Wordless Wednesday – Glitter and Glitz

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Wordless Wednesday – Season’s Greetings

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Wordless Wednesday – More Favorite Techniques

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Wordless Wednesday – Favorite Techniques

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

First Friday Studio Tour – Heather Lair

This month we travel to Canada to visit Heather Lair.  Heather answers the questions I originally posed to start the series and also treats us to photos of her participation in an actual studio tour.

Do you call it a studio or a sewing room?

I call it a studio.  Has been forever!  It is a business and a passion.

Sometimes I hold classes in my studio.

What do you have in the room?

In my room:  3 tables, desk for one machine, fabric, shelves, thread/notions cupboard, piles of fabric on floor, bolts of interfacing/batting.  Dresser with paints, etc.  Rolls of quilts, trunks of quilts.  Shelves of products to sell.

This is my studio on a busy workday. My sewing machine is in the center of the ironing board – cutting table – thread cupboard and fabric stash. Nice north facing windows.

This table in my studio is piled with things I have made. I am getting ready for a craft fair. Lots of new fabric postcards!

How are your supplies organized?

Fabric is organized by color and type:  landscape, backings, silks, flannels, etc.  I actually don’t have a huge stash, as I use it up as fast as I get it!  Thread is organized by color and type.

My husband made this thread and notions cupboard for me.  There are shelves on the doors for the large spools of thread, and I use magazine holders and zip lock bags to keep snaps, ribbons and elastics all organized.  I try to put a label on every box as I store things!

Do you have anything, supplies, more machines, etc. tucked away in any other rooms of the house? How many other rooms?

I keep bags, boxes and containers of extra stuff in the attic.  I have my hoop set up in the living room so I can listen to talking books on the computer while I quilt.  Twice a year I cover the whole house in quilts for an Artist Studio tour.

Sometimes there is not enough room in my studio to unroll all my quilts. Here I have my bed covered with art quilts as I decide which ones to take for a lecture. I took most of them.

We built a special shelf in the powder room to display fabric postcards and other trinkets. Just out of view is a large pottery bowl with more cards.

Quilt on hoop in the living room.

How much horizontal surface do you have and is it ever enough?

 My work table is usually clear for my 24″ x 36″ cutting mat.  The back half of the table is covered in layers of stuff. 6″ – 8″ deep in tools, fabric, pencils, etc.

Here I have cleaned out my studio to dry painted sky fabric.

Do you straighten as you go, putting each fabric away as you cut, or do you clean up after a project.  How many projects do you work on at a time and how do you keep them organized?

I have a cupboard for UFO’s.  Once a linen cupboard, It was rescued from the back lane and repainted.  There are packages of unfinished quilts here and there throughout my studio,  I will often have a few projects going on at one time.

This past summer I had a commission to make a 3D quilted volcano. This is what my worktable looked like when the quilt was finished–much like the volcano.

Anything more you want to add about your studio?

I love being in my studio.  I quilt, sew, paint fabric, design quilts and visit with other quilters on groups like this one all the time.

I finally found a picture of my studio clean! This does not happen very often.

  Wave Artist Studio Tour

In addition to giving us a virtual tour, Heather has provided photos of her house during an actual tour.

Every year I participate in the Wave Artist Studio Tour. Here I have quilts on the front of my house and by the front door to welcome people into my studio.


The dining room covered with quilts for the studio tour.
The living room during the studio tour.

Another view of the living room during the tour. My daughter and friend are waiting for the crowds to arrive.

Thank you so much to Heather for inviting us to visit her studio.

Quilting on my hoop in the dining room.

Heather lives and quilts in Gimli, Manitoba.  Her quilts have appeared in several movies and she was featured in the September 2010 issue of American Quilter. Her website is http://heatherlairdesigns.com

Next month: Vivian Helena Aumond-Capone

First Friday Studio Tour – Lynn Chinnis

From Wikipedia: “A studio is an artist’s or worker’s workroom . . .”

A friend and I, both mostly traditional quilters, were discussing whether we had studios or sewing rooms. I thought studio was a bit pretentious a term for the kind of quilting I do, but she had heard that if you have more than one machine, it’s a studio. I suspect, therefore, that a lot of us have studios, whether or not we think of ourselves as artists.

And we are eternally curious about other folks’ working spaces. If we visit another fiber artist for the first time, do we even notice the living room? Not unless there is a sewing machine, longarm, loom, spinning wheel, easel, or other piece of equipment set up there. We want to see the workroom.

Today begins our First Friday Studio Tour series where we will peek into our site members’ studios and hear their thoughts on some of the questions I posed to get us started. We’re starting with mine, because someone has to go first.

Do you call it a studio or a sewing room? Why do you think this is so?

Sewing room. I didn’t start out as an artist or a quilter. Originally I made clothing and things for the house. I started with a machine in the corner of our dining area, graduated to the corner of the guest room, and when I finally had a room of my own it was the “sewing room.”  It’s probably too late to change an old habit now.

What do you have in the room? Anything that might surprise the rest of us?

Sewing machine, cutting table, shelves of fabric, stabilizers, fusible web, freezer paper, plastic tub of patterns, baskets of ribbon, lace and yarn, buttons, beads, paints, brushes, old plastic egg cartons to use as palettes, stencils, paintstiks, colored pencils, markers, a small bookcase with magazines, catalogs, and file folders of loose patterns and instruction sheets, a bulletin board that is always overcrowded and a design wall that has become a partial bulletin board.   Piecing thread; most of the quilting thread is in the basement with the longarm.

Surprising item: a role of hardware cloth, which isn’t cloth at all, but a wire mesh that can be easily cut and manipulated. Used once for a 3-D piece in a challenge.

Do you have anything (supplies, other machines) tucked away in other rooms of the house? How many other rooms?

I have a longarm in the basement, quilting books and magazines in the guest room, more books, mostly quilt history and art, in the living room, spinning wheel and baskets of roving in the dining room, yarn in the bedroom and basement and a small room in the basement with serger, needle felting machine, small sewing machine for taking to classes, dyes and dyeing supplies (buckets, measuring cups, etc.), and my guild’s charity quilt stash. Right now there is a Quilt of Valor top and its batting resting on the guest room bed until I quilt it. My husband does accuse me of taking over the whole house.

How are things organized?

Fabric is mostly by color with lots of exceptions: batiks, orientals, hand dyes, big pieces for backing, anything with so many colors that it can’t be called one color. Scraps are in small boxes by color. Also a big box of fabric that already has fusible web applied, and a separate box of non-cottons: silks, satins, burlap, velvet, etc. Thread is organized by fiber content, and weight. Once or twice a year I take all the fabric off the shelves and sort it.  In between times it becomes less organized as I use some and stuff the rest back where I can.

How much horizontal surface do you have and is it ever enough?

Sewing machine in a cabinet, with a drop down back that is always covered.  60″ x 36″ cutting table that is usually covered.  If I’m trimming a full sized quilt, I have to move things off the cutting table.

Do you straighten/organize as you go or do you clean up after a project? How many projects do you work on at a time and how do you keep them organized?

This was my cutting table this week.  It’s showing aprons for my guild’s booth at the local hospital bazaar, a pile of fabric for a workshop at another guild, fusible web for a batch of postcards, and tiny scraps from another set of postcards. Generally I work on one thing at a time and clean up at the end.  If working on more than one project, I try to keep things in separate piles.

Hope you have enjoyed the tour.  I enjoyed giving it.  Looking through a camera lens always creates a new perspective, and answering my own questions gave me some ideas about how I might be better organized.

Thank you for reading and commenting.

Next month:  Heather Lair