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Etsy Shop - Ravenmade Works: My Process

Dec 19, 2014

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I go to thrift stores, garage sales and estate auctions in search of embroideries, hand made works that have essentially been discarded. Each one has a story about its maker, its owner and its history but for most of them this provenance has been lost.

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Sometimes, when I take a work out of it's dusty framing, I'll find a name and maybe a year. Sometimes the stitching has been completed but the work is not framed or finished.

Sometimes the work is unfinished, then I wonder what stopped the stitcher working on it.

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Each work is soaked then washed according to the materials it is made from. It is dried quickly in a drying room so the colours don't get a chance to run. Once it is damp-dry, it is pressed and blocked with a steam-generating iron, until it is dry.

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Works made from wool are fulled lightly during the washing process so they won't unravel during the cutting up stage.

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Individual elements are cut out and grouped according to a colour scheme. 

Crewel embroideries work particularly well.

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I go into my stash of vintage textiles to find a background that will work with the collected elements.

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Elements are selected, auditioned and composed before I hand and machine stitch them in place.

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With needlepoint works, I find 2 that work together then cut them into strips. The 2 different lots of strips are woven together to make a new image but the physiology of the female eye enables her to still see the 2 different embroidered images.

These small works are then mounted in black, shadow-box frames so they can be hung together in groupings or singly.

Dec 19, 2014

2 min read

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Thank you for exploring Lesley Turner Art

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