Monday, 30 June 2014

CWS done

It was exhausting and exciting. My brain has been stuffed with both complex and simple weaves.
At the Complexity exhibition. This one looks more complicated than it is because she has used painted paper rolls to create the gold zig zag within the loose twill vocen silk.
Woven on 2 shafts with an ondule reed which is a reed with very crooked teeth.
What Bonnie is doing now. She weaves multiple tie downs in a fancy network draft while a few pattern warps weave another complex pattern. The really nice thing about these is that you can see individual threads.
The shaping of this garment was woven in with the crinkled structure a la Diane Totten.

And the sun came out and the cloud moved away from Mt Rainer so it could peek over our hill.





Friday, 27 June 2014

Tacoma

A couple of days to explore Tacoma before the seminars starts.
 Sally, Geoff and Jo
our hotel is the block beside the dome.
The Art Glass Museum has an artist in residence program which invites 40 art glass artist to work with their team each year. Fascinating to watch even though they often create "installations" which need reams of explanations rather than being beautiful objects merely.
Some Chihuly glass from inside the Union Station.
And I finished another toeless sock.





Wednesday, 25 June 2014

I'm in

Got the good news yesterday was that I have a place at the Complex Weavers Seminars. Talk about a last minute cancellation opportunity! I chose my seminars randomly so goodness knows what I will learn. It is bound to be inspiring.
So we celebrated with French champagne, local salmon and too much wine. 

Today's weeding was a good head clearer. I even found some tiny blackberries in the mown meadow. I was looking for a fawn but the thought of deer ticks put me off.

We went to Bellingham and I spotted:
It is a spinning, weaving and knitting store on two floors. What bliss. I was dragged off with a bundle of Corridale roving in many colours (the woman said "are you making Dr Who socks?" -- he must have lurid taste) because even they didn't have a sock yarn that will give me half inch colour changes. I will have to spin it myself.
Their weaving yarn wall.



Monday, 23 June 2014

Blaine

Here we are in the cool North West enjoying Geoff's hospitality.
At Semiamoo
The view from the back patio, complete with coyotes in the meadow.
The big house.



Saturday, 21 June 2014

A new to me artist

Jo's conference is finished so we did the riverboat tour followed by a bus to the Marian McNay modern art museum which is in the house she built in the 20s. She was lucky enough to be the only child of a doctor who discovered oil on his farm. She was an artist, patron and collector. The collection is very nice and even though the rooms of her mansion are air conditioned to freezing, it was a pleasure to see lots of old friends on the walls and make new ones like Ben Nicholson, a British painter whom I hadn't ever heard of. His painting there is great. Perhaps after seeing their temporary exhibition of contemporary baroque works (they were busy and loud) his work which is minimal/abstract/cubist was a relief.

The gardens are nice, too.
Back on the bus for lunch downtown, then some soccer/knitting and I have "finished" the toeless socks and started the new yarn.
The only non painted toenails in SA
The new yarn is not as nice as it is superwash merino with 25% nylon -- good for socks that will grow. The yarn just makes it around one row sometimes, or three at other times. I can't see the repeat yet. 
There may be another ball in my future.




Friday, 20 June 2014

Learning and walking

Yesterday I walked to a yarn store. I have almost finished one sock from the balls I bought in Vienna.
It is a toeless sock because I like to knit toe up except for the toe that I will knit toe down when I have finished both of them and decide which is the left and which the right. I should have enough yarn left for one, or two, fingerless mitts to match. But I really wanted a self striping yarn. This is more of a gradient yarn. So, I went to the LYS and bought:
The name says it all. I hope it comes out striped and not speckled. Or I may be forced to buy another ball or two in Tacoma.

On the way home I visited the Brewster gallery of Western Art. They have some splendid saddles and romantic views of cowboys.

Last night was the conference dinner and prize giving with a good speech by the recipient, Dr Alvin.

Today I have rounded out my Texas education by going to the San Jose mission where the Spanish civilised the local Indian tribes who, unfortunately died of European diseases before being completely Christianized. It was very picturesque with a good movie and explanations.
San Jose 
Cells for the natives.
One explanation board said that the Spanish taught the Indians to weave on European looms, as well as all the other trades that were usefull to the missionaries.






Thursday, 19 June 2014

Fabulous scene

Flying across US on a clear day
Unusual route over Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado (South of Denver), Kansas

My idea off having an audio track available to passengers could be extended now that wi-Fi is available on the plane (for $2 0per hour.) there could be , and probably is already, a camera on the plane's nose. There could be a commentary from the flight deck....look left, look right. On cloudy days, you could see on screen what I saw today and you could add lots of songs, poems, reminiscences, readings from journals, information by geologists, archeologists, historians, etc, etc. wpoldn't it be great! Plus, the airline could sell space to get more revenue. Everybody wins and I don't have to ask the steward Where are we?" -- he has to check with the pilot.

Long walks

I have walked lots along the San Antonio river pathway which is nicely landscaped in the downtown area but gets a bit wild the further out of downtown that you get.

