Saturday, May 18, 2013

Reed leaves

Finished with the flat gold, and started on the reed leaves.
The leaves on the right side (orange and green) look much better than those on the left side. I may have to re-stitch. I will wait till the right side is done before deciding.


I'm thinking about the finishing for the piece. For her piece, Kay Stanis put a piece of gold lame as backing, so that the carry-over of the flat gold under the voids would not be obvious. She also finished it as a scroll. I will do the gold lame underneath, but probably will do it as a framed piece.

Friday, May 17, 2013

Flat gold done

Flat gold fencing couched and done. I used up 15.5 strands of flat gold (1.5 packets). I will review tomorrow to see if there are any missing stitches.


Should be much easier from this point on.
Just saw a missing fence section, will fix it tomorrow.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Flat gold fences

Made good progress today. In fact the flat gold is almost done, although the couching lags behind somewhat.  I found that when I couch the long spans, it works better if I couch one end, then the middle, then the other end, and then go back and fill in the middle couching stitches. That probably isn't the correct way, but for me it turns out better.


Monday, May 13, 2013

Flat gold fences

What was achieved by one packet (10 strands)  of flat gold. I wasted about 1 or 1.5 strand of flat gold, and about 3/4 of the way done. Hope this turns out ok.


Thursday, May 9, 2013

Flat gold fences

Moving along, still slow, but not as much un-stitching as before.


Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Flat gold solved!

I am so happy I've figured it out! Here's the story.

During class with Kay Stanis, she told me that the flat gold starts at the 2nd hole from the left void, then weft layer at every other "valley" (actually hole, as the Ro fabric does not have defined valleys), and end up adjacent to the subsequent (right) void, for a total of 5 laid flat gold's.
Here's my fabric much expanded, with the needle I use for the flat gold. When I counted the weft threads between voids I have 12 threads! That means I end up with 1 hole remaining! I went back to look at Kay's piece, and her Ro fabric has 11 threads between voids, not 12!! That was my EUREKA! moment.
So the moral is, for the Ro fabric with flat gold, count to see how many threads there are between voids, and adjust accordingly.


Another problem is the size of the needle. As the flat gold requires the largest needle that I have (one size smaller than the sinking needle), the point of the needle is not as sharp as I would prefer, which makes it more difficult to poke precisely.
Also the flat gold, while not delicate, cannot be un-stitched more than 2 or 3 times, before it starts peeling or crimping.

I am finally getting to the point where I make progress with the flat gold. And it's looking decent.


Flat gold detail.
According to Kay, the backside of the flat gold (on the underside of the piece) should be flat, and not twisted, and I need to work on that; although that is not a flaw (in my opinion) that requires un-stitching.

Monday, May 6, 2013

Flat gold

I measured the distance between the flat gold; it amounts to 1.2 mm apart. It is very difficult to space out this distance. Some of the difficulties came from the width of the flat gold. I also tried to insert pins at the correct distance but that wasn't workable either. Finally I gave up and just did the best - and with practice, actually it was starting to look ok. (Whew!!)
Initial attempt:


Where I left off today- the fence on the right side looks better than that on the left side:

The frame for Kenny came, so here he is in his new frame.

I also framed Betty. I like Betty better than Kenny.