I was fourteen when I started keeping a daily journal. I got away from it in college, but started it up again in my twenties. When our son was born, I kept a journal about his first years. When I saw Marking Time, I thought what a wonderful idea it is to use one’s fiber craft to document the passing days!
Tommye Scanlin enjoys the slowness of tapestry weaving. She realized that she was “weaving to the passing of time” and wondered if the process could be employed to represent time. “What if I made a tapestry with each day as a separate, distinct part?” she asked.
Tommye searched for other artists with a daily practise. She discovered a weaver who documented her emotional state over a time of crisis. Other artists documented the weather. Some incorporated coded messages. She asked these artists to talk about their motivation and process.
The resulting book is an inspiring exploration of new ways to use craft for self-expression–documenting one’s internal life, the world around us, and the passing of time.
Most of the artists are weavers, but others work in embroidery, quilting, and mixed media,
Roan Haug is an artist who has a “deep appreciation for traditional domestic arts, especially that of quilting. Her quilt All My Quiet Moments includes traditional yo-yos and paper piecing hexagons, hand piecing, and French knots.
I love how she used the sheer fabric for the yo-yos which are interspersed with solid fabric hexagons.
I noted that Haug used black thread for connecting the hexagons, an unusual decision. But she explains it was intentional: “I wanted to mark the time through contrasting thread so the viewer got a better understanding of the time-intensive process for making this work, in particular.” I am reminded that artists don’t make mistakes, every choice is intentional and it is our job to understand.
Many in my weekly quilt group are paper-piecing addicts! I have included paper piecing in several of my quilts. I know how much time is involved! But I am sure the general viewer has not a clue!
Another artist who caught my eye was Karen Turner. She uses vintage and recycled fabrics in her fiber art. She was inspired to create a slow stitch journal on a single piece of cloth.
Like Turner, I find hand stitching very relaxing. I love embroidery and hand quilting and hand applique. Turner notes that while working these simple stitches she felt very grounded and meditative. At year’s end, Turner had a strip of 365 blocks, “a visual marker for the passing of time.”
Rebecca Cartwright documented temperature highs and lowes in 2019 in her Temperature Quilt, comprised of 365 split hexagons.
A few years back a friend knitted a scarf that represented a sport team’s wins or losses. There is a great opportunity in knitting for documenting events.
Joan Sheldon is a marine scientist who uses her craft to represent scientific data. Her crotched Climate Change scarf uses color to illustrate temperature changes from 1600 to the present. It is beautiful, but also startling and concerning when you understand what it represents.
Tommye considers how artists use codes in their work and the book includes pages showing Morse Code and Braille that can be visually incorporated into your art.. There are full pages of templates for planning your project.
Tommye shares her own journey and her sixteen year long practice of daily weaving. She offers ideas of how to get started. She notes that, in the end, “it is about the journey.”
I have shared only a few of the stunning artists in the book.
The book is beautifully presented. It includes two ribbon book markers and the inner side of the dust jacket is printed with “Daily Creative Practice Starting Points.” The hardbound cover has the same design as the dust cover.
Thanks to the publisher for a free book.