Jacinta
In short, we`re both artists in our own particular ways! Neither of us is
worth a hoot without the other!
Pat Porter
East Anglian Xstitch Designs
http://homepages.tesco.net/~porter
Country Village scenes
"Jacinta Lodge" wrote
Has anyone else had this?
I had a very interesting (offensive?) discussion on the weekend with a
person who decided to tell me that my needlework was of no more artistic >
worth than Painting-by-Numbers. According to his theory designers were
the only needleworkers with any artistic capabilities and those of us who
simply follow their designs cannot claim any based purely on this work.
Obviously I was flabbergasted (to put it in a socially acceptable format),
managed to stutter out a few responses but, as is always the way for me, I
couldn´t find the arguement I needed when I needed it. Of course at home on
my own later, I could think up plenty!
Has this happened to anyone else and did you come up with some good
arguments in response?
>
> Jacinta
>
Still, it's fun and it creates a beautiful decorative object -- even at times a
useful object. Small changes can be worked into it: I changed all the blues
in the last Mirabilia cherub I did to mauves, and that did take an artistic
eye. Skill is important, too. It can be done poorly, or done well, and that
makes all the difference, sometimes.
Specialty stitches take a bit of skill beyond simple cross stitches, also.
Is cooking not an art? Aren't we impressed with a good cook, whether she/he is
reproducing a tried and true recipe, or inventing a new one? Cross-stitch is
like that.
Katrina L.
I have had many many people saying negative things about my cross
stitch -not the quality of the finished result - more the amount of 'wasted'
(their view) time involved. I think it is a way of covering their surprise
that someone can do something they don't have a clue about. After all, in
their minds it is only crosses and anyone can thread a needle and make a
cross stitch on fabric.
JMHO
Yve
"Jacinta Lodge" <jlo...@chemie.fu-berlin.de> wrote in message
news:3AE3E1E2...@chemie.fu-berlin.de...
Stupid, sophomoric comments by this individual. Do I think I'm a
needlework artist? No - and I design as well as stitch. But that
doesn't make me an "artist" - only a novice craftsman. But there's
nothing wrong with being a craftsman, either. Takes years to get even
to that level.
Dianne
Well, actually, they can, can't they?
I learned, you learned, others learned. Others are seeking to teach
others, to lure them into our ranks inorder to keep designers designing,
stores in business and to increase the numbers of people financially
supporting the industry.
How do you keep your balance on that line between people who
distainfully consider X's as thread by numbers vs those who
automatically say "oh, I'll never be able to do that/I can't do that?"
In my limited experience there are few who actually, physically or
cognitively "can't." For most it's a time management choice: they don't
want to take the time to learn, then do. Until you get into other
stitch techniques, changing out things, it IS just X's on cloth.
I know the original post was one about a disparaging remark, but other
replies just tried to out-disparage the disparager. In reading those I
thought, what is your goal here? To insult or to edify? To support an
industry, to try to increase it's base or to limit it to a select and
ever decreasing few? Where is the line when dealing with people?
--
maria from MA
remove the munge to reply
Personally, I wouldn't even bother with the guy because a comment like that
is meant to get a "dig" into someone. Is that your impession? You know
him, we don't.
There was a thread a while back that wondered about this issue, but it was
coming from a needleworker who was pondering the issue, and it had a
completely different, non-negative spin. Nothing wrong with philosophizing,
but there's no need to make a negative judgment about it.
> How about: Is Perlman a violin "artist"? He doesn't compose
> generally. Is Rubenstein a piano "artist"? Is Jo Ma (spelling?) a
> cello "artist"?
Good reply...there is a genius in composing/desiging and in
playing/stitching. The work of the composer/designer is not of much use
without the musician/stitcher, eh?
Best Stitches,
Bess
Newsletters and other pieces of information
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Current rotation: Jean Farish's America, Celtic Knot, Beary Christmas Advent
Calendar, Ann Trabue Sampler, Baby Afghan, assorted RRs
Pat Porter <pat.p...@ntlworld.com> wrote in message
news:jvRE6.832$Ln6....@news2-win.server.ntlworld.com...
Brava, Dianne, Brava!!!
Yes, there are some XSers who operate solely in paint-by-numbers mode. But
there are also those who apply plenty of creativity: we change the colors, we
add specialty fibers, we add or remove parts of the design.....
I can't draw for beans, but I've "designed" a number of projects by taking a
border here, a motif there, and combining them in original ways. I consider
that the equivalent of cooking with beef I haven't raised myself and spices I
haven't raised myself. My cinnamon-flavored beef stew is a true original, even
if I started with store-bought parts.
With my penchant for metallics and dislike for beads, I put my "signature" on
most of the pieces I stitch. Although my friend Kat does lovely work, very
precise, if you gave both of us the same kit, you'd have no trouble identifying
the stitcher from the finished pieces. She will slavishly follow the
directions and stitch on the enclosed white Aida-14 with the enclosed floss.
Mine will be over-one on some non-white evenweave, the cat eyes will have
hologram thread and their neck bows will be rayon, and the border will be
changed to match the recipient's decor. Nonetheless, Kat's by-the-book work
will be "artistry" next to the first attempt of a 6-year-old working the same
kit ... her artistry is in the precision of the stitches.
Similarly, you could put the same pile of fruits, bottles and plates in front
of Picasso, Monet and Van Gogh, and they'd turn out very different still lifes.
The artistry is in what you *do* with the outline. (I can envision some
modern artists taking a paint-by-number kit and painting the sky green)
My aunt was a gifted painter; I'm a klutz. I admired one of her paintings and
she gave me the same kit for Christmas. You didn't have to ask which finished
painting was hers and which was mine. Hers looked like a deer. Mine looked
like a brown blob. "Paint by numbers" may not be as creative as paint from
scratch, but there are some people who cannot paint even by numbers........
--
Finished 3/12/01 - Rose Snowglobe
WIP: getting my health back, Calif Sampler, Holiday Snowglobe
Paralegal - Editor - Researcher
http://hometown.aol.com/kmc528/myhomepage/profile.html
Don't risk your on-line privileges! I report all Spam.
