Friday, May 30, 2014

Guild Fall Show and the Exhibit Form


For more than fifteen years, the Homewood Library has hosted our annual Guild exhibit. This is a great opportunity to have our best work on display in a well-attended, museum-quality setting for an entire month.

The Homewood Show provides our guild with multiple opportunities. It allows professional fiber artists to show their work, but even more importantly, it’s a chance for those of us who don’t sell our work to display the beautiful things we make where they can inspire the public and attract new guild members.

This year’s theme is the use of natural fibers, including wool, cotton and other plant fibers, silk, rayon, and tencel.  Pieces can be knitted, handwoven, handspun, felted, tatted, embroidered, crocheted, or in bobbin lace. 

Please bring your finished piece or pieces (no limit), with an exhibit form (download form), to either the June or the August guild meeting.  We will prepare a museum-quality label for each piece, based on the information on your form. That information will also allow us to track and protect your work, and get it back safely to you at the October guild meeting.

We will be setting up the show on Friday, August 29, and taking the show down on Tuesday, September 30. If you would like to help with either day, we’d welcome you. More information will appear in the August and September newsletters.

Download the exhibit form. Fill out a copy of this form for each piece you want to have included in the show and bring those forms with your work when you deliver it to the show set-up crew.

Guild Newletter, June 2014

                      President’s Column                           

Hello Fiber Friends!

I trust everyone is managing to stay cool! I don't know about you, but I have difficulty knitting wool when it gets very hot outside! Those who know me know I have never been a big fan of cotton...either to knit or spin! Well, last month at the picnic, one of our members brought a lot of cotton yarn to share as she was de-stashing! I wasn't going to take any but a lovely orange cotton and bamboo mix called my name! I have been working on my cowl and it is almost finished...I love it! The yarn has made a soft fabric with a lovely drape! So now I've decided to give cotton another look and my next project is Janet Weinstein's shawl from KnitPicks in a soft shade of green!!! Never say never!!! Maybe this summer it's time for you to revisit something you swore to never do again.......you might find it's no longer as difficult or fussy as you remembered!

Hope to see you all at the June meeting!


Karen Ford

 



June Meeting - Making Fiber Embellished Cards with Barbara Mitchell
 

Saturday, June 14th, 10:00 am
St. Peter the Apostle Catholic Church
2061 Patton Chapel Rd
Birmingham, AL  (205) 822-4480

 


Do you ever have pieces of yarn or fabric that are too small to use but too good to throw away?  Have these bits outgrown a bag or drawer, or do they haunt you because “they might be good for something?”  Come join us at the June meeting as Barbara Mitchell guides us in turning these small treasures into greeting cards.

Please bring your scraps of fabrics, yarns, or small weavings and be willing to share, as sometimes the most unexpected color combinations can be stunning.  Don’t worry if you don’t have any scraps, as Barbara has enough for everyone.  Sewing skills are NOT needed as others can sew for you.  But if you have a portable sewing machine you may wish to bring it.  Please thread your machine with a neutral color (taupe, beige, grey) and remember to bring your cord, foot pedal, zig-zag foot, and perhaps an extra needle.  This will also be an opportunity to play with your machine’s decorative stitches.

Each person will choose a prepared fabric base that you may enhance with yarns or even small beads.  We’ll decorate them, cut out the pieces, and attach them to cards.  Each person will be given supplies to make at least four cards.  These instructions can also be adapted to make decorative hang tags with care instructions or your contact info.  Most people enjoy receiving a hand-made card, and now you can match a card to your fiber project.  The cards can also be framed for display.  We look forward to seeing you in June.
   


Thanks,  Mary Kaiser

 

Note new time and location!  When you arrive at the church, park and then look for an awning at the front left of the church.  Enter through the door under the awning


 



Mark your Calendars for the
GBFG Fiber Frenzy Day
!

 


Posey, the llama, just heard that the Greater Birmingham Fiber Guild, is having a FIBER FRENZY day, Saturday, September  13, 2014,  from 10:00 a.m.  - 2:00 p.m. @St. Peter's Catholic Church, Room C, directly across the hall from our regular meeting room.   So, what is a FIBER FRENZY?...

....This is a hands-on opportunity workshop to participate in all types of fiber activity, to learn and share, some of those unusual and crafty tools such as a rigid heddle loom, drop spindles, nostepinde or niddy-noddy, or various types of spinning wheels you always wanted to try.  We will have areas set-up in the room for you to a try a hands-on tool, and ask questions, as well as help you.  There will be a drum-carder there for you to card some of your favorite fleece or fiber.  We do ask that all fiber to be carded, be washed and clean.   This is a day dedicated to all of our guild members to try out some of those tools you don't know much about and learn something new.  We will have spinning wheels, small looms, the drum carder, various tools set-up for you to try and learn about.  We will also have various sheep fibers, alpaca, camel, and mohair on display and explain the differences. 

