of "quilting" so far that they caused controversy, before being accepted and awarded. (Think the painted quilts of Hollis Chatelain, for instance.)

Now we have the third wave of quilters who seek a modern design aesthetic, and these days even their spare design movement is being reinterpreted and reinvented by creative textile artists.

It is a great time to be a fiber artist! For the most part we can have completely different artistic points of view, but we can all come together at the Houston Quilt Festival and celebrate our shared passion, while discussing our various quilting idiosyncracies with gusto.

Vive la difference!

or… Long live the Aloha Spirit!

 

*

*

*

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Creative Nudge – A Spicy Soup

3GoldLadies_550

I am home, recovering from a 12 hour time difference, and mulling over impressions from my tour of India. There are so many things I want to be sure to remember…the myriad of smells and sounds on the street, the impossibly clashing but stimulating color combinations, the smiles of the people with lives of extreme simplicity, and the endless creativity of those who had nothing but time on their hands.

One thing that really struck us was that the people who had the least – still had COLOR. The women who lived in the most primitive and challenging of conditions, wore the most saturated colors, and the most interesting color combinations.

For two weeks I watched no TV, and severely limited my exposure to the outside world. (With the exception of checking the news on our Colorado flooding.) I wanted to create a clear context, with which to experience the colors and creativity of India. I wanted to limit the distractions of modern life, and be as present as possible with the people I met each day. It is so easy to gloss over the difficult aspects of day-to-day living in a developing country. We don't even realize when we are looking away, not wanting to see…

So I looked. I looked at everything. I took as many photos as I could, so the camera would see and remember what my eyes and brain could not process when I was overwhelmed and oversaturated. What the camera saw was the exquisitely detailed handwork on the textiles, but also the twisted limbs of the beggars along the River Ganges. The camera saw intricate designs in the tilework of the mosques, but it also saw the ravages of time and a hard life on a mother's face. I wanted to see all of these things, and more… to remember.

Ever since I arrived in India, I've had some of the most colorful, detailed, long-winded dreams at night. The first night I was there, I had a powerful psychological nightmare that gave me something to think about during the day. The trip was an empty crucible into which my subconscious dumped itself every sleep cycle. It was an opportunity for self-discovery that went way past Creative Inspiration.

It was a brief moment in a lifetime, for a cleansing, a healing, and a rebirth. I don't know what it means yet, but I know the soup that has been bubbling in my subconscious crucible will reveal itself in so many ways, as I live, love and create in the next several months.

We are accepting comfort quilts for Colorado Flood victims. You can drop them off or ship them to us at:
eQuilter.com
5455 Spine Rd, Suite E
Boulder CO 80301

I have an artist friend who lost her home and studio, and all her artwork. She lived in the town of Lyons which is still evacuated and unlivable. We will call upon our local contacts to make sure that each donated quilt is personally delivered to someone who has suffered a great loss in the flood. Many thanks to those of you who have offered to send quilts!

Namaste….
Luana

*The photo above was taken at the Amber Fort in Jaipur…the Three Golden Muses?*

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Colors of India

My feet are back on US soil now, and I am having
a 4 hour layover at Newark Airport. My journey back will be 36 hours
door-to-door, from the hotel in Varanasi to my home in Boulder Colorado. I saw
lots of flood damage in India, so there was a curious parallel during my trip
as I read about Boulder, but saw the effects of last month's monsoon floods in
rural and urban India.

As I have posted on my blog
and on my personal Facebook page
during the trip, I've had queries about whether eQuilter will carry Indian
fabrics.

Actually, we have always carried fabrics from India, and designer collections
inspired by India. I've made a list of these below, so you can start to see the
fabric that inspired me to go to India, and what is inspiring me to create over
the last couple weeks.

Indian themed categories:

Bollywood,
Elephants & Faux Ikats

Paisleys,
Peacocks
& Tigers

Fabrics from India:

Cotton
Yarn Dyes
and Ikats from Textile Creations

Shot
Cottons from Kaufman, Andover
, and &
Lam?
from Textile Creations

eQuilter
Value-Priced Batiks

Designers Inspired by India's Colors:

Jinny
Beyer
– from the years she lived there.

Kaffe
Fassett – he keeps a village employed
with his yarn-dye
and shot cotton
orders.