The Wren
> I would have absolutely no problem telling him that conversation with
> him has no artistic or other value and walking away.
Oh that's classic! Bravo :)
--
.|.
- * - Jen Persinger
(\o /|` ** mom to Alyxa Brianna (21 Sept 1997)
(VXV E-Mail: vel...@rootaction.net ICQ: 35217570
/| URL: http://cainan.shutdown.com/~velvet
>Stupid, sophomoric comments by this individual. Do I think I'm a
>needlework artist? No - and I design as well as stitch. But that
>doesn't make me an "artist" - only a novice craftsman. But there's
>nothing wrong with being a craftsman, either. Takes years to get even
>to that level.
Thanks, Dianne. I do NOT have the necessary talents or skills to
design, so simply buy what someone else designs and do it.
What I'd like to know is why it has to be [flourish of trumpets] ART
to be worth doing? I've found the art world a rather pretentious,
snooty place, and am much happier among the crafts types. :-)
--
Seanette Blaylock [make obvious address correction to e-mail]
"Either you're being sarcastic, or your post leaked over to me from a
parallel universe, or one or both of us is insane and/or stupid and/or
not paying attention and/or lying." Ben, ATSR
Michele in Southern Maryland
goldil...@aol.com
victoria wrote in message ...
>What kind of person would ever say something like that, anyway? Even if I
>thought it, it certainly would not be something I'd say to you if you were
the
>avid stitcher.
*snip*
>However, with regard to the artistic expression of the stitcher who did not
>design the work...hmmm, that is some set of couluones on the person who
said
>that to you, the stitcher. It is definitely not just like painting by
number.
>This is an art which we perform because, compared to a beginning stitcher,
or a
>stitcher who does not take their time, my work looks like it should go in a
>museum. Yes, I think I take THAT much care to lay each stitch in so the
piece
>expresses my love for the design. In that expression, I am creating art.
As a
>design unfurls in front of my eyes as I stitch bottom to top, it is ME who
is
>placing, counting, and being sure the floss lay right.
*snip*
>One step further, I avoid people of such ignorance. Because of this, I
have a
>relatively small circle, as many people are pretty ignorant, I find.
>
>Victoria
>My aunt was a gifted painter; I'm a klutz. I admired one of her paintings and
>she gave me the same kit for Christmas. You didn't have to ask which finished
>painting was hers and which was mine. Hers looked like a deer. Mine looked
>like a brown blob. "Paint by numbers" may not be as creative as paint from
>scratch, but there are some people who cannot paint even by numbers........
Such as me. :-) [I am a good cook, though.]
And how about those times when you miss a stitch here & there, and
decide to compensate rather than rip out everything you've done around
it? At times, that takes a great deal of creativity! *lol* Okay, I'm
stretching on that one, I know ... but I'm among those who change the
fabric, colors (on a small scale thusfar), beads used in the piece
(changing, adding or removing). Of course, I've also had a ton of
compliments on my work - including from people I'd *never* expect to be
interested in it. The most "negative" thing I get is "that would drive
me nuts. I don't know how you do it!" Heck, I've even had people
(okay, my MIL) ask me to do a piece for them.
>
> I can't draw for beans, but I've "designed" a number of projects by taking a
> border here, a motif there, and combining them in original ways. I consider
> that the equivalent of cooking with beef I haven't raised myself and spices I
> haven't raised myself. My cinnamon-flavored beef stew is a true original, even
> if I started with store-bought parts.
Oooh...would you be willing to part with the recipe? I'm always
looking for good recipes :)
> With my penchant for metallics and dislike for beads, I put my "signature" on
> most of the pieces I stitch. Although my friend Kat does lovely work, very
> precise, if you gave both of us the same kit, you'd have no trouble identifying
> the stitcher from the finished pieces. She will slavishly follow the
> directions and stitch on the enclosed white Aida-14 with the enclosed floss.
After stitching on linen, I just can't do Aida anymore. I balk at the
finished Mirabilia pieces on Ebay that are done on Aida ... not that
they look any less beautiful (and no offense if the stitcher is on the
newsgroup), but I've just developed a "taste" for linen. I tried to do
a piece on Aida after stitching my first linen piece, and I just got so
fed up with it - I've *never* wanted to burn a piece so badly in my life
(okay, there were other issues aside from the fabric, but that was a
major contributor).
> Similarly, you could put the same pile of fruits, bottles and plates in front
> of Picasso, Monet and Van Gogh, and they'd turn out very different still lifes.
> The artistry is in what you *do* with the outline. (I can envision some
> modern artists taking a paint-by-number kit and painting the sky green)
It's all a matter of perspective, and everyone has a different
perspective on the same issue. Life would be so boring if we all
thought the same way about the same thing. I am not a robot, I'm a
person :)
>
> My aunt was a gifted painter; I'm a klutz. I admired one of her paintings and
> she gave me the same kit for Christmas. You didn't have to ask which finished
> painting was hers and which was mine. Hers looked like a deer. Mine looked
> like a brown blob. "Paint by numbers" may not be as creative as paint from
> scratch, but there are some people who cannot paint even by numbers........
My mom used to paint ... oils, acrylics ... she's done some really
incredible stuff - no kit involved. She sketches and is really good at
it. She's a free lance photographer as well, and for many years she
spun, wove, sewed, knitted, tatted. Heck, at one point she even grew &
cured the flax, spun the linen, and wove a curtain for the kitchen
window (I think she's cross stitching some celtic knotwork on it now).
If I'm lucky, you can tell the stick figure I'm drawing is supposed to
be a person ;) Music? Forget it ... I get all turned around when I try
to read the notes (and believe me, I've tried). I used to consider the
extent of my "artistic" abilities to be my writing - which I could do
when the mood hit me (after becoming a mother, those moments are few &
far between, and usually around 3am). Then I started cross stitching.
