Old 08-15-2011, 06:57 AM
  #30  
FroggyinTexas
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Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Here and there
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Originally Posted by annesthreads
I've just spent two days at the Festival of Quilts in Birmingham (UK), and as ever was totally amazed and awed at the standard of work displayed there. Some beautifully made traditional quilts, and many, many highly original, expressive and creative pieces. That's started me musing on creativity and originality. I suspect that my work is craft rather than art - I follow patterns and my original input comes from choices of colour, quilting stitches and threads - and is limited by my skill level. Many of the works on display in Birmingham were original pieces of art.
Now, I'm not in any way putting down the craft approach - I get endless enjoyment and fulfillment from what I do, and was in awe of the standard of some of the traditional work on display. But how to move into the more original work? I wonder if I just lack some artistic, creative spark that gives the artists who produce these stunning pieces their imagination and vision.
Would love to hear people's thoughts on this.
Just jump right on in to the art water! Your ideas are as good as anyone else's. Want to make a log cabin out of grays and whites and then scatter red paint drops on it?
Mess up on an Ohio Star and rename it wonky-doodle?
Dip one end of ecru muslin into blue dye and the other end into green and and in the middle applique some flowers you fussy cut from something in your stash, make some creative sashays around it all with your sewing machine--or by hand--call it "Lawn and Sky" or ""My Backyard" or "Smog on a Sunny Day" and you will have a work of art.
froggyintexas
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