(See my video
interview with Kaffe Fassett and Brandon Mably
about his shot cottons!)

I'm dreaming in these Indian Colors:

Saffron Gold

Jaipur Orange

Red Curry

Rajastan Pink

Lime Green

Peacock Teal

Jodphur Blue

Ganges Lavender

More Color Inspiration:

Hindu Wedding Red

Turmeric and Marigold

Krishna Blue

Rice Paddy Green

Lotus Pink

Taj White

Henna Red

Red Fort Terracotta

One of the biggest spice surprises on the trip was the color and smell of
*fresh* Cardamom seeds! I have never seen them so fresh and green at the Asian
market in Boulder, but now I have to try and track them down. The smell is
sweet and spicy but really clears out your sinuses!

Many thanks to our friend and hostess in Delhi – my new friend Anju.

If you follow my
fellow traveler Pam Holland
, you'll also see more photos and videos popping
up on her blog. She is on her way to Dubai today, and will be teaching in
Abruzzo in Italy next weekend.

I have several thousand photos and I am distilling them down and posting on my Flickr photo page.…but
now I have to go catch that plane home to Colorado!

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Creative Nudge – On to Varanasi

Many of you who follow my travels and creative essays may have already figured out that I write and send these essays very spontaneously. It is a creative challenge that I made for myself when we started our midweek Creative Nudge a couple years ago.

Right now I have about 15 minutes to write down my thoughts, pack up, and head for the airport to our last destination – Varanasi.

Two days ago, what was supposed to be a 6 hour cross-country drive, turned out to be an 11 1/2 hour drive on severely rutted rural “highways” which ran through remote areas (don’t even think about what would happen if we broke down) and punctuated with crazy crowded noisy villages full of people, cows, trash heaps, pigs, goats, bicycles, all headed in different directions at the same time.

Travel is a great test of character, and every day we’ve felt like part of all of the day was like being in a National Geographic documentary. We did not take the usual tourist trip, but the 3 of us hired a car and driver, and took off in search of the most interesting photography subjects. Traveling in India is not for the faint of heart, especially if you go off the tourist track. I certainly wouldn’t recommend this trip for just anyone. There are days that we had to prepare for the worst so we could be happy if everything went as planned. Ha!

On the other hand, I must say that we could have exposed ourselves to many dangerous situations here, but we did not. We had a driver and a guide. We stayed in nice hotels where we knew we could eat safely. We did not go out alone or at night. If too many people crowded around us hawking their wares or begging for money, we left quickly and spoke forcefully to anyone invading our space.

I’ve seen extreme poverty up close, and interacted with people living lives of hopeless destitution, but each new culture carries its own heartbreaking version of what it means to be poor. The villagers we see as we pass through rural roadside villages, are so poor they can’t afford to send their children to the free public schools here. That is really something to think about. However we were happy to see that many rural children DO go to school, and that will drive the progress of this densely populated nation.

It has been an intensely rich experience of colors, textile arts, fabrics, sights, sounds and smells. As many have said to me, it is impossible to explain the constantly intense experience of being in India, but once you visit here, you know. It is beyond words. However I have taken thousands of photos and I am working to condense them down into a visual story for you.

I’ve posted many photos already on my photo page, and also several videos on my personal Facebook page. I also purchased several gorgeous elephant and horse-themed embellished wall hangings which I will make available on eQuilter when I return. (thanks to my buying assistants and fellow travelers – Pam Holland and her sister Jan!)

I am unplugging now, here in Khajuraho, and flying to Varanasi. Tomorrow we tour this sacred city on the banks of the River Ganges, and Friday I begin my long journey home with an extra suitcase, and a heart and mind full to the brim with emotion, inspiration, and exquisitely complex memories.

Feel free to share your thoughts on my blog.

Namaste….
Luana

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Colorado Floods

 

I am writing to you tonight from Agra in India, after visiting the Taj Mahal today. As you can imagine, it is very surreal to be reading about the flood devastation in Colorado, when I am on the other side of the world. A couple days ago I was at a textile dealer in Jaipur, and when I mentioned I was from Boulder, he immediately said ?Oh, you had the big flood!?? so obviously it was heavily covered in the international news.

So far I know of one friend who is homeless from the floods, and I imagine I will learn of others when I return. Our family and staff and fabric warehouse were ok during the flood ? some of us had to bail water out of our basements but to my knowledge that is the worst of any damage in our eQuilter family.