I started with stamped cross stitch, and just hated it. I had no idea
what I was doing, and to say the piece was awful is a gross
understatement. I don't know what made me pick up a counted kit, but I
did and took right to it. The addiction quickly followed, and now I
quite gleefully stitch :)
After all, the Mona Lisa wouldn`t have been half so effective of it was
painted to tone in with the decorations of whoever commissioned it!
I have a friend who selects her pictures because they contain the same
colours as her paintwork - not for their actual content! Overall the effect
is very lovely, but when you really look at the pictures, you wonder why she
bothered to "pick" them at all!
Pat P.
"Karen C - California" wrote
Although my friend Kat does lovely work, very
(For the record, I seldom change anything that isn't on the pattern and
instructions. The designers do a wonderful job, and I'd hate to put so much
time and effort into something already perfect, and then fudge it up. There
is a reason why I do XS and not design it :o)...hey, I can admit my
weaknesses.)
--
RoseAnne
"Seanette Blaylock" <seanette.spam...@impulse.net> wrote in
message news:9nk8etc6lv1otpbj1...@4ax.com...
I suppose it is something like painting-by-numbers. But I can honestly say
I have only run into 1 person in my life who was unable to paint by numbers.
As for cross-stitching ? I can't tell you how many people have tried it
after seeing some of my pieces, and who literally can not do it. It shocks
me, as it seems relatively easy - at least the basics.
However, I had a very interesting conversation with the owner of my
(favourite) LNS this weekend. I had taken a piece - Flower Power by Cross
Wings - in to finally get it framed. We had it spread open on the table,
looking at various frames etc. (great fun !) and almost everyone in the
shop kept coming by and commenting on how fabulous it looked. Now I tend to
be rather ho-hum about things. Cross-stitching doesn't seem all that
complicated, so I figure anyone could stitch the piece. But the owner
started explaining how it is a real art. That simply putting x's on a piece
of cloth wasn't necessarily, but laying them correctly, producing even
stitches in the correct places, modifying designs even slightly to suit
yourself (even if it's just finding the correct place to stitch you
"signature") - that all took an artistic eye. And she repeatedly said she
had multitudes of people who came by just to look at the model pieces and
often said they loved to look of cross-stitch, they simply could not do it -
they didn't have the talent or the know-how to finish a piece.
And I have to admit, I think counted-cross-stitch does take a bit more
talent than perhaps does stamped cross-stitch.
But I think that is an arguement that can never be won. Aggravating isn't
it ?
Shannon
"Jacinta Lodge" <jlo...@chemie.fu-berlin.de> wrote in message
news:3AE3E1E2...@chemie.fu-berlin.de...
Now, I can draw a flower and a leaf, but certainly would NOT want to
paint my own wallpaper design. It takes an ARTIST to do that - who
understands color, shading, design concepts. Just look at William
Morris' work, or Marilyn Imblooms, Judy Chicago or Lula Chang - and a
host of many others past and present. If you've ever seen an Ayrshire
piece - it is not just the embroidery - it is the design.
I can design small works, especially for teaching pieces. I would NOT
attempt to do anything large scale, as I lack the talent.
But I refuse to demean the artists. Yes, there are those I don't
appreciate, those with whom I feel are crass. But I know enough to know
that I simply "don't know enough" to make a judgment. :-) That being
said, I certainly can tell an amateur's work.
We are craftsmen in our artform of needlework. And it takes YEARS to
become masters at it. Whether you change what a designer has said to
do, or copy it verbatim. A color change here or a stitch change there
doesn't make you an artist. But those same things, well done, do make
you a gifted craftsman. And there's a select few, worldwide, who
probably jump the barrier of master craftsman and become an "artist"
with needle and thread because they can either design their own in true
"artistic" fashion or augment a design in such a way that hairs on your
neck stand up. (By, for instance, adding needlelace or openwork that
wasn't in the original design, but enhances it beyond expectations).
We get too worried about "words".
Dianne
Recipe? I don't need no stinkin' recipe!
Quite seriously, I'm one of those good German cooks who generally dispenses
with cookbooks and measuring cups.
Brown as much beef as you need for the size of your family. Add chopped
veggies (kinds and quantities dependent on your family), no-salt tomato sauce
and like amount of water (an 8 ounce can is good for a family-size batch),
season with ground cinnamon, nutmeg & allspice. Simmer till tender.
If you really want to make the kids happy with your accompaniment, take a can
of crescent rolls, and sprinkle cinnamon on the dough before you roll it. If
they aren't eating their share of fruit during the day, roll each one around a
slice of apple. (I sometimes even toss some chunks of apple into the
cinnamon-flavored stew just to be different. I rarely make the exact same
thing twice.)
--
Finished 4/23/01 - SW Angel
Her stitching is incredibly precise, and a joy to look at for that reason.
It's just that -- in every thing she does -- she follows directions as written
and would never think of changing anything.
Someone gave her a recipe which she mentioned to me that she couldn't make
because she doesn't like green peppers. I said "so leave them out", and she
said "but the recipe says to use them". Unless you're making pepper steak or
stuffed peppers, it's not that big a deal to leave them out! "Are you sure?"
I assured her that the cooking police were not going to arrest her for leaving
them out.
She is constantly amazed at my "imagination" in working recipes around what's
in my cupboards that day (no green beans? Fine, I'll add zucchini instead.),
and that I'm "clever" enough to change my stitchery colors, but she was raised
to follow instructions and she's going to follow them as written because God
might spike her with a lightening bolt if she doesn't do what she's told.
Others have mentioned Itzhak Perlman and Yo-Yo Ma in music. I would mention Sir
Alec Guinness and Sir John Gielgud versus Sylvester Stallone or Steven Seagal.
Put each of them in "Hamlet" and you cringe. However, Sir Alec or Sir John
cannot kick butt. Add that Stallone and Seagal often help write and produce
their films...so who is the greater artist? ;) Would anyone seriously vote for
the Karate Kids? But Gielgud and Guinness are just "parroting" what someone
else wrote. How can we consider them real artists?
