Module 5 "Touching Texture"

Module 5: "Touching Texture"

A study based on textured surfaces in landscape.

Wednesday 9 March 2011

Chapter 11 continued

9th March 2011
First ideas for composition of resolved sample

I'm still at the early stages, but thought I'd post some of my ideas for the resolved sample, more as a way of organising my thoughts than anything else. (These are just rough ideas, mostly faked on Photoshop.)


Idea 1

My first thought was that growth and disintegration are processes and that I wanted to somehow indicate that movement or process, even in a static textile. I thought that each unit could contain a bird, distressed in a different way and that each unit could be made separately and joined by laced insertion stitch, so that it could be unlaced and separated into its consituent parts (disintegration), or re-joined to make a different composition (growth). I also considered other ways of joining, so that they could be separated and put together again.





Idea 2

My second idea was to have birds of different sizes, with a large bird shape cut away in smaller bird shapes to reveal disintegrated birds behind.




I liked the idea of a subtle echo of the shapes of the inside birds by applying small birds to the background, in matching fabric, just frayed and distressed a little at the edges.

Small bird shapes stitched a little way from the edge then frayed slightly.



Idea 3


I then thought that it might be interesting for some of the inside shapes to break through the edge of the big bird, thus disintegrating it more and giving opportunities for some counterchange. (This isn't actually counterchange, but gives the same impression.)






It would be quite difficult to have the birds disintegrated without the whole composition looking too busy.

Too busy!


It would be necessary to leave some plain areas to balance the distressed shapes.





There are elements of all three ideas that I would like to keep, so have not yet decided which to use. Maybe I need to do some more fabric samples and play about with different ways of disintegrating the small bird shapes.


I am also still interested in my very first idea I had in July, to layer up different fabrics and cut away, melt or dissolve away to reveal lower layers.


The hardest thing is not having the ideas, but in selecting which will work best. I think I'll sleep on it.





































1 comment:

  1. Idea 3 is great in plain colours. At first I agreed that the second image was too busy, but when I look at it again, it looks a bit like a Kandinsky.

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