Grove of Trees – Part Two
I’m working on my grove of trees nuno landscape slowly. I think that some of you may think that this is a “find the difference” in the photos as they look pretty similar. But this is how I work, I add something, take a photo, look at the photo to see if it works, then add something else etc. That means there may be only one small difference from photo to photo, maybe I took something off, maybe I added something.
I had the background “horizon” and the large dark tree on the left when I left off. Now to add more trees. There are three little lines added on. These are the folded edges/hems of the nylon scarves I use to add layers of color. I usually just cut them off and don’t use them but I thought they might work for background trees. I tried maroon, yellow and orange. Not exactly what I wanted.
Then I added a mid tone grey one. I liked that better as it pushed the line further into the distance.
I added more mid tone grey trunks and moved the orange one closer to the “sun”. That looked better.
The I added a few more orange ones keeping them on the right hand side where the light is coming in.
I wanted to use more of the silk organza for a few more bigger trunks in the mid ground to foreground.
And a couple more smaller ones in the same deep red color. I was happy with how it was coming along.
Here I have added a few white “branches” to see what that would look like. I am inspired by Wolf Kahn’s tree paintings and was looking at several that showed white marks to denote branches like in this painting. I would need a lot more of the white lines to give the same effect. I will be pondering on that idea a while yet.
I decided I didn’t want to add too many layers without starting to stitch down the under layers. So I stitched the darker “horizon” background down to the nuno felt. Now I need to stitch the skinny trees down. I still need to figure out the foreground and there will be more layers of fabric on the larger trees. Still a long way to go. But I’m happy with my progress.








12 thoughts on “Grove of Trees – Part Two”
Sehr achtsame Art und Weise zu arbeiten. Ich liebe es. Das Werk wird beseelt.
Thank you so much, this method of working usually yields better results for me.
Takes us back to childhood with the spot-the-difference books 🙂
Wolf’s painting is wonderful and yes, why not try the white-branch technique?
Yes, those type of books were exactly what I was thinking of. 😉 I think I will try the white branches and see how it goes. Perhaps I can stitch them in with thin white thread? Applique will take forever.
This reminds me of sitting up to watch the dawn, Ruth. The sun’s rays brightening up the forest as the minutes pass. Very calming and exquisite.
Helene
Thanks Helene, it is very “dawn” like. It’s fun to play with light and shadow to see what “atmosphere” you get.
I like to to follow your thought processes, very inspiring.
This seems to be going towards a very dramatic setting, Ruth. You can already see that it will catch the atmosphere of a particular moment in time, an emotional one.
I like the idea of thread for the thin branches, or maybe painting/mark making with white ink?
Thanks Caterina! What a great idea to use white ink or paint. That might work really well. I will have to see if I can sample that idea on other fabric first to see what the result will be.
Beautiful. Love the colour of the horizon and the golden sunset (to me as opposed to sunrise).
Thanks Marie, sunset or sunrise, either works for me 🌞
I think I can see where you’re going with this now Ruth. I was struggling with the size of the pictures. They were all much larger than my screen, but once I had copied them and pasted them side by side on a real “spot the difference” type page I was able to appreciate the nuances.
Looking forward to the next steps.
Ann
Thanks Ann, the photos have been some what of a problem in WordPress. Not sure what the issue is but hopefully it will resolve on its own.
The changes are small and hard to see but eventually I get somewhere. 🤪