Monday, September 27, 2010

Studio LaScarfa

Hello all, it has been quite a while since I have posted something... oops.

Here is something I've been working on for school along with a few classmates of mine. It is a joint project called Studio LaScarfa. It is a "store" for our Professional Practice class.

Studio LaScarfa is a collaboration of work and ideas that will come together in a Trunk Show in a couple of weeks.

Check out our blog at http://studiolascarfa.blogspot.com

Sarah

Thursday, April 22, 2010

The Beginning: The Piece Before The Thesis


I created a small handbag to illustrate the time before the handbag was seen as a functional object. Before the early 1900s, the handbag was merely an accessory. Women only needed to carry limited objects, such as lipstick or a compact mirror. It wasn’t until the 1940s that the handbag was seen as more than just an accessory to an outfit. When women became vital to the workforce, the handbag transformed into a functional object that was much larger than the accessory-type handbags of previous years. I have illustrated this with a very small handbag that is quite difficult to fit anything into.

The outside of this small handbag is a lacy fabric created by machine embroidery. It is delicate and fragile, which is how women were viewed for most of history. The inside of the bag has images of some very important Canadian female figures that broke through this stereotype.

I found images online of these women and altered it slightly in Photoshop to give them a vintage feeling.

Nellie McClung was crucial to the women’s suffrage campaign in Western Canada. She helped women in Manitoba win the provincial vote in 1916, which was the first province to achieve it.

Thérèse Casgrain was the first female leader of a political party in Quebec. She lead the twelve-year fight for women to gain the provincial vote, which was finally granted in 1940.

Agnes MacPhail was the first woman to enter the Canadian Parliament in 1921. She remained its only female member for seventeen years.

Emily Murphy successfully lobbied the attorney general of Alberta in 1916 for a women’s court to be established and she was appointed as police magistrate, the first woman to be given the honour.

Emily Stowe is the pioneer of women’s rights and suffrage in Canada. She founded the Toronto Women’s Literary Club in 1876, which was the birth of the women’s movement in Canada.


Wednesday, April 14, 2010

White Roses

I have created a ceiling/wall piece of white fabric roses to hang in the cloister at Knox College. Knox College is part of the University of Toronto but is also affiliated with the Presbyterian Church in Canada. Because it is part of the church, many weddings are performed in the chapel. There is a lot of traffic in the cloister: students, faculty and churchgoers. I hope this piece will have an impact on these passers-by but also those attending weddings.

In a typical North American wedding, a large amount of money is spent on flowers. They are a major motif in weddings, but they only last for that one day. They wilt and die and lose their beauty, becoming another disposable object. Fake flowers tend to be very tacky and therefore not used even though they are more practical because they don’t die. With my piece I hope to remind people of the disposability and waste of real flowers and prove that fake flowers can be beautiful.

I created the flowers with a fold of white cotton broadcloth that I twisted and sewed together to create the rose shape. I went through a few different methods and this was the most efficient and cost effective method of creation. I also tested a few different sizes of roses to see which would have the most impact in the space. Once I had created a large amount of flowers, I began to sew them onto a piece of netting. This was for stability and for hanging purposes.


Sunday, April 4, 2010

Update

I'm busy busy busy with school, but I thought I'd post and let you all know what I'm so busy with.
On Tuesday I have my Statement of Intent due for my Thesis, which takes place all of nest year. I'm busy working on that and the visual response that goes with it. I will have a full post on that when I'm done and have photos and a finished statement. But here's the gist of it: I'm going to be talking about the Canadian Women's Suffrage Movement and how it influenced the handbag and how the handbag influenced the movement. For my visual response I am creating a handbag that, on the outside talks about the stereotypes that men believed of women in the time before the movement (eg. weak, over-emotional, not worthy of the vote or of education) and on the inside of the handbag I will talk about what women really are (eg. smart, strong, caring, deserving of education and the right to vote and make decisions, etc.).

For my Advanced Fibre Studies class I am creating a huge wall installation that will hypothetically be installed at Knox College at U of T. I am creating hundreds of white fabric flowers to talk about weddings and how flowers typically used at weddings become disposable objects.

Lastly, I am working on a project for my business class. We have to create a business plan and a prototype. I am working on a business plan for a company that makes handbags out of pre-loved clothing and fabrics. For the prototype I am making an envelope-style clutch out of pre-loved handbag and men's dress shirt.

As you can see I am extremely busy for the next few weeks. I will try and post when I have new photos to show.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Garden Bags

I made this series of garden bags for my Printmaking class last semester. We were supposed to make a line of functional objects with screen printed fabric. I decided to make bags that can be used in the garden, mostly for transporting seeds and tools from the house or shed to the garden. My inspiration came from these images from a vintage "how-to" book on drawing birds.