Many friends and customers have asked how they can help our flood victims. We are grateful for your offer!  A couple years ago we collected and distributed quilts for those who lost their homes in the Colorado Fires. It is hard to believe that once again in our foothills community, and around the Front Range area, we are looking at so many people whose homes and belongings were devastated by the flash floods.

I am halfway through my trip, so I will be home next weekend on the 28th. If you would like to send us comfort quilts and bed quilts for flood victims, we will make sure they are personally distributed to those most affected. You can drop them off or ship them to us at:

eQuilter
5455 Spine Rd, Suite E
Boulder, CO  80301

If you would like to make a donation to a local organization that is helping flood victims, please take a look at the list below.

I will be writing more about my trip to India in the midweek Creative Nudge newsletter in a few days. In the meantime you can follow my travels on my personal Facebook page, and on my Flickr photo page.

Many thanks to all of you who have called and emailed, expressing concern, and wanting to help in our post-flood community!

HelpColoradoNow.org is a partnership between the Colorado Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management (DHSEM) and Colorado Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster (COVOAD). This initiative brings together government agencies and nonprofit organizations so they may better assist communities affected by disasters.

Emergency Family Assistance Association: For all emergency needs for residents of Boulder and Broomfield Counties: http://www.efaa.org/

Community Food Share:  For emergency or ongoing food needs for residents of Boulder and Broomfield Counties:  http://communityfoodshare.org/

Salvation Army: Help those affected during the days of storm ahead and during long-term recovery. The Salvation Army uses 100 percent of your disaster donations in support of local disaster relief operations. To give, visit imsalvationarmy.org or call 1-800-SAL-ARMY (1-800-725-2769) and designate "Colorado Floods."

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Road to Jaipur


JamaMama_W

I am writing to you from a hotel in the countryside, about a half hour outside of Jaipur in India.
In a few minutes I?ll be leaving for our daytrip to Jaipur ? the Pink City.

We've only been here 3 days and I feel like I have been here a week.
Having traveled extensively throughout Asia, and having spent a month in Sri Lanka in 1987, I had an idea of what two weeks in India would be like? but?

There is no amount of logical foresight that can prepare one for the
experiences of a tour across India.
Yesterday we made the 6 hour roadtrip cross-country from Delhi to the
Jaipur area, and by the time we arrived at our country hotel we were all
completely exhausted! There was so much to see on the road? With all the photos we took,
we still could never capture the depth and breadth of what we
experienced on the highways and villages.
The sacred cows chewing garbage in the road medians, the monkeys
chattering and bouncing in the trees, the camel convoys driven by
white-turbaned farmers, the homeless children selling water and flowers
at the toll stops, the ladies in billowing saris sitting side-saddle on
the backs of scooters, the painted lorries (trucks) parked along the
roadsides (waiting to roll at 9 pm), the endless stream of buildings
that are half-built or half-destroyed, the fields of barley and the
distant huge factories, the trucks overloaded with workers spilling out
the windows and clinging to the back bumper and roof?I've seen photos of
these things but it always strikes one as an incredible snapshot in time when you take that picture?

Our trip has not been without surprises.
Last night as we turned off the highway, we ended up taking a long drive
down a twisting dirt road filled with cows and goats, dips and rocks,
mudholes and the occasional human.
A half hour from when we had turned off the main road, I finally entered
my private villa and realized what was so special about this remote
hotel.
I had to do a 180 degree turn in my expectations, but as I settled into
embracing a countryside spa experience (when I was expecting a plush
city hotel close to the sights of Jaipur) I was able to shift into a
place of peaceful surrender.
Which of course was exactly what I needed!

This morning on the way down the rock path to breakfast, I almost
stepped on a big green slug on the pathway.
?Hello!? I said.
?What message are you bringing me today?? I find that Nature always
brings me messages of wisdom, when I can slow down enough to understand
the message.
?Slow down? enjoy the peaceful quiet of Nature? the slug seemed to
whisper with each bob of his antennae.

I will continue to post photos every day or two, as I am able.
(with the help of the internet gods.) This photo was taken at Jama Masjid ? a mosque in Delhi.
This beautiful mother had 5 small children, and she was very happy to have their photo taken.
She had a grace and quiet wisdom about her that we will always remember.

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