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Keep up with the latest art and adventures from Rene Shoemaker Art!

Questions For You

As I write to you, I often wonder what you are expecting to find here - what do you expect to read, what are you looking for? I have not heard enough about You. I need your help to know what kind of topics you would like to see covered in this blog. I’ve been writing and sharing my world with you for 10 months now, and it is time to re-access what I am doing, to help me stay on track, before a whole year passes by. Can you help me out?

I must admit, it is sort of fun to work in a vacuum, to write, and to try to think about what others might be interested in. But I realized the other day that my writing might be more effective if I got some feedback…

Since January, some of the topics I’ve covered have been: introductions and interviews, tutorials, behind-the-scenes work, travel, plans and goals. Oh, yes - and a story about my fascination with the history of pockets!

Let me know which of these subjects have worked for you, and what you would like to see more of. 

Thanks, as always, for your continued interest. Making art is a lot of fun, and it is also lots of fun to share it!

  -Rene

              

                                                                  New: shibori stole for a pastor friend

Working with ARROW

This month, it’s been delightfully busy, and I think it is just a result of gearing up for the fall season. When it gets a little cool around here, all of us slower-than-molasses Georgia gals get crazy with excitement. This week, I could write about my experience with Rinne Allen and working with the great group at Arrow in Athens, but daughter Kate just created a post on her blog with photos of the event - so click here to see what we were up to! 

Kate has been encouraging me to post a dyeing tutorial - so I will do that in the next few weeks. But in the meantime, here are two more of her photos showing how much fun creating colors and watching the rainbow come to life at the workshop was: 

Here are two quick items to share with you this week:

1) The Birds silks that were at the Jittery Joe’s 5 Points location have flown the coop to live in New Hampshire! I received a call that a very nice woman wanting to purchase the birds as a set - she sang into the telephone:

   “I love them!

        They make me happy!

            They need to stay together as a flock!”

I am so pleased that they will be living on a lake in New Hampshire, happy to be together still.


  2) To help support our local gallery, ATHICA (Athens Institute for Contemporary Art), I took the silkscreen design that I had submitted to the Mystery Triennial exhibit and had it printed by the local print shop Satisfactory.  It was my first-ever professionally screened textile design! Satisfactory did a great job printing them up for us. The shirts are available at ATHICA, and would make a great gift for fans of Athens, the Chase Street Warehouses, Tracy Street Studios, or of course ATHICA itself!  A portion of the profits are donated back to ATHICA to help support the good work they do. 

Happy Fall season to all my friends!

Shears

Earlier this month, the New York Times Sunday Magazine had a spread on Designer Shears, curated by Carin Goldberg.

"For New York’s Fashion Week", she wrote, "some of the industry’s top craftsmen and  women pay homage to their tools":


I loved seeing this spread because, as I’ve noted before, the tools that you use are very important - and so very personal! They really become part of you, your life, and your creative experience. 

And here is this designer’s favorite pair of scissors, signed by the person who made them. They were a gift to me, they have the perfect weight, and they work superbly. And, as Isaac Mizrahi noted, I never use them on paper!

                                                                René Shoemaker, of Coffee Cup Press

Let me know about your tools. I’d love to do a post on reader’s favorite tools!

Pockets!

Have you ever wished you could have an extra set of pockets? I have!

I recently re-discovered a new/old way of providing pockets. And I think it is such a good idea, I wanted to share it with you.

Last week, I was at Ron and Marty’s house and ran across Marty’s embroidered textile collection. Now, Ron and Marty are pretty serious when it comes to collecting wonderful stuff from the Arts & Crafts period, and when I saw her textile display in the dining room, I got very excited. The designs and the needlework were fabulous, and she let me take everything down and touch and explore the pieces.

All this is a roundabout way to say that when I saw the first piece, it reminded me of some ‘external pockets’ that I had read about before. In the 1700’s to the early 1900’s, women used pockets in a similar way to how women today use a handbag – to carry their belongings. The pockets back then were often under their dresses, and they were belted or tied around the waist. If you can’t imagine what that would look like, here is a painting of a woman reaching into her pocket:

Now, we can see how unglorious it is to raise your skirt in public, so a way to put your hand in your pocket through the skirt was devised, and here is a picture of that:

There is even a game of ‘Find the Pocket” on this site at the Victoria & AlbertMuseum. It is fun to discover the ways people hid, and used, their pockets by looking at paintings. 

Now, back to Marty’s beautiful textiles, I wanted to share some of them with you:

     This is the first one I saw; it is made of linen and has one pocket on top of the other, and has two reinforced holes in the upper corners that make me think it was tied around a waist,

as opposed to this textile, which has a drawstring construction – it would be used as a bag..

And this one was not a pocket, or a bag, but a table cloth case, and I am showing it to you because the design, colors and embroidery is especially beautiful on this Art Nouveau textile.

So, you see how beautiful and useful these pockets could be? My intention is to bring these back into the public conciousness and see if people might like it. I could make some from my designed fabrics, such as these samples:


And maybe I can start a new fashion fad!