The gallery wanted a sample, so I decided to make a piece centered on a gray fox I saw running through our neighborhood one night,
First of all I worked on the fox, beginning with a sketch in markers on a buff piece of batik.
Then I put it on the
machine, simply layered on a piece of felt with no other backing.
I then stitched it very closely with grays and a little red and white.
After it was completed, I removed it from the machine, cut away the excess felt, and turned the fabric under to make a large applique piece.
Next came the various elements of the landscape- I painted a piece of silk for the sky, and marker-sketched a bit of hand dye with some distant mountains.
I knew I wanted rocks (we're the rock capital of the world), yuccas, and a grassy hill, so I cut those shapes out of appropriately colored material.
extra shading and depth- grey, burnt umber, and purple. I built the yuccas from the shaded purple-gray-green, stacking up the long narrow leaves on a piece of teflon.
The sky was quilted by itself first-the reason for this is two fold- I can sew freely without worrying about running into foreground elements, and also I can move those elements around for maximum impact.
After removing it from the machine, I began working my way downward- placing the mountains, hill and a couple of rocks- then I quilted them.
Then came boulders, grasses, the yuccas, and the fox was appliqueed in front of them.
I used a beautiful striped hand dye for the foreground, over which I put the foreground plants- chamisa and prickly pear- and dabbed on cream, yellow and yellow ochre for the flowers.
Since the piece is meant for free hanging, I backed it with a lightweight black interfacing to hide the stitching and help it to hang straight.
voila!-