Wednesday is the day to link with Kat and the Unravelers. Today I'm writing about my Stitch Journal. If you remember, I began by hand quilting a piece of fabric for the cover. Loosely following videos from k3N Cloth Tales, I made the journal, leaving space between paper signatures to accommodate stitch pieces. Last year while when I discovered this channel, I stitched on a blush colored piece of fabric. Right now, it lays inside the back cover as an endpaper of sorts. It isn't permanently attached. In 2024, Kathryn posted a series of weekly prompts for stitched pieces. I am stitching pieces at my own pace, not weekly. I plan to follow some of her prompts but also create my own.
I won't drive you nuts posting all of the pages but I'm celebrating getting started and completing three pieces. These little pages have been good company this winter. For me, hand stitching is peaceful. Underneath each piece, I write something. The first page is a piece of cloth weaving with a poem I jotted down over a week or so. *
I have no idea where I first saw it but it reminds me of the classic picture book, "Goodnight Moon."
The third page is my version of Kathryn's prompt on Light and Dark. Her emphasis was on the balance of light and dark. Lately I've been thinking about what we gain by being in darkness. Regardless of clouds, smoke, precipitation in the night sky, the light of the moon empties and fills. The stars shine even when they are not visible to the human eye.
I finished reading Becoming Willa Cather: Creation and Career by Daryl W. Palmer. I have written of this nonfiction previously because I picked it up and put it down several times. In this book, Palmer looked thoughtfully at the changes in Cather's work, from early stories, her one volume of poetry, and through the three novels (O Pioneers!, My Antonia, The Song of the Lark) that made her reputation. Interesting to me was the influence of territory making and how maps were continually redrawn, the railroad, and how growing up in that time and place both constricted and allowed her to explore gender in her writing. Palmer doesn't ignore the fact that Cather didn't attend to the genocide of Native Americans. Nor does he dwell on Cather's sexual orientation. The writing is a little dry in places and probably isn't for everyone but it expand my thinking about Cather's work.
Thank you for sticking with this long post. Here's to a new month, February and a breath of fresh air.
* The poem and all creative work is copyrighted by Jane A. Wolfe
The book about Willa Cather sounds good. I like her books and have several. Your cloth journal is beautiful and creative. I hope that February is a wonderful month for you.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad to hear you're finally testing negative! I'm sure the cough is still annoying, but at least you know you won't infect anyone else now. Your stitch journal is such an intriguing project and I look forward to seeing your contributions to it.
ReplyDeleteyour journal is so sweet!! Glad you are on the mend and hopefully back at regular life.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you tested negative and I hope your cough doesn't keep you awake. Your Stitch Journal is quite a marvelous piece and I'm grateful you've provided close ups of the pages. Your stitching and words are additive, making the whole even better than the sum of the parts. I love your night sky and light and dark. I hope you'll share more pages as you fill them.
ReplyDeleteGood news on the negative test. I love your take on the K3N journal and prompts. I have been considering some of her prompts and projects for this year. It was good to see your pages. I like that you can write words and poems behind the pieces.
ReplyDeleteYay for testing negative Jane!! Your stitching is inspiring. I'm so glad you shared your pages...and your poetry with us. And ironically, Colin texted me earlier that he and Iris had finished one book last night and would be reading "Goodnight Moon" tonight! I am so thankful that he and Mailing are reading aloud to her (today was World Read Out Loud Day!!).
ReplyDeleteI am so happy you tested negative! But I hope your lingering coughs fade away... and soon! But your stitch book! Oh my, Jane! What a delight! I love everything about it and do so hope you will continue to share your progress! Thank you for the link to k3n... what a delightful rabbit hole that is!
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely love your journal and please do post every page.
ReplyDeletePlease feel free to share ALL the pages in your lovely stitch book, Jane! I love seeing them, and would love to be part of your audience as your journal continues to come together. Such beautiful and inspired (and inspirING) stitching. I'm so glad you're positively negative again -- which is such a great feeling. (Now for that cough to subside . . . ) XO
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