Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Corduroy experiments

How many different things can you make out off cast of corduroy pants?
Here are some of my non-bag projects. 

Decorative throw pillows, embellished with a zinnia.


This is one of two pillows with orange chrysanthemums on plum corduroy. 

This jacket is 18 mo. size with pink flowers


On the back is an adorable owl on a branch. 
This jacket is size 5,
with fun flower embellishments on the front and back. 
This is a women's size denim shirt with poppies
Another adult size jacket with a leaf motif. 
Dark denim jacket with pink, turquoise and green swirls and flowers. 
All of these pillows and jackets are in Ostara's.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Bags by the Batch

So, two or three weeks ago I (Brynn) got inspired to make some bags with more of a spring look.  The first thing I always do is drag out all my pieces and scraps and see what meshes into an idea.  I make a huge mess doing this, to the point that I am usually wading through the various piles of potential bags, so I decided to come up with as many ideas of designs and color schemes as possible (not hard, as they usually trigger each other anyway), and cut them all out at once.  I started with four or five, but then another idea or two  presented themselves, and so I cut them out too...  It took me a couple of weeks to get through them all, but now I have six new bags!  (I gave one of them to my daughter for her birhtday.)  It was a lot of fun to take them in to Ostara's all at once. 

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Rugs

I (Barbara) have always had a desire to make rugs. I did a lot of dreaming and not much doing. My rug has to move fast. I am not the hooker artist content to keep her rug in a frame for years and work a little each evening. No my rug must take only a few weeks. It can't cost much either. I think I have in my long life of 64 years crocheted a rag rug or two. But I think I really got out of the dreaming stage when we were at Immanuel Mission. Down there they have this craft room filled with years of missionary barrel artifacts--barrels of yarn, for instance. Stacks of unwanted fabric. Usually we would use these items for craft projects with the ladies, but it was also kosher for us "missionaries" to use it for personal projects. This first picture is a rug I made using a toothbrush needle. and strips of torn fabric. We all made one, and I was ratherpleased with how quickly it went. I used old upholstery fabric mostly. I use it on my porch and it goes through all the weather, but provides an initial cleaning off of shoes before entering the house.
This next rug is made from yarn. First I finger knit tubes that provided yards and yards of a kind of jumbo yarn. Then, I raided the shop for a 3 foot long 1X1 board to which I screwed about 30 small wooded spools.Then I used this like a jumbo knitting loom. This produced am 8 foot by 30 inch washable rug which I use in my bathroom.
Well I have always been a woolaholic and collected wool blankets from any imaginable source. Once I made slipcovers for a chair and a sofa out of some beautiful red wool blankets--a little to my regret because on e of them was one I grew up with that my parents had purchased from a peddler from Minnesota Woolen Mills in the fifties. When I had acquired about a dozen blankets, I decided to make a braided rug. So I did. It went pretty quickly. I had it done in 2-3 months a couple of winters ago. It is a lovely thick, soft round rug about 8 feet in diameter. It is in my living room. one thing about these vintage blankets is the usual colors are pink and green. I tries dyeing the pink to an orange but it didn't take the dye very well. My sources say that to wash it, you take it out on your clean patio and hose it down and let it dry. Mine is staying pretty clean. I can't imagine having to do this for 4-5 years. But it's nice to know it is do-able.
After making purses in great quantities, I acquired several baskets full of scraps. So this led to the penny rug. This has been in the works for 2-3 years. Michaela helped me get started by cutting and sewing layers of circles. Then we began appliqueing them onto a green wool army blanket. That was pretty hard on the fingers, so it was on the shelf for quite some time. But Arianna got books on tape from the library to listen to while she finished it for me.

Last week I was at a thrift store and came home with a desert rose wool blanket that I paid a dollar and a half for--they called it a pet blanket. I'm kind of burned out on purses just now, so thought I would make this blanket into small rugs--appliqued and three layers soft. I'm taking them to Ostara's tomorrow, and have plans to sacrifice another of my woolen treasures for a rug.


Thursday, March 17, 2011

Some of my recent paintings

OK this is a little like Dan's last blog where you had to build a pig pen to have a ham dinner. We had to buy a computer for me to write my next blog. Oh sure I could have gone over to Brynn and Dan's and used their computer, but it is more complicated than that. I had to take pictures of these paintings, but our camera was full, so I had to wait for the new computer to download, so I could take pictures of my paintings. Then, of course I needed a special tutorial to know how to get things going. Et voila! Here I am pounding away on my keyboard writing a blog--A BLOG! Will wonders never cease? Really painting the pictures is a snap in comparison. It all began with Michaela wanting me to paint a picture of Kansas for a friend--that one I don't have a photo of--it's in China. Then another of her friends visited and took a picture I had painted for Arianna several years ago. But, as the saying goes, "Mom can always paint another one." In this case it was two.
Arianna is always looking for the quintessential Kansas picture--you know flat horizon with green fields in the foreground and lots of clouds. Her other interest is in the preraphaelite movement. So she found a painting she liked and I copied it for her.
Then Brynn wanted a couple of pictures to help her rejeuvenate her living room. So I whipped out some poppies originally painted by Georgia O"Keefe and a fairly large picture taken from a photo of aspen trees.

And lastly, I decided to use my last canvas to paint a picture that I brought back from Immanuel mission. I think these two little girls are old ladies by now. So that's what I've been doing. B &I are talking about whether to enter the art fair in May. Maybe...

Friday, March 11, 2011

Ostara's

My (Brynn) main reason for wanting to create bags was pure enjoyment, mixed with my streak of practicality.  Having four kids, I tend to always have an extra bag of books, food, clothes or something everywhere we go, so always grabbed on from my stash of plastic grocery sacks.  This didn't appeal to my sense of aesthetics very much, and so that is what I had in mind when I made the first one.  I was surprised, and gratified to find other people besides just myself enjoyed them as well.  One of the most exciting developements in our creative journey was last summer I met Renee Nulf, who runs Ostara's, which is near Avenue A on Main Street in Hutchinson.  Her store is a combination of antiques and artisian creations, as well as anything else that she finds cool.  She invited us to consign our bags in her store, and it was the beginning of a great friendship!  These are the bags that I have in the store right now. 

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Hi Everyone

These are the Confessions of desperate Farm-wives:
    When the creativity of a mother and daughter is combined with a 30 min drive to the nearest metropolis of any significant size, four children, two husbands, limited incomes, and a love for thrift shopping,  something had to happen. It all started with the never ending search for the perfect bag/purse. Brynn decided to make her own perfect purse. This idea grew into a good gift for birthdays and weddings. Friends started to ask for a bag for themselves. Soon she was invited by a friend to share a booth at the Farmer's Market.  Barb, inspired by Brynn, decided to try her hand at making purses.
     Both Brynn and Barbara love to shop at thrift shops, and garage sales. They found that these places were great for finding bargains. Used clothing has been an excellent source of inexpensive material. Brynn's preferred medium is corduroy, canvas, and sometimes denim. Cargo pants are great for the pockets. Barbara is interested in felted wool. Sweaters washed in hot water make excellent felt for crafting purses,pouches, pillows. pins and hair pretties.    They have met many people who are also interested in artistic crafts. Through these friends they have found a good venue at Ostaras on Main street in Hutchinson.


barbara at her sewing machine

Brynn in her workroom

Brynn's horde of raw materials gleaned from thrift stores, garage sales

some of Brynn's works in progress

Purses really do grow on trees!
Arianna was home for a visit, and joined in the creativity.  These are throw pillow covers in progress.