Edge Exhibition

Edge Exhibition

I live in a coastal town in SE England called Whitstable. As a member of a group called Made in Whitstable (a loose affiliation of local artists & makers) we had a group exhibition coming up with the title of “EDGE” at The Horsebridge – our wonderful local community arts centre. We needed to produce at least one item that fit the Edge brief, however we wanted to interpret it. The rest of our work was entirely up to us. 

I could have got away with explaining that practically everything in my wet-felted pictures happens at the water’s edge, and it therefore met the brief. But I was actually quite excited to think through some new and different work. I particularly like working 3D and it feels like a while since I’ve felt really energised by the creative process. So, I thought about what ‘edge’ might mean and I ended up making 3 different interpretations.

Edge 1

For my first piece I pondered the edge of the felt as a focus of a picture. 

I decided on a flat background with strips of felt jutting out to show their edges. I’ve made things like this using multiple resists to create flaps that then stand out. I wondered if I could pre-felt some strips before attaching, rather than creating flaps with resists in the lay-out stage. 

I selected some home-dyed Corriedale wool I had left over from an old project. Just as I’d decided to use this I noticed how well the colours went with a second-hand silk scarf I’d just bought so I decided to use some of that too. 

Home-dyed Corriedale wool and charity shop silk scarf

After I’d laid it out, leaving a fluffy edge to help attach it to the background, I realised I’d made it far too wide. “Oh well”, I thought, “I’ll cut it into strips once it’s prefelted”. I’d intended this to be a test for a more thought-through piece.

I decided to stick with what I’d done and move on to something else: I never made the more thought-through piece.

Edge 2

For my second piece I started to think about the outside edges of a shape. I decided I’d try using a book resist to make a vessel with a large surface area. 

I scanned the internet for book resist ideas that didn’t have too many ‘pages’. I alighted on an article Gladys Paulus (a felting hero of mine) had written for DHG comparing bergschaf and merino wools in which she included a 3 page book resist.

https://dhgshop.it/blog/article-compares-carded-wool-bergschaf-and-merino_88.php

I decided I’d use a similar shape using black and white wool but would cut and shape it differently from Gladys’s. 

I wanted to use carded batts as they’re much easier to lay out than tops / rovings when navigating complex shapes.  I had a good supply of white Norwegian wool batts but was struggling to lay my hands on anything appropriate in black.  I found a black merino batt and decided to go with that, though I wasn’t sure how the wools would interact, with the Norwegian being much more coarse than the merino.

Book resist
Starting to full the shape

The Norwegian wool was slow to felt and the black merino didn’t come through as much as I’d imagined. Interesting, if not surprising.  Eventually I ended up with something that looked decidedly anatomical: three lungs was the most polite thing I could think of.  I got a lot of comments about the anatomical possibilities of this one!

The vessel is an odd shape so I decided to embrace its oddness and bought some curved screw-in metal studs to add to the top of each segment. Given the brief was ‘edge’, I thought these would add a little extra edginess.

Edge 3

And, finally, I created a vessel using a circular resist that I would stand on its edge.  I’d recently bought a carded merino and silk (70% : 30%) batt from World of Wool that I was dying to use – it is deliciously soft and scrumptious to feel.

I laid out the first layer clockwise around the resist, and the second in circles radiating from the centre. 

Having wetted the fibre out, I turned it tightly over the resist then set about laying out another two fine layers in the same pattern.  Or at least, that’s what I intended. Looking back, I think I got distracted and may have only laid out two layers on one side, as the reverse side feels decidedly thin and soft, despite long and patient fulling.  Distracted? When I’m making something I’m finding fun, I tend to add lots of “what if”s and “how about”s instead of sticking to my original plan. See the ‘ooh, shall I add some silk’ for Edge 1.  On this occasion my “how about”s included a stripe of mohair tops, a dark circle cut from Edge 2’s offcuts (one on each side) and a strip of curly locks.  Fun, but not very scientific.

Adding ‘stuff’

Anyhoo, here’s Edge 3.  It does feel lovely and is very light but I wish I’d paid more attention to the layout.  I’m tempted to make something similar with a 6 layer layout.

In the meantime, here’s my exhibition space. I was pleased with the results and had very much enjoyed making three experimental pieces. 

Before I leave you, I thought I’d show you a natural phenomenon I saw while I was making my edge pieces. Being lucky enough to live by the coast, I often have a speed walk in the morning by way of exercise and enjoyment. It was a clear and sunny early morning when I noticed some mist rolling in. I saw a puzzling white arc in the sky – sort of like a rainbow except it wasn’t raining. I decided it might be a ‘mistbow’ and looked it up when I got home. Turns out it’s called a ‘fogbow’. It’s unusual as you have to have very specific conditions: enough mist or fog to reflect the sunlight but a low sun behind you which isn’t obscured by the mist / fog. The water droplets in mist are very small so don’t refract the light like raindrops do, they just reflect it. It’s also called a ghost rainbow. I saw this photo while I was uploading the images for this post and thought you might be interested. I’d never even heard of such a thing but I found it really lovely.

16 thoughts on “Edge Exhibition

  1. Fogbow is beautiful and it does look like a ghost rainbow.

    Your exhibition looks very inviting – your 3 entries are ‘edgey’.

    Adding the metal studs to the book resist vessel was a great idea – they really finish the piece.

    Oh it’s so easy to lose track of how many layers you’ve done when making a vessel. Even having paper and pencil handy to track progress doesn’t help because when distracted you forget to jot things down. Anyway the merino/silk vessel looks great!

    The blue edges worked well and give the impression of waves in the sea.