Originality, creativity, artistry, craft. Whatever you want to call it. I think
it's time for Fred to post his little poem about listening to the sound of the
needle flowing through the fabric and hearing the voice of your own being
echoing the Creator, and how can you be unhappy with that?
As a former poster used to say - Have a stitchy day!
Lollee
>I suppose it is something like painting-by-numbers. But I can honestly say
>I have only run into 1 person in my life who was unable to paint by numbers.
I'm another one. :-)
Maybe I need someone like you around to show me how to break the rules once
in a while : )
--
RoseAnne
"Karen C - California" <kmc...@aol.com.LuvXS> wrote in message
news:20010423141428...@ng-bj1.aol.com...
Meredith
>Obviously i was flabbergasted (to put it in a socially acceptable
> format), managed to stutter out a few responses but, as is always the
> way for me, I couldn´t find the arguement I needed when I needed it. Of
> course at home on my own later, I could think up plenty!
As a designer, I can assure you that the people who stitch what I think up
always make me feel very proud that what I imagined someone else made come
to life. People who feel that the only creativity is in the person who
makes a design don't really understand what it's all about. My husband is
an art teacher, and we have had many discussions about what is and isn't
art, we're pretty far apart on what we believe, but in the end we manage to
agree about most things. He didn't see any value in needlework when I
started again but now he's come around and appreciates it far more. And he
can see how attractive it is for someone to take a chart, which is really
only a blueprint, and make something of it that has a lot of yourself in it.
> Has this happened to anyone else and did you come up with some good
> arguements in response?
Tell them you'd rather have your own hand-worked original version than a
cheap print on the wall. Each stitch is a little part of you.
-Su
--
http://www.cutworks.co.uk
emailing as usual in an irregular pattern
Felice
Martha Stewart considers what she does to be "domestic art"
Andy Warhol and his group considered cans of Campbell soup to be "art".
I once visited an exhibit at the modern art museum here in Fort Worth called
"Clickers".
Imagine a large rectangular room with a row of benches in the middle. Plain
white
walls, ceiling and floors, with little metal clicks sounding from different
points in the
room in some pre-determined order. This is called "art".
There is most definitely an "art" to getting a graph translated to fabric.
People who play a piano translate notes on paper into music. Are they artists?
(someone else pointed this one out and I agree wholeheartedly)
Beauty and art are in the eye of the beholder.
Angie from Texas
WIP: Daffodil by Pam Kellogg
would like to start someday - Magical Night - TW; Companions - TW
Cat Alphabet & Welcome Cats - Vermillion
As far as Justifying Needlework when I sign the back of a finished
framed design I sometimes write.....
"I can imagine 10,000 butterflies coming over the hill.
I can write the directions for 10,000 butterflies coming over the hill.
But it is the stitcher who makes the 10,000 butterflies coming over the
hill appear in all of their glory for the world to see."
We all do our part to make the visions appear. Each finished design
tells a story to the stitcher. They remember where they were when the
sections were finished. It's like a time line and it's also a tribute to
time that was not wasted. The designs show that with each small part and
tiny seemingly bitty stitch is built upon to create a whole thing of
beauty.
The movement of the hand and the needle and the colors are soothing to
days of stress and work. We proclaim that in the midst of all of the
turmoil we have found time to do this item of art. We are whole ...we
are complete.....our time is recorded! And then we give it away! So that
we can do it again. We step forward into a new place of color and decide
where our creativity will take us.
If this isn't art then I don't know what is!
Marilyn
B & Y McBRIDE wrote:
>
> I think everyone who stitches has come across people like this. My usual
> response ranges from 'I know it is only crosses - here is the fabric and
> thread you show me just how easy it is.' Or simply 'If you did it you would
> understand.'
>
> I have had many many people saying negative things about my cross
> stitch -not the quality of the finished result - more the amount of 'wasted'
> (their view) time involved. I think it is a way of covering their surprise
> that someone can do something they don't have a clue about. After all, in
> their minds it is only crosses and anyone can thread a needle and make a
> cross stitch on fabric.
>
> JMHO
> Yve
Stallone is a convincing character actor with rippling muscles and an
interesting persona. But he's not an artist - he's a craftsman.
Dianne
Angie wrote:
> People who play a piano translate notes on paper into music. Are they artists? (someone else pointed this one out and I agree wholeheartedly)
> Beauty and art are in the eye of the beholder.
>
Angie - they are only artists if they have the gift of insight, emotion
and the ability to convey the right feeling of the music to the audience
in a fluid, perfect way. The ability to play piano - no matter how
fluently - doesn't make you an artist - it makes you a "piano player".
There are tons of those around :-)
That's why I used music as an analogy.
Dianne
I agree with what you're saying here, Dianne. For many years, I took piano
lessons and I could play quite well, compared to the other people my piano
teachers taught -- I was always given one of the most difficult pieces at the
recitals. However, I never really "felt" it. One day I visited a friend of
mine, who also played piano, and she sat down and played for me. There was
something different about the way she played -- so fluid, and with emotion.
You could see her whole "self" go into the piano, and hear the difference in
what came out. She was really an artist, a musician.
I don't know if I'll ever be an artist in anything, but I continue to do the
best I can and push myself forward in learning new things in some fields.
I sold the piano, though!
Katrina L.
Me, three.
My aunt could always tell whether it was her son, or me, playing the piano. In
terms of getting my fingers on the right keys, I'm as good as he is, but my
playing is robotic, devoid of emotion. My typewriter keyboard required me to
strike all the keys with exactly the same force, and I never learned to do
differently at the piano.
Step one, go buy Cattitudes, I believe it's #4. Stitch up "If you obey all the
rules, you miss all the fun. [K.Hepburn]" Hang it on the wall as a daily
reminder.
I'm a true child of the 70s. Bare feet, long hair hanging loose, T-shirts,
jeans, and believe bras and rules are best when burned. :)
"JennyWren" <vand...@agecon.purdue.edutwist> wrote in message
news:3AE441B4...@agecon.purdue.edutwist...
