Finding Balance

Cadence 7

I hope you have all had the best Christmas possible and wish you a very Happy, Healthy and Creative New Year. Ours was still a little quieter than pre-pandemic as we chose to restrict our activities in the run up to Christmas Day so that we could celebrate as a family. The highlight, for me, was playing a new ‘cheaters’ addition of Monopoly on Boxing Day with Joe (son), Riley (grandson) and son Callum and his wife Lulu who came up from London for Christmas. Who knew that Callum was such a cheat!! Nothing fancy but so special.

It is that time of year when many of us look back at the previous year and make some plans for the following year. 2021 started in a pretty bleak place here in the UK and was a year in which too many families lost loved ones and all of us were affected by the stress and uncertainty that comes with lockdowns and restrictions. But 2021 was not a repeat of 2020, we are in a better place than we were thanks to vaccines, home testing and better treatments for Covid. Our NHS, social care workers and scientists are truly amazing.

When I look back at my year I see a lot more positives than negatives - life has not been ‘normal’ but it has been good. And you guys played a part in that - the support I have had from those of you who read this blog, buy from my shop or sign up for one of my workshops has been brilliant. I would especially like to take the time to thank those of you who have taken the time to sent me an email or card. You have made me laugh, made me cry and made me feel loved and supported, thank you.

So, my positives …..

I have found my way back to MAKING ART! Big happy dance!!! And it feels so good. I started the year tentatively working on pieces that were ‘process’ driven. I had no inspiration as such other than the joy of making. Using colours I love and my favourite breakdown printing techniques I have made a series of pieces called Cadence. The early pieces were rubbish but I kept going and have made some pieces that I think are beautiful. And, it turns out, that others agreed - Cadence 7 won the Art category at Festival of Quilts in the summer. (Yes, I got tearful!) This affirmation that I was on the right track has given me confidence in my creative process, something I lost in 2020. There will be more Cadence quilts as they are just joyful to make but I have ended 2021 making the first pieces in a new series …. I don’t want to jinx it so haven’t posted any images yet but I am rather happy with it so far.

I caught up on the majority of workshops that had been delayed from 2020. There was plenty of rearranging during the year and I’m grateful for the patience and understanding of my fabulous students. Alongside those workshops that had already been scheduled for 2021 this meant I taught many workshops ‘back to back’ which was exhausting but so, so satisfying. I also had three guest tutors in the studio; Ruth Brown, Rosie James and Christine Chester which was fun. I kept my Covid safe practices in place throughout the year and will do so into 2022. Thank you to my students for complying with this - the studio has felt like a safe place the whole time.

I am also rather proud of myself for developing my first online workshop. It was a massive learning curve completed in a short period of time whilst the studio was closed over the winter. I launched Breakdown Your Palette in March and have loved the interaction with students from all over the world.

Launching that online workshop also helped raise money for YoungMinds, a charity that supports young people with mental health issues. In total we raised £345, thank you. Definitely a positive.

Despite everything, when I look at the positives, 2021 was, on balance an OK year. And despite the uncertainty we face going into 2022 I’m looking forward to sharing many more positives with you.

Leah x

Leah HigginsComment
New Student Gallery

Self Portrait by Pippa Wardman

I love seeing the fabrics that my students print and dye during workshops - their work is so varied and inspirational. But I don’t often get to see what happens next - how they use their fabrics. I suspect that many pieces are put away in cupboards, but I hope that, at the very least, they get pulled out every so often and stroked lovingly. However earlier this autumn I asked my students to send me photos of work made using fabrics created here at Urban Studio North. And wow! The variety of work is amazing and I’m grateful for their help. I have put together a gallery of their work which can be accessed via the workshop page on my website. Have a look!

(And, whilst I’m here, a quick reminder that the last date you can place orders for delivery in the UK before Christmas is this Wednesday, the 15th.)

Stitched sample by Hilary Kimber using the selvedges from breakdown printed fabrics.

Last order date for pre-Christmas delivery in UK

Although the last posting date is later I’m setting Wednesday 15th December as a cut off for pre-Christmas orders as I plan on taking a long break over Christmas and the New Year. Orders placed later than this will be posted at the start of January. (Unless I get a bit bored and fancy a trip to the Post Office!). I thought you might also like to know that I’ve added a few more new Wonky Print Inspiration Packs to my online shop.

