Fiber art: A new alternative to paint?

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The discussion centers around a human interest story that explores a unique approach to fiber art, likened to an extreme form of quilting. Participants note that while the techniques may not be entirely new, the marketing strategy employed by the artists, who are sisters, could enhance the collectibility of their work. The conversation highlights the evolution of quilting into a recognized art form over the past 30 years, with a significant movement focusing on quilts as artistic pieces rather than functional items. The integration of embroidery into quilting, particularly since the rise of the Crazy Quilt in the 1880s, is acknowledged as a historical influence on contemporary quilt artists. Overall, the thread emphasizes the intricate and abstract nature of modern quilting, showcasing its mathematical precision and artistic potential.
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This human interest story caught my attention. Could this be a new art form?

http://www.lubbesmeyerstudio.com/_media/popups_and_thumbnails/l_poppies.jpg

http://www.lubbesmeyerstudio.com/
 
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That's COOL!
 
Neat! At first I thought it was just quilting, but then as I read, I realized they do it a bit differently than quilting is done.
 
Sort of like extreme quilting? :biggrin:
 
not for my home... not especially new idea... but being sisters and using this style of marketing may make this collectible ... but i don't buy things for this reason... so I'm still not interested.
 
Things that fall under the heading of Fiber Art have been around since man discovered the use of fibrous things.

Fiberarts Magazine
Address:http://www.fiberartsmagazine.com/

What these two women are doing may or may not be a specific technique unique to them, I can't really tell. You do find similar things on the extreme edges of quilting, where people are exploring it as an art form to be hung on the wall, rather than as working bedcovers.

What people are doing with quilts has become really spectacular over he past 30 years or so, and there is a very strong "quilts as art" movement that has produced some stuff I find mind-bogglingly elaborate and super-rich for being quilts.

Embroidery entered quilting in the 1880's, I believe, with the sudden popularity of the Crazy Quilt, whose irregular shaped patches are always bordered with elaborate embroidery stitches. Alot of quilt artists take the use of embroidery thread from that tradition, and go wild with it.
 
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Beautiful works here...I am an avid quilter myself, and it is a very "mathematical" art because of the symmetry of the pieces. But this takes art would see so abstract yet exact to have to create these.
 

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