> I prefer to think of myself as a craftswoman, instead of an artist. Maybe
> it is just a philosophical difference. But I prefer to focus on executing
a
> design with skill and insightful interpretation--craftsmanship, by my
> definition. I tend to define "art" as original work. But that is just my
> way of looking at it. I lump needlework in with woodworking, making
> clothing, and gardening. It isn't the activity that defines whether the
> product is art or not, but the approach taken in its creation.
>
> The Wren
>
>
Aida, linen or other evenweave, fabric color, DMC or Anchor....or something
else, Over one, or over two, French knot, colonial knot, or beads....or some
combination?
Or loud or soft, accented or legato, phrasing, and execution of chord
pattern (arpeggio, single bass note or full chord) when only a chord name is
given?
When I started stitching, I used kits and followed directions to the letter.
Now I choose more ambitious designs, design some of my own stuff, and change
designs to suit. I would equate this quite closely to my musical life,
where I began with Mary Had a Little Lamb on the violin, progressed to
not-much-better stuff on the piano, and am now at the point where I'm
playing Chopin and Schubert and composing some of my own stuff. Obviously I
consider what I'm doing now more "art" than what I used to do......but no
one was prouder than I was after completing my first XS project (still
hanging on Grandma's wall!) or when I realized I could read music.
In short......yes, there are probably needleworkers who are still at the
paint-by-number phase artistically, just as there are painters who paint by
number and musicians who use those coded direction charts on those zither
things (anyone know what I'm talking about here?) But you know what?
They're still creating! They're still doing more than the non-crafter who's
so sharply criticizing! And above and beyond that, for most of us, this is a
*hobby*, something we do because we love it (and those of us who make money
at NW started out doing it as a hobby!). So critics be damned, we'll keep
stitching our hearts out :)
-Amy
> From: Jacinta Lodge <jlo...@chemie.fu-berlin.de>
> Has anyone else had this?
> I had a very interesting (offensive?) discussion on the weekend with a
> person who decided to tell me that my needlework was of no more artistic
> worth than Painting-by-Numbers. According to his theory designers were
> the only needleworkers with any artistic capabilities and those of us
> who simply follow their designs cannot claim any based purely on this
> work. Obviously i was flabbergasted (to put it in a socially acceptable
> format), managed to stutter out a few responses but, as is always the
> way for me, I couldn´t find the arguement I needed when I needed it. Of
> course at home on my own later, I could think up plenty!
> Has this happened to anyone else and did you come up with some good
> arguements in response?
>
> Jacinta
Just tell them that you never argue with anyone who is wrong. :-)))
Liz from Humbug
I think that color by number books are great gifts for people in the
hospital recovering from "who knows what". They don't have to think or use
many muscles. If don't want to take the pictures home, you can leave them
in pediatrics for them to hang on the walls. If they have grandchildren,
they can send them to the kids instead of the kids sending pictures to
grandma/grandpa :-)))
Tobie
--
In Rotation: Picture of 5 clowns (NP); Ocean Princess (James Himsworth
C.C.S.); Millennium "Peace on Earth" by Ellen Maurer-Stroh (C.C S.);
Highland Light by Christine Champ Andrews (C.C.S.); NP "Shoe" by Sharon G.;
Tallit Bag by Lee
Finished: 3/7/01-Tallit Bag
> What I'd like to know is why it has to be [flourish of trumpets] ART
> to be worth doing?
Why can't it just be fun?
Best Stitches,
Bess
Newsletters and other pieces of information
http://www.geocities.com/bess_of_hardwick/news1.html
Bess' Photos
http://briefcase.yahoo.com/bc/bess_of_hardwick
Current rotation: Jean Farish's America, Celtic Knot, Beary Christmas
Advent Calendar, Ann Trabue Sampler, Baby Afghan, assorted RRs
Dianne
These are both activities that reach our souls, and in turn touch
"other's" souls.
I never want to demean anyone's skills. You can enjoy something at a
beginner or "clutzy" level - and it can be very good for you and those
around you. It's the process that counts. What is that new-age
thinking? "If a butterfly flaps its wings in Singapore, does it rain in
New Jersey?" That's what I mean by the word: process. We reach into
ourselves and touch others. One needn't be at the highest level of
attainment to do that.
Dianne
--
RoseAnne
"Marilyn Leavitt-Imblum" <mar...@tiag.com> wrote in message
news:3AE28FD3...@tiag.com...
We are all born with "gifts". Some of us are wonderful at social
skills, others of us are great at organizational skills - the list goes
on. You are either born with a degree of talent in any given field, or
you're not. Some of it can be taught. Some of it can't because it
comes from an inner "dimension" that is beyond current explanation.
Unfortunately, we haven't learned how to define a lot of "gifts".
Academic ones are easy to categorize. But other gifts aren't rewarded
in this culture. They remain un-nurtured, and the "gifted" remain
frustrated unless they can come to terms with it. :-)
What many of us need to do is learn to be happy with the gifts we have,
not be envious or covet those with a greater gift (not speaking
specifically about you as an individual here - but the collective
"you"). Nurture those gifts - whatever they might be. Collaborate with
others who augment or enhance our skills.
Dianne
Hi Connie,
Just wanted to say I really enjoyed reading your post. I left it all intact
in case someone else might not have had the opportunity to read it. You
husbands sentiment is quite on target. Great Post!--How many MLI angels
have you done?
Myna
--
WIPS:
Jennifer Gilligan-May
Terrance Nolan-Spike
MLI-Celtic Spring
Regards
Yve
"Karen C - California" <kmc...@aol.com.LuvXS> wrote in message
news:20010423211348...@ng-fz1.aol.com...
Meredith
victoria wrote:
<SNIP>
> We are all individual, but when someone makes us so uncomfortable about what we
> do, in this case cross stitch, that we feel the need to justify...well, poop on
> that dolt.
>
> Victoria
"Marilyn Leavitt-Imblum" <mar...@tiag.com> wrote in message
news:3AE28FD3...@tiag.com...
>
>Has anyone else had this?
