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Meet tree-lover Lorraine Roy and her wonderful Woven Woods series.
Through this project, Lorraine explores the mycorrhizal networks of fungal threads that connect trees beneath the earth.
https://t.co/WruYwb0dzU
Starting with her collection of travel selfies, Ailish Henderson reflects on memories of her life experiences. She uses these images to inspire her delicate collaged and stitched portraits.
https://t.co/Oab7JO9Mrl
Ailish Henderson stitches sweet wrappers, tickets, collected papers and even bits of her own clothing into her collaged portraits.
These personal items help to give the work greater depth and meaning.
https://t.co/Oab7JO9Mrl
Never leaving her background in horticulture behind, Lorraine Roy brings her science training into her art process.
She takes a thorough approach to research, going directly to the experts to find out more about her chosen subject of trees.
https://t.co/WruYwb0dzU
Exactly how would you hang a circular artwork? Textile artist Lorraine Roy shares her ingenious solution for this tricky task. Her stunning circular appliqué and quilted artworks are inspired by trees and their connections through the mycorrhizal network.
https://t.co/WruYwb0dzU
Ailish Henderson's work starts simply, by looking through photographs. Her travel selfies inspire pen and watercolour drawings and mixed media works. And she uses these stitched portrait collages to explore her past experiences and emotions.
https://t.co/Oab7JO9Mrl
Monique Day-Wilde wants you to go outside and look. Especially at the plant life that surrounds you. It’s your connection to ‘place,’ and it can inspire your textile art beyond measure.
https://t.co/jc2gWKi6zd
Ailish Henderson stitches sweet wrappers, tickets, collected papers and even bits of her own clothing into her collaged portraits.
These personal items help to give the work greater depth and meaning.
https://t.co/Oab7JO9Mrl
Kate Tume uses her embellished and textures animal portraits to tell stories exploring the lack of reverance for the natural world, drawing attention to the constant, damaging loss of biodiversity on the planet.
https://t.co/xy0tBr3wSQ
A chance article about how quilt blocks could inspire architectural design led lecturer Valerie Goodwin to embark on a secondary career as a successful textile artist and write her own book “Art Quilt Maps, Capturing a Sense of Place”.
https://t.co/MM0HeUkyWf