Erica Spitzer Rasmussen’s Talking in Circles

Erica Spitzer Rasmussen makes books as well as mixed media pieces she calls garments. Her website lists workshops that she teaches. I must be a magnet for sewing ideas right now, because I immediately focused on this one:

Drawing in Stitches: Non-Traditional Embroidery
In this two day workshop, students learn to stabilize and embellish paper to create unique grounds for hand stitched imagery. Motifs and narratives are developed from such sources as clip art, handmade stamps and freehand drawings. Non-conventional threads, such as wire, dental floss and horse hair, are used in conjunction with floss and simple stitching techniques to create personalized and tactile compositions.

Here is her book “Talking in Circles.” Below that is one of her garment pieces that I found particularly effecting. See all her work here.

Erica Spitzer Rasmussen’s Talking in Circles

Erica Spitzer Rasmussen’s Talking in Circles

Below is “A Portrait of my Father”. Mixed media (abaca, flax, various plant fibers gathered from ancestral land, acrylics, cotton thread and bovine blood)

Erica Spitzer Rasmussen

Prompt Challenge: Embroider

The word for my prompt challenge group this month is “embroider.” I knew immediately I wanted to use embroider in the “add fictitious or exaggerated details to make something more interesting” sense of the word. Then I saw Carol Blinn’s fabric book and I knew I wanted to try something with hand sewing and fabric. The pleasure (and challenge) of these prompts is making a book combining things I know with some skill I’m not as comfortable with. Sometimes the balance is off though, and this month I fumbled around a lot with too much of what I didn’t know!
My first step seemed safe enough—I investigated embroidery stitches and decided I could probably safely do cross-stitching. Then I went to the fancy fabric store in town and got completely overwhelmed, over-awed and side-tracked. I came home with this:

Embroider: Starting materials

If you sew, you’ll know that I should have bought something linen-y, not something meshy. I spent several days trying to make the fabric work with my limited embroidery skills until I noticed that Carol had used french knots in her book. French knots don’t work at all on meshy fabric, they just fall through the holes, but with the proper (tighter weave) fabric I could use the knots to make what I hoped would be interesting patterns. So back to the fabric store for an embroidery hoop and some new fabric.
As I practiced making french knots, I realized I could use them to write words in braille—the dot patterns would meet my criteria of “interesting” and if the words were synonyms of “embroider,” I’d be working in the meaning of embroider I was looking for. Here’s “puff up”

Embroider: French knot practice

The words I chose: misrepresent, ornament, make much of, embellish, disguise, upgrade. I made 5×7″ “pages” out of my fabric and sewed the words onto them, then bound them into a book using Claire Van Vliet’s single sheet woven method.

Embroider: first book try

I knew the others in my group would like this book because it was so not me! The binding is loose. The edges are frayed. It’s messy. It does feel nice in the hand and I really like the verso pages because you can see where the sewing comes through. It was also a novelty using an iron to make folds rather than a bone folder.
I meant to stop at this point and declare victory, but the book idea kept gnawing at me. Not to mention that I had enjoyed mastering the french knot! It dawned on me to incorporate more of what I was comfortable with into the book, so I tried sewing french knots into paper. The more fabric-y paper I pulled out first—rives BFK—didn’t work. But thicker, crisper 80# French paper did very well.
After I’d sewn a few pages, I thought “why not blind stamp the word above the embroidery.” So I set some type and used my letterpress to do just that. Here’s the cover, a spread, and then a close up of one of the pages. Now I was ready to stop—this book kept what I liked about the fabric book but is much more of my neat and tidy style.

Embroider: cover

Embroider: spread

Embroider: close up

Miniature Fine Binding

I ran across Hannah Brown’s tumblr the other day. She does fine binding commissions and has a wonderful post on how she made this cover for a miniature book about Monet. It’s a leather binding that she painted and then added details with sewing and onlays. Here’s the cover and a closeup, but check out the post as there are many more details.
Hanna Brown’s binding for a book on Monet

Detail of Hanna Brown’s binding for a book on Monet

Oak Knoll Fest, part 3, Warwick Press

Years ago, my friend Cathy gave me a lovely letterpress printed book by Carol Blinn of Warwick Press (I wrote a blog post about it here.) I was excited to see that Carol would be at the Oak Knoll Fest and we had a nice chat. She talked to me about her newest work, which is a mixture of paper and fabric pages with sewing and no text, a completely different turn for her. The fabric was gorgeous—vintage Japanese cloth—and the paper she dyed herself. The book cried out to be touched. The word for my prompt challenge group this month is “embroider.” I thought I knew what I was going to do for my book, but Carol’s work has sent me in a completely different direction.
Here’s the book I saw. She doesn’t have it on her website, but check out her book about her paper dyeing here.

Carol Blinn, Warwick Press