>I had a very interesting (offensive?) discussion on the weekend with a
>person who decided to tell me that my needlework was of no more artistic
>worth than Painting-by-Numbers. According to his theory designers were
>the only needleworkers with any artistic capabilities and those of us
>who simply follow their designs cannot claim any based purely on this
>work. Obviously i was flabbergasted (to put it in a socially acceptable
>format), managed to stutter out a few responses but, as is always the
>way for me, I couldn´t find the arguement I needed when I needed it. Of
>course at home on my own later, I could think up plenty!
>Has this happened to anyone else and did you come up with some good
>arguements in response?
>
>Jacinta
>
I don't think you need to justify anything. It is bad enough to
accidentally blurt out something thoughtless; it is just beyond rude
to deliberately put down someone else's interests. So what if it isn't
high art? I think that most of us have discovered that any pursuit is
difficult to do really well; they all take patience, care, and quite a
bit of dedication. You can make something that is beautiful, will last
a long time, is not easy to duplicate really well, and will be
treasured. That ought to be worth something.
I guess I think of myself as just crafty, although I am working on
several designs. The designs I stitch are someone else's
much-appreciated talent, but I make it *real.*
Lynne
Absolutely! I cannot draw to save my life, but I loved playing with my crayons
and colored pencils. I still buy a new box of Crayolas every couple of years
because I enjoy scribbling with them. But even I am not going to put my
drawings on the wall because they're so awful. I just enjoy the process, and
when I'm done, I stick them in the recycling bin. (OK, now you know why I have
that big pile of scrap paper that's printed on one side cluttering up my dining
room.)
Dianne replied:> Typing doesn't translate to poor piano
>keyboard skills.
I didn't say it did. I said that I learned to type in a certain way, and never
*learned* to do differently at the piano. (Same cousin is an excellent
pianist, who later learned to be an excellent typist, so I know they're not
mutually-exclusive.)
At the time I was learning piano, I was spending more hours a week at a manual
typewriter than at a piano. "Manual" being the important word. (You can
"play" a computer keyboard with different touch on each key and still get the
same color imprint on your paper.) I didn't have the talent to make a career
of piano, so it was more important to develop the correct touch for the
typewriter, and it became automatic to use the same pressure all the time.
I'm sure a good teacher could teach me to properly caress a piano keyboard, but
it's never been a high priority for me to learn. Not when I was taking lessons
as a child, and not when I play only for my own enjoyment as an adult.
Ooooh, this generated a LOT of discussion before I got back on line! And we
seem to be pretty much in agreement that -- well, what are we in agreement
about -- ah. We're in agreement that your person was wrong. Though we seem
not to be in agreement about precisely why.
I just came back from a family reunion -- several of the relatives had to
leave early so they could go watch the hockey playoffs (I forget who was in
on this, though I'm in Pittsburgh and should be paying attention), and my
uncle was shocked -- as usual -- that I didn't know a thing about the hockey
games.
He said he wasn't disappointed in me, but he couldn't figure out what I did
with my time.
Well, what I do with my time is that if I HAD been watching the hockey game,
I would have gotten some needlework done.
"De gustibus non disputandum est" --
there's no accountiing for tastes; to each his or her own.
If I had to sit and watch the hockey game without something to do with my
hands, I'd go crazy.
cheers, Anne B.
--
RoseAnne
"Anne B." <tin...@adelphia.net> wrote in message
news:teb8956...@corp.supernews.com...
>> What I'd like to know is why it has to be [flourish of trumpets] ART
>> to be worth doing?
>Why can't it just be fun?
That's what I would like to know. If I have the pressure of having to
produce [trumpets] ART to be able to consider what I do worthwhile, I
might as well give up now, between lack of artistic talent and
distaste for the pretentiousness and snobbery found in the ART world.
--
Seanette Blaylock [make obvious address correction to e-mail]
"Either you're being sarcastic, or your post leaked over to me from a
parallel universe, or one or both of us is insane and/or stupid and/or
not paying attention and/or lying." Ben, ATSR
>I didn't say it did. I said that I learned to type in a certain way, and never
>*learned* to do differently at the piano. (Same cousin is an excellent
>pianist, who later learned to be an excellent typist, so I know they're not
>mutually-exclusive.)
My high school required a typing class. I noticed that the students I
knew were good piano players did the best in the typing class. :-)
Meredith
Seanette Blaylock wrote:
>
> Karen C - California
Pat P.
East Anglian Xstitch Designs
http://homepages.tesco.net/~porter
Country Village scenes
"Dianne Lewandowski" <dia...@heritageshoppe.com> wrote in message
news:3AE57507...@heritageshoppe.com...
I wonder if the fellow that caused all this furore is an afficiando of the
so-called modern art. Some modern Art hits the spot, but on the whole I
wouldn`t cross the street to look at it - very little of it is what you
could call BEAUTIFUL, and in many cases the "hidden meaning" is so darned
well hidden that it means nothing at all to most people!
For instance the pile of bricks much heralded as a work of "Art", and the
pickled corpse of a cow - and many so-called fibre arts consisting of what
appears to be a collection of rags and string. Of course if you don`t like
it you`re sneered at as being unimaginitive and stupid for "not
understanding it". If that makes me a Philistine so be it! Give me a
beautiful Old Master or Impressionist - or a wonderful cross stitch design
any day!
Someone mentioned the much lauded efforts by Apes earlier - I saw on tv a
few months back, that someone was making a fortune by selling modern
"Paintings", done by an elephant! All you could say is that the elephant
appeared to be thoroughly enjoying it!
Pat P.
East Anglian Xstitch Designs
http://homepages.tesco.net/~porter
Country Village scenes
What I'd like to know is why it has to be [flourish of trumpets] ART
Deanna A.
in southern New York
Finished in 2001: Beginner Hardanger Bellpull, Strawberries & Cream
XS/Hardanger Sachet, Bucilla Baby Bunny
WIPS: TW Floral Bellpull & Stretch, FAHS Monet Water Lilies, Topiary Afghan,
Christmas Ornaments
Might have been "The Subversive Stitch: embroidery and the making of the
feminine" by Rozsika Parker.