Bring a salad and light snacks to share, and, a drink if you want.  Coffee, and, bottled water will be provided.   Let us know no later than Saturday, September 1, if you are planning to attend.  This helps in our final preparation.

WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOU!  Wear comfortable clothes.

Mark your calendars!    Sorry, Posey won't be there but her fiber will! 
🐑🐑🐑


 

Interesting Fiber Items to Check Out from and about our Members...
From Karen Ford - It's a free pattern from Ravelry called Sanibel Cowl....really fun to knit, goes quickly! It's worked in the round and the eyelet is made by purling a row then a row of purl 2 tog, yo....then another purl row....you space them however you like! It's been a fun project! Check it out -
                                                                       


Congrats to Janice Weinstein! Her pattern 'Sitting Pretty' is featured in the newly released Knit Picks' book - 'Comfy' 2014 Collection.

It is also available to purchase individually. 'It is fun to knit and fun to wear'! 




START THINKING...

Homewood Library Guild Show

September, 2014
 

For more than fifteen years, the Homewood Library has hosted our annual Guild exhibit.  This is a great opportunity to have our best work on display in a well-attended, museum-quality setting for an entire month.

The Homewood Show provides our guild with multiple opportunities. It allows professional fiber artists to show their work, but even more importantly, it’s a chance for those of us who don’t sell our work to display the beautiful things we make where they can inspire the public and attract new guild members.

This year’s theme is the use of natural fibers, including wool, cotton and other plant fibers, silk, rayon, and tencel.  Pieces can be knitted, handwoven,
handspun, felted, tatted, embroidered, crocheted, or in bobbin lace. 


Please bring your finished piece or pieces (no limit), with an exhibit form (see below), to either the June or the August guild meeting.   We will prepare a museum-quality label for each piece, based on the information on your form.  That information will also allow us to track and protect your work, and get it back safely to you at the October guild meeting.

We will be setting up the show on Friday, August 29, and taking the show down on Tuesday, September 30.  If you would like to help with either day, we’d welcome you.  More information will appear in the August and September newsletters. 

 


Remember the New Guild Blog!

 

We're trying something new for sharing information online about guild activities. Please check out the new guild blog at:

www.greaterbirminghamfiberguild.blogspot.com


The blog has been very successful in its first months of existence. People from all over the world have found  our blog and clicked on it to read about our happenings. Make sure YOU are one of those who click on the above link on a regular basis to read about regional Museums of interest to fiber artists, what's happening with our guild members, and fun fiber related stories. And this is also a place to put 'your pen', by writing a post or making a comment!

 

Study Groups Meet Monthly
 

  • Spinning Study Group:  4th Wednesday of the month from 10 a.m to 2 pm at St. Peter’s Church in Hoover.  Please check out the GBFG Blog  for cancellations or schedule changes.
  • Nancy Clemmons is interested in sharing her love of tatting with others by teaching one or more in her home. Please contact her if you are interested.
  • More groups may meet in the future.  Watch the newsletter for more information and let a board member know if you are interested in a study group.
 

Thanks and Good Luck!
 

We want to say thank you again to our past president, Janelle Zorko Schultz and to wish her and her husband, Rich, the very best in their recent move to Atlanta. We will miss her presence in the Guild and know that we can keep up with her fiber pursuits on Facebook. Janelle's move is our loss and the Chattahoochee Fiber Guild's gain!

                                                            



Newsletter News - and HELP!!

HELP!!!! I really need YOUR articles, stories, photos, book suggestions, fun fiber places, etc, etc!!!
Please send your ideas, suggestions, book recommendations, questions to me (Susie Strauss) by the 20th of the month to go into the following month's newsletter. Email me at
sushicoach@yahoo.com and put GBFG Newsletter in the subject line.


Greater Birmingham Fiber Guild
 
The Greater Birmingham Fiber Guild is comprised of individuals dedicated to the dissemination and preservation of fiber arts.  Meetings are the second Saturday of the month, 10:00-12:00 (no meeting in July and August). Visitors are welcome.  The Guild offers programs almost monthly, focused workshops several times a year, and equipment rental (see below).  Southern Strands, the Guild newsletter, is published monthly (no issue in August); deadline for submission of material is the 20th of each month).  Send items to Susie Strauss at sushicoach@yahoo.com.
 