My parents have 2 or 3 bird feeders in the backyard so we always have lots of birds hanging around. I felt the bird was a perfect motif for this series.
I came up with the pattern, shot it on my screen and printed it onto a nice cotton canvas. We also had to use the digital printer for half of the project. I manipulated my image on Photoshop and added colour. Then it gets printed out on the printer (sort of like the printer you have at home for your computer except that its HUGE and prints on fabric instead of paper). Then you have to steam the fabric for about an hour to fix the dye (that way you can wash it and not lose your image). I wanted a third fabric so I dyed some white cotton with Tetley tea, the result is a lovely mottled caramel colour.

When all that was done I sat down in front of my sewing machine and began to make! Here is the result:
All four bags!


The digitally printed lining


Tea-dyed cotton lining

Knitting Bag

Good afternoon!
I made this knitting bag for my mom for her birthday. I used a floral canvas for the outside and a yellow cotton broadcloth for the lining. The inside of the pockets are a teal broadcloth, for a little surprise! I also made the handles, with the canvas (lined with interfacing to give it strength) and a yellow satin ribbon sewn on top to hide the seam.
The bag has plenty of inside and outside pockets, perfect for her knitting needles and supplies.
Here are some photos:


This was my original sketch.


The bag!


Detail of the fabric and the inside of a pocket.


Here is the inside of the bag, showing 8 pockets (there are 4 on the outside also).

Friday, March 12, 2010

Birthday Dress!



It was my birthday last week and as a tradition I buy myself a new dress. This year I didn't have a lot of extra cash so instead of buying myself a new dress I decided to make one. It was a pattern from Burdastyle and fabric from Fabricland. It was pretty easy to make, but the final product isn't perfect. I just threw a belt on it and I was happy!





The straps are a little crooked...

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Busy Bee Continued

Here are some photos of the second bag!



Monday, February 15, 2010

Busy Bee

I've been working like crazy trying to get this project done for Wednesday. Its for my Advanced Fibre class and we have to make a production line of marketable objects. I've been making travel bags! I hand printed the lining and the postcard motif and sewed it all together with recycled leather. Here are some photos of the first bag.



Friday, February 5, 2010

Craft Field Trip

Good afternoon!
On Wednesday afternoon my Advanced Fibre Studies class went on a field trip and visited some shops and an artist's studio. The first shop we went to was Bookhou. Its run by husband and wife team John Booth and Arounna Khounnoraj. They collaborate and also create separate works which include furniture, home decor, children's clothing and accessories, etc. Their work is all handmade and absolutely gorgeous! It was really exciting to go to their store at 798 Dundas Street West because Arounna is an OCAD grad, was a teacher of mine in my first year and my friend Noelle Hamlyn worked with her.


The second store we went to was Made.
Made sells handmade Canadian designs and small production pieces by industrial designers, craftsmen, and architects. They sell a wide variety of furniture, lighting, ceramic, glass, textile, jewelry and home accessories.


After this our last stop was the screen printing studio of Yasmine Louis. Yasmine is also an OCAD grad and has been screen printing ever since she graduated (which is about 13 years!) She makes t-shirts and pillows with images of Toronto, Montreal and any other city she's visited, which is a lot because she loves to travel. Yasmine will be selling her shirts and pillows at the One Of A Kind craft show from March 31 - April 4th.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Poppytalk Handmade


I found this website, Poppytalk, in my many searchings on the interweb and everything on it is simply stunning! Lots of inspiration and lots of tugs on the purse strings!

akimbo


For anyone in the art and design world in Canada, akimbo is a great website for updates and information on the latest shows, calls for submission, and even job postings. You can subscribe and get these updates sent to your email so you can always be in the loop!

Friday, January 29, 2010

Knitting!

Last night I had my first of two nights in a knitting class! I'm taking this class at Passion Knit on Yonge with my best friend and our mother and a couple other ladies. We are knitting a Moebius which can be worn many different ways. It can be a scarf, a shrug, a cowl or a hood. I'm knitting it with this absolutely gorgeous deep purple merino/cashmere yarn. Its called "como" by Debbie Bliss.


We used a provisional cast on which is temporary. So that means that when I've finished knitting 38" in length we will take out the temporary cast on and join the ends together making the seam invisible. Pretty cool!
I'm using 15mm needles which are huge and look pretty silly, but the effect of the knit is really nice.


I'm going to be knitting during all me free time, which isn't much!

Thursday, January 28, 2010

The Purl Bee


I found this site a few months ago when I was searching for fabric. The Purl Bee is the online journal that goes along with purlsoho.com (a lovely website for yarns and fabrics). The images are stunning and give me so much inspiration!

Ah, my first Blog!

Hey guys, here I am, trying out this social media thing.
I'll be blogging about the life of an art and design student trying to make it through school with dreams of being successful. We'll see how that goes...