This is the SA Museum of Art where I saw a Matisse exhibition of works collected by the Cone sisters in the 1920-40 from the Walters Museum in Baltimore. I have been there and thought that I had seen them all 20 years ago. I had only seen a fraction of their collection. 
One of the most telling bits was a compilation of shots of his lady in a peasant blouse that he, typically, worked and reworked many times. The images were superimposed and hardly change so it is almost like she is breathing.
The museum also has Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Asian, Latino, etc collections housed in two buildings joined by this walkway. . . . .and I thought that I had lost my fear of heights!
Yesterday I went to the zoo which was full of little kids and their parents. The bear was bored, the snakes coiled but awake, lots of birds with out of date signs, sleeping big cats and a pair of Okapi.
Okapi

The Southern Tamandua (a tree climbing anteater the size of a cat) had a hammock!
And the flamingos (which are orange, not pink) had babies.




Tuesday, 17 June 2014

Potomac Craftsmen

Yesterday, Janet and I went to the Baltimore Weavers Guild show. It was impressive. The guild has around 160 members. There were 62 exhibits and the standard was generally high. The theme was Idioms and some were a stretch while others were quite apt.
Cut it Out
Hanging by a Thread
In the afternoon, on the way back to Silver Spring from dropping off the car in Alexandria, Jo and I went to the National Art Gallery. The East Wing is closed to renovations which made the WestWing crowded (the downpour didn't help, either.) We saw an exhibition of Andrew Wyeth's watercolours of windows, wind and walls. It was marvellous. Across the courtyard was a Degas/Cassat show that paled into uninterestingness.
Today Janet, Renata and I went to the summer breakup meeting of PC which is now called the Potomac Fibre Arts Guild because they have lots of quilters, fellers, etc, etc. They usually have a study group round-up but because it snowed on meeting day in January, the speaker who had been scheduled then talked to us today instead. She is a collage artist and teacher. She talked about the history of collage which started with Picasso and Braque. So, not only did I get to catch up with old members, I had a modern art lecture as well. It was brilliant.
Ruth, Jeanne and Janet
Floris and Lana



San Antonio

We arrived on Sunday to find the town in a tizz because the local basketball team was in the finals. Spurs memorabilia was brought out of storage, bought and worn. When the team won the town went wild. Horns blared as cars drove around and around until the wee small hours of the morning.
Lots of streets were swept on Monday morning.

The downtown area has been taken over by tourists and conference goers. The biggest conference going on this week is the Fraud accountants gathering. . . no surprise there!

I went to the Institute of Texas Cultures yesterday. Folk have come here from everywhere to displace those who came before. There I found this reminder of Andrew Wyeth.

Thursday, 12 June 2014

Silver Spring

Moved to The Stollnitz' in Silver Spring and enjoyed an Ethiopian dinner in the rejuvenated downtown. 
No critters in this house, but lots of weaving.

Wednesday, 11 June 2014

At the Berneys

Those eggplants were rather too much. I spent an uncomfortable night and couldn't face much the next day. We joined Jo's old boss, Shiva, his wife, Charma, and friend Gene for dinner at an Indian restaurant in Bethesda. The food was notable because there were vegan items listed on the menu. Everybody else at our table was vegetarian and the local vegan internet group had a meetup at the next table. 
The Berneys have two new cats. The still have Nimmy.
Nimmy
And Merlin who, although he grew up on a farm, does not go outside. He was really pleased when I gave him some grass.
Merlin
Isadora is a cat they rescued from a breeder. She is a very squashed nosed Persian who is tiny and as sweet as honey. She is only 3 and didn't know about grass.
Isadora
And Tululla, a tortie who would rather be outdoors. 
Tululla
Another cat visits for meals but only in the warm weather. He is feral but has been caught, desexed, part of his ear lopped and released somewhere where he will be fed. I guess the locals don't value their native animals.
All the indoor cats got their nails trimmed as it is much easier done by two.


Monday, 9 June 2014

Queens Birthday

It didn't rate a mention. We had a quiet day. Jo was not successful finding a shop to sell him the Adobe software he wants to play with his photos. He did suss out the racket situation in a store that only had Nike tennis shoes for women (not good enough.) I found a linen T-shirt in Esau de Nile. I will fall off the no knits for linen.
We took Jean out to a local Lebanese/Syrian restaurant. The decor was very exotic, the roast eggplant salad was delicious but I greedied all my eggplant main coarse and now feel stuffed as a dolmades.
Here is the deer I saw in Vienna on Friday. I don't seen to be able to upload photos to published blog posts.


Greek lunch

Vas gave us a Greek, home cooked lunch on his balcony. Luckily he had an umbrella to lend me or I would have been fried crisper than his roast potatoes. (The secret is t parboil the spuds. Toss them in a little oil then put them into a hot, heavy pan in a hot oven.)
Vas and Jo
After a nap back at Jean's, we went to the Scheyers to help celebrate Shirley's 75th. The granddog, Awesome was there. He looks even bigger ans shaggier than two years ago and still insists on playing with 2 balls in his mouth. The cat, Lucky, made himself scares until it came time for him to share the crab legs. (Mud crabs are still the best crabs in the world, despite what the Scheyers think.) home early in the pouring rain to these two. See 10.22.2012
Lunar
HP



Sunday, 8 June 2014

To Arlington

We moved to Jean's after a lovely lunch with Nona in Georgetown followed by a quick visit to poor Sergiu who is on a liquid diet for two weeks
Sergiu

It is lovely to be with a kitten (12months old) who has the run of a large house, a devoted owner and an elderly dog to play with. She is an extraordinary jumper . . . Leapt onto Jo's shoulders in one bound much to his surprise.
Lunar
Harry Potter

Dinner at the Southby's with John and Pam was lovely.