 

 2014 Officers and Board 
 
Karen Ford – President
Mary Kaiser – Program
Debbie Scott – Workshops
Emily Levitan - Membership
Nancy Lavender – Treasurer
Janice Weinstein - Secretary
Mary Spanos – Website
Susie Strauss - Newsletter
Janelle Zorko Schultz - Past President

 

 
Rental of Guild Equipment & Materials

 
The Guild has available, for rental to members, the following:
  • Looms of various types (floor, table, rigid heddle, tapestry), spinning wheels, drum carder, and more. Rental fee is $10 dollars per month with a deposit of $100 per item. Deposits will be returned when equipment is returned in good condition. 
  • Lucy Neatby's DVD knitting collection. Deposit of $30 per DVD. This is the current replacement cost. One-month checkout. See  http://www.lucyneatby.com/dvd_contents.html for description of DVD contents.
  • See inventory list and photos of Guild equipment in the Yahoo group folders section (you must be a paid member to access the Yahoo Group files and phot

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Museums to visit on your way to the beach

From Mary Spanos...

If you are leaving the Birmingham area and heading south to the beach this summer you should take a break in Montgomery and Mobile to see two new museum exhibits that include interesting textile details.

The Alabama Department of Archives and History in Montgomery has opened a new permanent exhibit that describes the history of Alabama from the 1700s to modern times. In the section about the interaction between the Creek Indians and early settlers there is a handspun twined cloth that I made, which I based on an impression in pottery from an archaeological site in Clarke County, just north of Mobile County. This sherd is dated to the Mississippian Period, which is from about 800 to 1500 AD.



















The round fabric impressed pottery sherd, above on the left, is thought to have been shaped into a round, after its original pot was broken, so it could be used as some sort of gaming piece. I pressed white polymer clay into the face of the sherd in order to see the yarn and cloth more clearly. I spun hemp fiber and twined the cloth, above, to match the image in the sherd. Twining is a technique for making cloth that doesn't require a loom. This cloth is now on display in the ADAH museum and is mounted at a height to encourage school children to feel what the cloth and clothing of the earliest Alabamians might have felt like.

Check schedules, get directions, and find out more about the museum at the Alabama Department of Archives and History at http://www.museum.alabama.gov/index.html

When you get to Mobile, stop by the University of South Alabama campus and visit the University of South Alabama's Archaeology Museum. It provides a unique view of how archaeology informs us about the past 2000 years on the Gulf Coast. I had the honor of designing and making the clothing for five figures: a woman and her granddaughter who are fishing on Mobile Bay 2000 years ago, a Mississippian chief wearing a full length feather mantle, a French trader in 1750, and an actual historical figure, Lucrecia Perryman, who was a midwife in Mobile around 1900. You can read about how the costumes were made, and the prehistoric and historic sources on which they are based, at: www.maryspanos.com/MSUSAMuseum.shtml.


The grandmother's shoes are based on a drawing by W. H. Holmes of shoes found in a cave in Kentucky. You can download Holmes' 1893 report, "Prehistoric Textile Art of the Eastern United States" at http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/19921. The shoes are twined, as are the skirts the grandmother and her granddaughter are wearing, and the grandmother's mantle. For the French trader (who represents the many European traders that were on the Gulf Coast in 1750), I spun and dyed the yarn for his socks and based their design on stockings recovered from a French ship, Le Macault, which was one of three ships that sank in the Restigouche River in Canada in 1760.

It was an amazing experience to completely clothe five people from such different times and backgrounds. Recreating any one piece is difficult enough, but completely outfitting a person, from how they wore their hair to what the chief's tattoos should be, was a daunting task. You can see more photographs of the museum, check its schedule and get driving directions at http://www.usouthal.edu/archaeology/photo-gallery.html

I hope you will visit the University of South Alabama's Archaeology Museum and the Alabama Department of Archives and History. I'm sure that you'll enjoy both of them.

I also hope that if you find an interesting textile treasure that our guild members might want to see, that you'll send the information about it to me so I can post it here on the guild blog.

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Please note! Corrections to picnic information.

Please note two corrections to the information in the recent newsletter about this Saturday's annual guild picnic. The picnic will begin at 11:00am. Regarding drinks, iced tea and bottled water will be supplied. If you prefer drinking something else--your favorite soda or your favorite spring time beer--feel free to bring it.

See the newsletter to read the entire description of this happy event:
http://greaterbirminghamfiberguild.blogspot.com/2014/05/guild-newsletter-may-2014.html

Hope to see you there!


