Showing posts with label Linda Van Alstyne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Linda Van Alstyne. Show all posts

Friday, March 30, 2012

NEFG




NEFG Exhibition 2012 at LARAC
Show and Tell at Northeast Fiber Arts Center
I belong to a guild, The Northeast Feltmaker's Guild (NEFG for short).  This year marks the 10th Anniversary of the Guild.  When I first joined, (which seems like a million years ago) things were very different.  For me, and for the guild.  Felters were few and far between then, and I was a part time feltmaker with a full time job working at an art museum as a Collection's Manager.  I had become good friends with the museum Director's new assistant.  She had sheep, she was confident enough to wear corduroys and a turtleneck to work, and she was a transplant from Manhattan in Washington County.  She used to sneak off to meditate under the stairs in this little secret alcove during her lunch break.  She created fantastic needle felted figures with a lot of personality and wit.  Just like her.  She knew I was a felter too, and she invited me to go with her to a meeting of her felting guild.  We drove a long way to an old church that housed an arts center, it was West Sand Lake.  It was almost all women, and they had brought their projects to felt on in the big room.  We brought bag lunches, and there was a show and tell period at the end of the afternoon.  Those felters were making some amazingly creative and well executed things.  It was not a big group, maybe 15 or fewer, but there weren't a lot of feltmakers around then, not in the northeast of the US anyway.  It was a pretty cool thing to see.

Chris White, Woodstock VT, dyeing program by Dianne Stott
Carol and Marianne dyed a bit of silk
Roz Spier in her Cyclone Coat, show and tell
I didn't go to all of the early meetings- it seemed like a long way to me, to travel just to felt with a group.  Not long after that, the guild really started to evolve.  There have been a number of dedicated people involved in the guild's success.  Today we meet three times a year for a weekend, every meeting has a very well organized program specific to felt making on day one, followed by a business meeting on day two.  Members take seriously their commitment to attending the business meeting, not just bailing after the fun stuff.  I think we realize that the group can't function or flourish without the effort of the membership.  This year we presented our second successful NEFG Exhibition at the Lower Adirondack Regional Arts Center, and we have organize five member exhibitions so far.  We boast a membership of 116, stretching out all over the Northeastern US.  This weekend we expect 41 members for the program, which is a good turn out. 

Guild workshop with Australian Myfanwy Stirling, Glens Falls, NY
Linda Van Alstyne with her felt at show and tell, VT
sqeezed into my studio for the business meeting

I think if it were not for the inspiration, knowledge, and professionalism of the NEFG, I may not have Luckystone Feltworks Studio today.  I certainly wouldn't know as many artistic women, and I wouldn't be part of such a warm, funny, creative, sharing, supportive network of feltmakers.  And I would have had far fewer gourmet meals, philosophical discussions and pajama parties.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Slipper Felting Sleepover at Linda Van Alstyne's

my finished felt slipper fits! (and Ruby's paw)
our fuzzy paws (R, Olive, Ruby)

I finally made my first pair of very firm felt slippers!  Last fall I set a date with felting friend Carol Ingram from Connecticut (the Queen of Surface Design) to get together for a Slipper Felting Sleep Over Weekend at Linda Van Alstyne's.

I counted down the weeks!  I've been wanting to learn to make slippers forever with my good friend Linda, the Queen of Hard Felt.  The three of us (and many of our felting friends) always have endless things to talk about.  From fiber, to food, to... well, some things are best left unsaid.


Linda & unfulled gray slipper
I first met Linda about 20 years when I was passing off my sister Polly Stirling to her and Beth Beede at the Starbuck's in Saratoga .  Polly was visiting from Australia, and I drove her to meet up with Linda and Beth.  Linda, Carol and I became good friends over our years in The Northeast Feltmakers Guild.  Both of these women possess an uncommon generosity when it comes to sharing their home or their knowledge.
 
R's fulling, resist still inside
L working the newly cut opening
L comparing before and after
Anticipating the weekend- I know myself pretty well, or so I thought.  I won't win any prizes for physical strength or stamina, so I was prepared to struggle with the physical challenge required of fulling down to a dense, hard felt.  However, I was shocked by the struggle I faced to wrap my head around the layout process.  (Six layers, two sides, twelve layers, two feet, four sides, twenty-four layers, separate stacks, separate directions, separate sides, identical layers, both sides, two resists- that's how my brain floated it around).
working my opening
 I've put in a lot of thought over the years about the difference in learning styles we all have.  I've observed a gamut of emotional responses by public school teachers and felting teachers, facing the challenge of teaching.  It is no easy task on either side of the fence, and patience can wear thin.  But I was shocked by how clueless I felt while trying to comprehend the slipper layout.  I've been making felt for a long time, but when I thought I understood, I'd find I did not, and Linda would try again to explain.  My powers of observation were occluded by the power of confusion when faced with such a multitude of steps.  I did my best.



L's on r after fulling & her resist
In the end (and after I grasped that I had to make two units out of the little piles of separated wool) it seemed quite simple, but I did not get it at all along the way.  I shouldn't have been surprised, Linda's resist pocketed bag stumped me the same way.   My interest in learning styles (and appreciation for teachers who honor differences) is informed by my child's struggle, and my own, with ADD.  I am still undecided as to the best approach when teaching a brain like mine, but it was a lesson in perseverance!  I was pleased that I only shed a few quick tears, and didn't hide in the bathroom at all.
Carol's opening cut, ready to remove resist
Carol's pair with latex applied to sole




adding acrylic paint to tone the latex



Carol & Linda.  Slippers not quite fulled.


Linda's masks & studio
We felted past midnight on Saturday.  Linda insisted I complete both of  my layouts (which I "resisted" but finished), then I crashed hard.  I woke up on the fold-out by Linda's studio, surrounded by years of her felting accomplishments- quirky masks, playful sculputres, beautiful bags, intriguing wall hangings, and rows of gorgeous resist dyed pieces on top of stacks of wool bins. It is quite an inspiring body of work.  Linda astounds me with her energy.  She works full time as a physical therapist, and spends most spare moments felting and teaching, if she isn't with her extended family.  She's always an enthusiastic ambassador for felt and passes on what she knows.  And that is a lot.  

L rolling to full & shrink length
heel tucked in to protect shape
L twisting to shrink width



manipulating toe back
manipulating toe forward


pushing with tool to form toe box
Linda shapes heel area
Sunday after breakfast, we focused on fulling down our slippers.  Linda was great at teaching ways to manipulate and shape, paying constant attention to keep the fit of the heel snug, or draw in the arch of the foot.  As Linda has shown me many times before, subtle movements can make all the difference in shaping your felt.  I learned I was using too much water.  I had been thinking of the Finn rug workshop with Karoliina Arvilommi and Rod Welch, and how much water we used.  But Carol observed my slipper as water logged, slowing down the process for me.  I extracted some water and it did speed things up considerably.  I finished one slipper to fit, and took the mate home with about an inch in length left to shrink.
 If there is a next time, I will focus more on the color and surface design.  I thought I was doing a pretty good job, but when I cut the opening in each slipper, I could see I just about reversed the color sequence of my layers!  In the end, the colors migrated and the pair looked matched.  They are not exactly beautiful to look at, but the structure of the felt is just what it should be.   My mission accomplished.  Thank you Carol, and especially Linda!

Our next felting sleep over: Surface Design with Carol Ingram!

Robin's slippers, more shrinking needed


too roomy, but almost there!
Both Linda Van Alstyne and Carol Ingram are available for felt making workshops at their home studios or outside venues.
at home, Ruby Jet bridging Olive