Kay at kh...@cas.org
all usual disclaimers apply .nothing witty here
The only excuse I could find for sitting through Chargers games was that at the
end of the season, I'd have a completed sweater, size XL, for the man I was
sitting through them with.
California requires a certain percentage of the construction budget to be
devoted to "Art in Public Places". As a result, we have a twenty-foot stack of
used luggage in the baggage area of the new airport terminal. DBF saw it the
first time and said "#@$%, I could've done that, and I could use the million,
too."
...and could play Remington's Typewriter Concerto in A4 Major!
--
Trish {|:OI}
Newcastle, NSW, Australia
.
>When our home was chosen to be in the Christmas tour of homes this year, he
>insisted that I borrow back all the L & L angels that I have done for our
>girls and hang them in my angel/doll bedroom. We have actually had this
>discussion, where I make the comment that "anyone" could cross stitch. His
>thoughts about it are that maybe just about anyone could do it, but the fact
>is that not just everyone does.
Exactly, my husband feels that anyone can be a doctor too. But it's
the ones with the time, not to mention the money that actually become
doctors. I think that some other fields not just anybody could do. For
one I could never be a singer and because of that greatly admire
anybody that can sing well and consider that art. My father was a
graphic artist for McDonnell Douglas, I don't know if you would call
the pictures he did art, but when he came home and painted, that was
definitely art. I sort of feel that when people do really well at
things it becomes art. My husband would say a candy apple paint coat
highly buffed on a car is art. Have you ever seen a really good
carpenter work? Just watching him/her amazes me and I would call that
art. I guess it's all in how much something is admired. I for one
don't mind being called a craftsman, believe me, I'm my own harshest
judge when it comes to my cross stitch, painting or sewing, so what
other people think doesn't bother me. Oh wait, there was one thing
today that made me flabbergasted. My DD's little friend asked me if I
were cross stitchin my project for a t-shirt. It's MLI's
Spiritdancer!! I cracked up and said I don't think so.
Kim in SW Fl
A needlepoint piece composed of 12 quilt block patterns. The piece was taught
over a 15 month period,1 block per month and three tier border/sashing.
Everyone stitched the same patterns, each used the same threads, but chose
their own colors.
Tony has requested that we provide him the list of or colors and bring the
completed pieces to the shop to be photographed. We have now posted about 8
individual pieces and no two are anywhere alike. Each square changes ratically
with the change of color.
Candy
I believe he was also buying plain white fridges for $600 and selling them
(untouched) as "art" for $10,000.
> pianists are already used to making their fingers
>>go where they want without looking at them.
>>
>I have to agree. I played piano before I took typing class, and it
>was very easy to transfer those skills.
>
OK -- do those of you who have played piano or guitar or are good typists
stitch two handed? I am most comfortable stitching two handed -- I play piano
and guitar and have been a pretty fair typist. I wonder if two handed
stitching is more comfortable for me as a result of all those years of piano,
guitar and typing practice?? CiaoMeow >^;;^<
.
PAX, Tia Mary >^;;^<
Angels can't show their wings on earth but nothing was ever said about their
WHISKERS!!
Nothing is complete without a few cat hairs!
No husband was ever shot doing dishes!
Visit my photo album http://www.photopoint.com
This has always rubbed me the wrong way -- why some people think we need to
"justify" our needlework! My stock answer is that at least I am producing
something of lasting value with my free time. That's more than can be said for
those who spend their free time watching the "boob tube"! That word -- justify
-- makes me see red!!! We don't have to justify what we do with our time
unless is has a negative impact on someone or something we are personally
responsible for! (*#$(*&#$(*^@$# idjuts got NO cooth!!! CiaoMeow >^;;^<
Julia Cameron, a well-known author and teacher of
creativity, puts forth the idea that we all have an
artist within us. We don't have to be professional
artists to enjoy and employ that part of us. I would
guess that Julia would call the person you spoke with,
a poisonous playmate. His creativity may be blocked
and he can't stand for anyone else to be enjoying their
creativity. When I string beads, stitch cloth or sing
a song, I'm enjoying the process and feeding my artist
soul. Even if no one else finds value in what I have
created, I'm enjoying it.
No argument is going to change that person's mind.
Just look at him sadly, call him a "poor dear" and go
onto something that makes you happy. He's not worth
agonizing over.
Mary K.
>OK -- do those of you who have played piano or guitar or are good typists
>stitch two handed? I am most comfortable stitching two handed -- I play piano
>and guitar and have been a pretty fair typist. I wonder if two handed
>stitching is more comfortable for me as a result of all those years of piano,
>guitar and typing practice??
I'm a touch-typist [had to take the class in high school], and stitch
two-handed. I do not play any musical instrument.
"B & Y McBRIDE" <bre...@bmcbride.freeserve.co.uk> wrote in message
news:9c40as$u13$1...@newsg2.svr.pol.co.uk...
> Me four and two daughters five and six
>
> Regards
> Yve
> "Karen C - California" <kmc...@aol.com.LuvXS> wrote in message
> news:20010423211348...@ng-fz1.aol.com...
> > >>I have only run into 1 person in my life who was unable to paint by
> numbers.
> > >
> > >I'm another one. :-)
> >
> > Me, three.
Couldn´t get online yesterday so I am amazed at how long this thread has
turned out to be! But reading others responses, I think Diane´s initial
response was right - I just hadn´t really made the definition myself between
artist and craftsman. I guess I do consider myself a craftsman
(woman/person/humanoid?) more than an artist. However, that doesn´t negate
the possibility that my craft has artistic merit. I don´t just work from
kits, I play on my own with cross stitch, crewel and beginning stumpwork
(although I will say that at this stage the best the stumpwork efforts can
be described as is not QUITE painful to the eye!).
But, all in all, I think the craftistic (as in vs artistic - can I invent
that word now?) view of what we do is probably the most descriptive and
accurate. Now how many more decades will it take to work up into a Master
Craftsman position?