Friday, May 2, 2014

Guild Newsletter, May 2014

    President’s Column                           

Hello Fiber Friends!

I hope everyone is enjoying our spring! I am in the midst of my usual spring cleaning...which is not household but usually possession-oriented! I really am trying to lead a simpler life! Isn't that what spinning, knitting and weaving mean? Then why do I have baskets upon baskets of yarn? And tubs of fleece, washed and unwashed? Boxes and ziplock bags of dyed roving?

I think I have solved the problem.....I'll just have fewer baskets, tubs, boxes and ziplock bags. Did you know they make REALLY big zip lock bags that actually zip? What's a fiber girl to do?

This Spring, rediscover your stash and make plans to use it! I'm really trying....then I have to deal with all my projects that need finishing...oh wait that's what Fall cleaning is for!!

Bring your current stash busting project to Pia's and enjoy a fun day with good food and friends! See you there!

 

Karen Ford

 

 



May Meeting - Annual Fiber Guild Picnic at Pia's Farm
 

Saturday, May 10th, 10:00 am
Pia
Cusick's Farm

436 Foster Road
Birmingham, AL 35094
 

Saturday, May 10, at 11:00 a.m., we will gather again to celebrate at Pia Cusick’s beautiful farm near Leeds.  Barabara Tucker will provide grilled bratwurst as our main course.  Please bring a salad, vegetable dish, or dessert to share and a chair or blanket to sit on.  Soft drinks will be provided by the guild.

The annual guild picnic is a great place to make new friends and catch up with old ones.  We are always grateful recipients of Pia’s hospitality, and her farm is always delightful.  The only item on the program will be fun!

Pia’s home and farm are located at 436 Foster Road, Birmingham, AL 35094, just off Highway 119 near Leeds.
 

 


Thanks,  Mary Kaiser

 

 Out of Whole Cloth - The Life of Bettye Kimbrell

                                          by Joyce Cauthen                                                             



                        
From Amazon..."This splendid book displays the fabric of a wonderful creative collaboration. Bettye Kimbrell told Joyce Cauthen her life story, and Joyce shaped it for us in book form – but still told in Bettye’s own voice. Bettye’s story provides a broad portrait of life in rural West Alabama. The characters flashing by make for a variegated kaleidoscope: self-destructive and damaging folly and irresponsibility mix unpredictably with creative resourcefulness in making do and generosity toward kin and neighbors. The net result is often painful, often inspiring, but always true to life as Bettye Kimbrell sees it.

In the second half of the book a new story line gradually emerges. Bettye had learned quilting from her stern grandmother, who raised her when her parents could not or would not. That skill was set aside for many years while she struggled to survive and raise a family in the midst of every imaginable adversity. Then quilting sprang up again in the later decades of Bettye’s life, providing the creative lodestar by which she reinvented her life. If quiet suffering while managing life’s vicissitudes dominates her early decades, quiet achievement, growing self-confidence, and public acclaim come to dominate the later decades. As her life shaped her art, simultaneously her art reshaped her life." —Alan Jabbour, Former Director (Retired), American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, Washington DC; author (with Karen Singer Jabbour) of Decoration Day in the Mountains: Traditions of Cemetery Decoration in the Southern Appalachians

 
                                                      

Interesting Fiber Items to Check Out...
 
Marathon Scarf Project - Thanks to Jennifer Justiss who shared with us the information about this worthwhile project for the 2014 Boston Marathon runners. Read about and view the success story here - http://running.competitor.com/2014/04/news/video-marathon-scarf-project_100436

We in the SE are very fortunate to have several arts and crafts schools within driving distance that offer many interesting and informative fiber classes. Here are some - check them out!
Andean Textile Arts announces its Fall 2014 Andean Textile Arts Discovery Tour
Cusco and the Sacred Valley of Peru - November 5 – 17, 2014
. For more information check out ATA's website - http://andeantextilearts.org/

Weave a Real Peace (WARP) : http://www.weavearealpeace.org/
     WARP serves as a catalyst for improving the quality of life of weavers and textile artisans in communities-in-need.  We provide information and networking opportunities to individuals and organizations who value the social, cultural, historic, and artistic importance of textiles around the world.
    Weave a Real Peace (WARP) is a networking organization of weavers, academics, and interested supporters who value the importance of textiles to communities around the world.
      Founded in 1992, WARP has members from across the United States, Canada, Central and South American, Europe, Africa, and Asia.  A newsletter is published quarterly telling of weaving, spinning, and dye cooperatives and other member projects from around the world. Once a year we come together for an annual meeting somewhere in the United States in a place rich in regional textile resources or history.
 