    Looking at the display again, all 3 pieces could have come from the sea or shore so they tie in very well with your lovely pictures on the wall 🙂

  2. Many thanks for your comments. I hadn’t thought about the sea / shore connection to the edge pieces but you’re right – well spotted!

    I think the white edge vessel is my favourite so I may well go back and have another try at something similar, while paying far more attention to making it properly. It feels lovely too: firm felt but very soft and light. That merino / silk batt is lovely to work with. The book resist vessel was a lot of work. If I made a wave-type thing again, I think I’d go back to flaps and resists at the layout stage. All good learning.

  3. A great read Lindsay. It’s amazing the number of different results you can get from one resist – I had a look at the Gladys Paulus post you gave us.
    Cutting out resists or inserts can be a chancy thing. I once cut out 3 resists stacked one on the other and the result was very anatomical, so I added a piece to it, but that didn’t help at all!
    I like all of your experiments, and I don’t think I can choose between the waves or the light vessel as my favourite. I agree with Lyn, your whole display is very “edgy”.
    That fog bow is amazing, but if you added it to one of your pictures, I doubt anyone would believe it- seeing is believing.
    Ann

    1. Thanks so much Ann for your kind comments. I’m glad you think I met the Edge brief and I did really enjoy being experimental. Completely agree re fogbow: I wasn’t quite sure I believed it myself and I was looking at it! Fortunately I had my phone with me so took lots of photos.

  4. Great work Lindsay, it looks like you had an interesting work through of your ‘edge’ thoughts. Always good to experiment and try out new ideas. I love the Gladys Paulus article and have read it many times, always getting new ideas from it. Your part of the exhibition is lovely and I agree that your edge pieces fit right in with your sea/bird pictures.

    1. Thank you, Ruth. Yes, it was really good to have the time and space to try out new things. I need to do it more often.

  5. Ooh, a ghost rainbow! Love how spooky it looks. Thanks for sharing, Lindsay.

    As for your Edges, I particularly liked the one with the er, bodily references. The spikes you added make it uncomfortable to think about in an anatomical setting. Well done 🙂

    1. Ha, ha, yes, ‘ghost rainbow’ is much more alluring than ‘fogbow’ and it was both strange and interesting. I’m glad you like the book resist vessel: I hadn’t anticipated exactly how it would turn out. Having decided it was a bit odd, I thought adding curved studs would embrace the oddness.

  6. Such wonderful work Lindsay, absolutely lovely. I love the white circular edge vessel the best I think, but a thank you from me for illustrating how to add some extra dimension to a flat piece of felt – the blue wavy piece. Love that colour. Your other work reminds me of 3 ventricles.

    1. Many thanks for your comments. That vessel is my favourite too. The wavy one worked ok (I added extra wool at the joining point on both sides to attach the strips to the base) though it was not necessarily any easier or more successful than adding thin resist strips with wool on top in the dry layout stage. Yes, I can see ventricles and again it’s on the polite side of the bits of anatomy other people saw!

  7. Lindsay….with your experimenting you have circumnavigated (on the edge) various different interpretations of what edge constitutes….kudos for your stunning results, all of which not only meet the brief but are edgy in the process. Shapes & imagery have already been discussed 🤪
    My fav is the white vessel. I’m curious – what are the 2 round grey (btm right & top left) circles I can see?

    Your exhibition display is certainly ‘of the sea’ enhanced by your colour palette.

    Fogbow or ghost rainbow….thank you….I now know what I saw on our last trip over to Ireland. Ahead of the bow of the ship was the most amazing arc of ethereal light. I’d never seen anything like it. It was mesmerising and like you I took several photos as evidence.

    Xx

    1. Many thanks for your comments, Antje. Ethereal is an excellent description for the fogbow. Apparently there are 7 types of rainbow: there’s a little rabbit hole to go down if anyone fancies it!

      When I was doing the layout for the white disc vessel (Edge 3) I started to wonder which way up it should be. I’d initially thought the fringe of locks would be around the opening, but as I was adding the strip of mohair I got a sort of Japanese minimalist design feeling about it. I thought it might be more interesting to go for something less symmetrical. I had three rectangles of black/white felt I’d cut out of Edge 2 (the book resist one) sitting on my work desk so I snipped two of them into circles, put one on each side and added a little of the main fibre on top. The off-cuts were fairly well felted so I wasn’t sure they’d adhere but I thought I’d give it a try and could take them off before fulling if they weren’t sufficiently stuck. They adhered fine and partly pushed through some of the top fibre as I was fulling it because they were already fairly well shrunk. I added them in the height of my “what if?” stage!

  8. This was a great read. Others work always fascinates me as to their thought process and wondering just how they came up with their work of art. Love your works!

    1. Thanks very much, Karen. I love seeing how others think through their work too, which is one of the things I enjoy most about the posts here, so I’m glad you found mine interesting.

  9. Cool fog bow. I had never heard of such a thing either. your edge pieces are very cool. I like all of them. I always have such a hard time not being literal when I get challenges like that. your pictures are very good too. I like the shell in the sand. I don’t think I have seen that one. Though I may nave seen the shell before. just not as a picture. I hope it was (is?) a good show for you.

    1. Thank you, Ann. This is an annual show which always has a theme for which we make at least one piece of work. Sometimes the themes suggest something very literal (eg Water’s Edge, though I don’t think we’ve used that one). I found that Edge didn’t immediately suggest a specific or obvious response to me so I let myself think around it for different ways of interpreting it. We set the theme last December so I had plenty of time for the thoughts to simmer away, which is probably why I ended up with three different options.

      I made 3 of those mussel shell pictures last year, when I was making lots of pictures for a big exhibition. One had flat sand and two had ridges, of which this is one. The most ridged one sold quickly so I have two left. I think I’ve shown it before but possibly not.

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