He looks so preppy and eager!
I was honored to be asked to be part of the Legacy book tour for Kathreen Ricketson‘s book Brave New Quilts: 12 Projects Inspired by 20th-Century Art From Art Nouveau to Punk & Pop. I am not a quilter so I can’t really give a serious professional review of the book from that prospective, but Kath was part of my online life for so many years and this review is more about her. It makes me happy that through this book, her spirit lives on.
The online craft world was shocked by Kath’s sudden death last spring. She was probably best known for the website Whip-Up. I’d “met” her before her Whip-Up days. I just tracked down her first comment on my blog- April 2005 on this post. She had a blog called RedCurrant and I thought of her as a photographer, doing a year of self-portraits. She was someone who came to the crafty mom world from a background in Art- something I can appreciate and relate to. When she started Whip-Up, she gave generously to the online community. She posted about so many interesting artists and projects, was not afraid to talk about some controversial subjects (I’m thinking about graffiti as art for one), and introduced new people into the limelight. I appreciated her support early on- the work I do was not often appreciated by the in-real-life world and my online community was my lifeline of encouragement and enthusiasm. Kath was a person I think of as a connector- she brought all kinds of passionate people together and made all our lives better.
Now onto the book. When I received my package and pulled the book out, I was delighted by the beautiful cover. And flipping through, so many beautiful photos and again COLOR! There are more book photos over here if you’d like to see. As I said, I am not much of a quilter but if at some point I decide to try get more serious, the book has lots of good technical info. The description of how to do paper piecing sucked me in- I’d never understood what exactly it was. The book is organized by Art Movements- Art Deco, Midcentury Modern, Dada, and more. It was fun to see her interpretations. These were my favorites-
The Seedpod-
And Clear Cut- which she labels as Bauhaus, which I understand, referring to Josef Albers but also has a very strong reference to Amish quilts. Love it.
That is a design I could see myself trying.
Thank you Stash Books for asking me to be part of this tour. Kathreen will live on through this book, through Whip-Up and through her generosity that touched so many of us in this online craft community. We miss you.
If you’d like to read other, more quilt-specific reviews, check out some of the other stops on the book tour.
Tuesday | 10/1 | Heather Jones | |
Wedneday | 10/2 | Kristin Link | |
Thursday | 10/3 | Maya Donenfeld | |
Friday | 10/4 | Alexandra Smith | |
Monday | 10/7 | Sonya Philip | |
Tuesday | 10/8 | Ellen Luckett Baker | |
Wedneday | 10/9 | Andrea Jenkins | |
Thursday | 10/10 | Shannon Cook | |
Friday | 10/11 | Mimi Kirchner | |
Monday | 10/14 | Cheryl Arkison |
I don’t think I’ve mentioned this- I have been too crazy busy with too many deadlines! Anyway, Check it out!
An Art/Food/Fun Retreat Weekend in New York City- how fantastic is that!!! It is in March, just when you need a little refresh from the winter. There are going to be such interesting people including Tamar Mogendorff and Lotta Jansdotter on the art/craft side of things. I am SO excited to be part of this- Hope you can come!
It is a bit complicated.
This was supposed to be #101. I was rephotographing her after the trip to Washington when I noticed that she was damaged. She is torn at the crotch. That is unfixable and probably a result of all the handling involved with doing a show- the packing, hanging, and manhandling by shoppers. So instead, this is #101-
He was one of the last dolls I finished right before I left and he found a new home in Washington DC. I never took an official “portrait”, just these booth photos.
And here he is on display.