And Check THIS out ...

 


 

 

In Between Meetings and Newsletters, Keep up with the Guild on the Web:
Visit the Guild Blog at
-
www.greaterbirminghamfiberguild.blogspot.com

 

When things happen during the month--in between meetings and in between newsletters--we post them on the guild blog. We also post the newsletter there, so if you are away from your email inbox or want to look back at old issues, you will find the guild newsletter there.

We want to support our members and would love to show your work on the blog. Send photos of your work and a description to Mary Spanos, the blog support person, at mary@maryspanos.com. You can provide a link to your own web site, your Ravelry page, your blog, or any fiber-related site.

We also want to share information about upcoming fiber events on the blog. If you know of fiber-related activities or events, please send that information to Mary and we'll post it on the blog.

If you want to make sure you don't miss any new blog posts, you can sign up to receive an email when the blog is updated. Click on the "Follow by email" link in the sidebar on the right of the blog page. Also, if you ever need to get in touch with anyone on the guild board, you can find links to their email addresses at the bottom of the sidebar on the right of the blog page.


        


Study Groups Meet Monthly
 

  • Spinning Study Group:  4th Wednesday of the month from 10 a.m to 2 pm at St. Peter’s Church in Hoover.  Please check out the GBFG Blog  for cancellations or schedule changes.
  • Nancy Clemmons is interested in sharing her love of tatting with others by teaching one or more in her home. Please contact her if you are interested.
  • More groups may meet in the future.  Watch the newsletter for more information and let a board member know if you are interested in a study group.
 

Where are these Photos from???


                         

(Michell's Alpaca yarn shop in Cusco, Peru)

                                                          

(Visby, Sweden)

START THINKING...
 
The Fiber Guild will be displaying items once again at the Homewood Library during the month of September. Our theme this year is Natural Fibers. So the handmade items can be knitted, crochetting, sewn, woven, quilted, whatever AS LONG as they are made from Natural Fibers. Items will be collected at the September meeting and returned at the November meeting. Please have your items labeled with your name and fiber content. Display labels will be prepared for each item. If you are interested in helping with the setting up and breaking down of the display, please tell Deb Kattus.
 


Newsletter News...

Each month, I am planning to have items coming from YOU, our Guild members. These will include short book reviews related to any fiber art; a tip you have discovered and used that make your fiber art a little bit easier to execute; any fiber related articles; and a fiber question you would love answers or suggestions from other guild members. Please send your ideas, suggestions, book recommendations, questions to me (Susie Strauss) by the 20th of the month to go into the following month's newsletter. Email me at sushicoach@yahoo.com and put GBFG Newsletter in the subject line.

 

Greater Birmingham Fiber Guild
 
The Greater Birmingham Fiber Guild is comprised of individuals dedicated to the dissemination and preservation of fiber arts.  Meetings are the second Saturday of the month, 10:00-12:00 (no meeting in July and August). Visitors are welcome.  The Guild offers programs almost monthly, focused workshops several times a year, and equipment rental (see below).  Southern Strands, the Guild newsletter, is published monthly (no issue in August); deadline for submission of material is the 20th of each month).  Send items to Susie Strauss at sushicoach@yahoo.com.
 
 
 2014 Officers and Board 
 
Karen Ford – President
Mary Kaiser – Program
Debbie Scott – Workshops
Emily Levitan - Membership
Nancy Lavender – Treasurer
Janice Weinstein - Secretary
Mary Spanos – Website
Susie Strauss - Newsletter
Janelle Zorko Schultz - Past President

 

 
Rental of Guild Equipment & Materials

 
The Guild has available, for rental to members, the following:
  • Looms of various types (floor, table, rigid heddle, tapestry), spinning wheels, drum carder, and more. Rental fee is $10 dollars per month with a deposit of $100 per item. Deposits will be returned when equipment is returned in good condition. 
  • Lucy Neatby's DVD knitting collection. Deposit of $30 per DVD. This is the current replacement cost. One-month checkout. See  http://www.lucyneatby.com/dvd_contents.html for description of DVD contents.
  • See inventory list and photos of Guild equipment in the Yahoo group folders section (you must be a paid member to access the Yahoo Group files and photos) 

    Copyright © 2014 Greater Birmingham Fiber Guild, All rights reserved.

You are getting this email because you are a member of the Greater Birmingham Fiber Guild or are somehow affiliated with the organization.

Our mailing address is:
Greater Birmingham Fiber Guild
P.O. Box 660723
Birmingham, AL 35266

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