I have now finished teaching for this year. The bad weather this week meant postponing the last two days teaching but other than that I’m happy, and relieved, to have been able to teach so many workshops this year. Despite the worries about the new variant we are much better place compared to this time last year. The rollout of vaccines has been amazing but I’m very grateful for the great attitude of all my students this year. We’ve worn masks, washed and sanitised hands, taken lateral flow tests and made sure that the studio has been a safe environment for all of us. Thank you to each and every one of year!

With no teaching scheduled until the end of January I can now turn all of my attention to making art. I’ve removed the plastic screens and re-arranged the benches to make the studio feel more ‘mine’. I’ve pinned all my ‘work in progress’ up on the design wall. And hidden the stock of chocolate biscuits so my beloved family can’t help themselves. Chocolate, and lots of strong coffee are an essential part of my creative process! The next quilt in the Cadence series is ready to quilt and I’ve got a completely new series in the development stage. So plenty to keep me busy!

Leah x

Eye candy!

The weather in the UK has been awful for the last few days so I thought you might appreciate some eye candy! Last week I had the very great pleasure of welcoming Christine Chester to my studio. She taught her 5 day Poetry of Decay class and it was fabulous. It is a mixed media workshop in which students add layers and layers of texture and colour to paper and cloth. Christine worked the students hard but the results were worth it. My thanks to Christine and especially to the students - Inge, Pippa, Chris, Gill, Ruth, Judy and Lesley.

New products including new Wonky Print Packs, Thermofax designs and more!

It is that time of year when you may be looking for Christmas presents for others, or dropping big hints about things you would like yourself. So, always being happy to help, I have added some new products to my online shop that you might like.

I’ve put together some new Wonky Print Packs and some packs of hand dyed fabric. The fabrics are all ones that I’ve made whilst teaching or when demonstrating breakdown printing at Festival of Quilts in the summer. Each pack contains approx. 1 metre of fabric and includes some ‘nearly solid’ colours that co-ordinated with the printed fabrics.

I’ve also added some new Thermofax Screen designs. Most are designs that I’ve used in my older art quilts and that my students have really liked to use in the studio. Deco 1 (below) is a completely new design that I’m rather pleased with.

Together we have raised £336 this year for the charity YoungMinds. I’d really like to add to that total so I have had some beautiful ceramic mugs made that feature my quilt Cadence 7. Each mug costs £12 including a £2 donation to YoungMinds. I hope you like them.

Although I spend a lot of my time printing I also teach my students lots of ways to dye their fabrics. I’ve put together a Beginners Hand Dyeing Kit in two colourways. Each kit contains three 50g pots of dye, soda ash, urea, a graduated measuring pot and a detailed instruction booklet that covers bag dyeing, dyeing a colour wheel, gradation dyeing, layered dyeing, tray dyeing and high immersion bucket dyeing. The Spring kit contains Acid Lemon, Magenta and Turquoise dyes and the Autumn kit contains Golden Yellow, Scarlet and Royal Blue dyes. The kits contain enough dyes etc to dye over eight metres of fabric and (I think) are a good place to start if you have never done any dyeing with Procion MX dyes.

And finally, if your loved ones are worried that they might buy you the wrong thing how about suggesting one of my Gift Cards (available in £20, £50 and £100 units).

And that is the blatant plugging over for now ….. I might add a few more Wonky Print Packs when I’ve caught up with my backlog of rinsing, washing and ironing my printed fabrics!

Book making workshops with Ruth Brown

I am delighted to announce that bookbinder and textile artist Ruth Brown will be giving two workshops in my studio next year. I sat in on the workshop she gave this year and it was brilliant. Ruth provides all the materials along with detailed notes. No prior knowledge is assumed and her demonstrations are well thought out and inspiring. You can find out more about Ruth here.

Ruth will be teaching a repeat of Books for Textile Artists from 30th August to 2nd September 2022. You can find more details and book here. In this workshop you will make -

·         A blizzard book - a folded book to contain business cards.