Jacinta
Jacinta Lodge schrieb:
I am a very good typist, played piano many years ago (and loved it) and
stitch two-handed!
Tobie
--
In Rotation: Picture of 5 clowns (NP); Ocean Princess (James Himsworth
C.C.S.); Millennium "Peace on Earth" by Ellen Maurer-Stroh (C.C S.);
Highland Light by Christine Champ Andrews (C.C.S.); NP "Shoe" by Sharon G.;
Tallit Bag by Lee
Finished: 3/7/01-Tallit Bag
I type like the wind -- on a manual typewriter I can generally type
approximately 90+ words a minute, and on a computer keyboard where you don't
have to worry about carriage return I can type in the 120+ range, with a 1%
error ratio -- yet I can't play the piano worth a darn. You need to have a
good ear too, LOL.
Leaward
"Bill Williams" <bil...@fn.net> wrote in message
news:pCuF6.1065$5W2.3...@nntp1.onemain.com...
Mark Shannon wrote:
well-executed blue-line work by previous
> generations are cherished by collectors now.
There's that term again: blue-line work! I've been here about 6 years
and have NEVER seen this until you and Mary started saying it :-) What
is this? A rejection of terms? (just kidding here).
Actually, embroidery has been stamped on fabric for hundreds of years,
and has been "cherished" since its inception. It was an industry that
brought valued gain to many a starving peoples - including today.
Maybe a few "modern" people are finally discovering what everyone used
to "know".
Dianne
>>You can enjoy something at a
>>beginner or "clutzy" level
>
>Absolutely! I cannot draw to save my life, but I loved playing with my crayons
>and colored pencils. I still buy a new box of Crayolas every couple of years
>because I enjoy scribbling with them. But even I am not going to put my
>drawings on the wall because they're so awful. I just enjoy the process, and
>when I'm done, I stick them in the recycling bin. (OK, now you know why I have
>that big pile of scrap paper that's printed on one side cluttering up my dining
>room.)
That's why the Dover coloring books are so great! I am RESISTING
buying a beautiful big Art Nouveau one because the next step would be
buying tons of color pens and pencils and the rest would be MADNESS
(very small apartment). For doodles I use Patternmaker, I just draw
with the mouse.
Alison
Someone mentioned a historical reference to "when a woman does it, it's
a craft, and when a man does it, it's art". That's the post I was going
to respond to - because that's not a fair analogy. At least by what
*little* I know.
Embroidery guilds were originally men. That's a few hundred years ago.
Only men got to embroider and design. But they were "craftsmen" - not
referred to as artists.
Dianne
Tobie & Herb wrote:
>
> Hi Mary,
>
> I am a very good typist, played piano many years ago (and loved it) and
> stitch two-handed!
>
> Tobie
I'm a tone deaf, hunt and punch typest who stitches with two hands!
Hmmmmmm...is there any hope I might be an artist one day! :-)))
happy stitchin'
Mavia
> That's what I would like to know. If I have the pressure of having to
> produce [trumpets] ART to be able to consider what I do worthwhile, I
> might as well give up now,
Only if you are willing to let the anonymous "them" dictate what is
worthwhile. Even what we do that ends up in the garbage is "worthwhile"
because we've learned something from the mistakes made.
Best Stitches,
Bess
Newsletters and other pieces of information
http://www.geocities.com/bess_of_hardwick/news1.html
Bess' Photos
http://briefcase.yahoo.com/bc/bess_of_hardwick
Current rotation: Jean Farish's America, Celtic Knot, Beary Christmas
Advent Calendar, Ann Trabue Sampler, Baby Afghan, assorted RRs
>I've wondered, though, if I may have been "intended" to be
>left-handed ... >I had one of those extremely
>old-fashioned first grade teachers who made everyone write with the
>right hand, though.
Same thing happened to my older and young sisters -- both are left handed.
They had teachers who tried to force them to write right handed. Didn't work
and my mom finally had to have a *discussion* with the teachers. I often
wonder about this myself. I am not truly ambidextrous but my older sister was
as a result of that teacher -- LOL. She wrote left handed but almost everything
else she could do with either hand. But I can do a lot of stuff with my left
hand that most "righties" can't manage. It would be interesting to see what
the trend is in families with both right & left handed members. CiaoMeow
>we've learned something from the mistakes made.
>
Not mistakes -- those are "learning experiences" or trial runs or something
similar :-))). For me, I use the term "big time obvious screw-up" 'cuz I
don't make mistakes I make MISTAKES!!! LOLOL CiaoMeow >^;;^<
Tia Mary-remove nekoluvr to reply <catwo...@aol.comnekoluvr> wrote in
article
Kim Brown <kawb...@ozemail.com.au> wrote in article
<3AE5E69A...@ozemail.com.au>...
> Pat Porter wrote:
> >
> > Ah well, perhaps if she`d learned the piano first, she would have been
a
> > concert typist by now!
> >
> > Pat P.
>
> ...and could play Remington's Typewriter Concerto in A4 Major!
>
> --
> Trish {|:OI}
> Newcastle, NSW, Australia
>
George
--
From Psalm 91 -
no evil shall befall you, no scourge come near your tent.
For he will command his angels concerning you to guard you in all your
ways. On their hands they will bear you up, so that you will not dash your
foot against a stone.
>Can you even buy paint by number pictures these days?
Yep. I've seen them at just about any arts/crafts type place I've been
in lately.
I'm probably just another in that list of people who can't do paint by
numbers though : )
--
RoseAnne
"Seanette Blaylock" <seanette.spam...@impulse.net> wrote in
message news:m4rdetsvhe5gq7tc4...@4ax.com...
That's because in the U.S. it *isn't* the size of typing paper. :)
Standard A4 paper is 8.27 X 11.69 inches.
US typing paper is 8.5 X 11 inches.
Just *try* to file a standard UK letter in a standard US file folder.
OUCH!!!
But I like the Remington concerto idea. <grin>
--
G. Romilly Goodfellow
Golden Circle Designs
Cat fur? What Cat fur? That's creative use of specialty fibers!