·         A crown book - a variation on the blizzard book with removable pages

·         The Secret Belgian Binding - this gives a book which opens completely flat and has a cover which will turn back on itself. The cover pieces and the spine piece are woven together with a crisscross effect. The signatures (pages) are then sewn on to the weaving.

·         A long stitch binding where there is a wraparound cover and the signatures are sewn through the cover.

·         A Drum Leaf binding - this is a binding where each pair of pages is a spread with no stitching in the centre, making it a lovely way to display art work or photographs. The version we make will have a case binding (a hard back).

She will be teaching More Books for Textile Artists from 21st to 24th June 2022. You don’t have to have done the previous workshop to do this one as no previous knowledge is required. You can find out more about the workshop and book here. In this workshop you will make -

·         A single section, stub binding.

·         An A6 hard back notebook covered with hand-dyed fabric book cloth.

·         An elegant Origata binding.

·         An A5 twin needle Coptic stitch sketchbook with cloth covered hard covers. This intriguing stitch formation gives a more stable book than the more common single needle version.

·         A travel journal with laminated book cloth covers, an elastic closure and a storage pocket at the back.

In the meantime, if you’d like to spend time in the studio before winter sets in then I have a few places left on my workshops this autumn. Including one space on my two day Simply Screen Printing workshop that has become available because of a cancellation. Have a look at my Workshops page for more details.

Bye for now, Leah

Rosie James

A very big thank you to Rosie James for teaching in my studio this week! I love her work and it was great to see her processes. The students loved it!

Here are just a few images of students work. In order: Jan, Janet, Ali, Tracey (x2), Sam, Kate and Sarah

Autumn term at Urban Studio North
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After a lovely time stitchin’ I’m now ankle deep in teaching. Autumn term is choke full of different workshops. I started last weekend with a wonderful new group of Creative Surface Design students. I always start this program with a focus on colour. It’s my favourite subject and I firmly believe that if you don’t love the colours you are working with you are very unlikely to love the printed or dyed fabrics you produce. We also used screens, mono-printing and mark making to create some ‘backgrounds’ for use during the next session. Not sure I like the colours I mixed …. but that’s the point! So back to the drawing board for me.

This week the very talented Rosie James will be teaching ‘Drawing with Your Sewing Machine’ in the studio. I love Rosie’s work and am looking forward to seeing the students samples and finished works.

Through October and November I’ll be teaching my colour course ‘Colour Your Palette’ as well as my screen printing based workshops ‘Simply Screen Printing’, ‘Print Your Palette’ and ‘Print, Stitch, Go’. As well as teaching my Creative Surface Design and my Introduction to Surface Design students. Phew!

At the end of November Christine Chester will be in the studio teaching her popular ‘Poetry of Decay’ workshop. This one has been delayed and delayed because of the pandemic so I have all my fingers and toes crossed that we have no further interruptions.

Most of the workshops are full but there are a few places left on Print Your Palette and Print, Stitch, Go if you fancy an indulgent five days in the studio.

I’m not going to have much free time for a while but that’s OK. Work on Flamin’ Nora will start again in December!

Flamin' Nora
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…. is the working title of the quilt I’ve been working on over the last week or so. It is a new piece in my Cadence series and will probably be titled Cadence 8 once it is finished. It is a piece inspired by those days when my carefully constructed oasis of calm, steady creativity is disrupted by unexpected but often petty interruptions (must remember to lock the studio door from the inside / turn off my phones), by stuff not working properly (I swear that my beloved sewing machine knows when to irritate me!) and by life just getting in the way. The type of day when I might say something a bit stronger than flamin’ nora.

I’m guessing you know what I mean …..

And so this quilt. It has the same main elements as Cadence 7 but instead of a calm, narrow band of colour running along the centre it is interrupted by a spiky band of colour that is the focal point of the quilt. It is a long way from finished but I thought that I’d share a few work in progress photos.

Although I’ve been enjoying some gaps between workshops this month my October and November are crazy busy. Which means that it will be December before I can finish the quilt. Which is frustrating as ideas for Cadence 9 are already forming in my head. But that’s life!

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