Several days ago I started a new project on my website and in my general classroom at Shining Needle Society: 2 new heart designs.
One of these new heart designs will have a twist: I will ask the people in my Shining Needle Society to help me design it.
Our first undertaking: I asked people to suggest themes for the new hearts. After a small bit of editing, the list is now 26 themes long and is posted on my website, www.GayAnnRogers.com, click on Stitch Gay Ann Stash. Now the people in my classroom are voting to narrow the list to 5 subjects.
So how is it going? I have 2 leaders who emerged quickly, but after yesterday's vote, 4 of the subjects are now nipping at the heels of the leaders. Today should be interesting.
Once I narrow the list, I will ask people to vote again and choose the topic of the heart I will design.
Then all along the way I will ask for advice. For example, I may do two drawings and let the group choose which one they like better. Then I will seek advice on choices of threads and stitches and we will see how it comes out.
I must admit, I look forward each day to seeing how the vote is going. Tomorrow I will know the answer.
So what is the purpose of all of this? Too many people think a design emerges complete and finished and ready to stitch. I am hoping people will see that the design process is the opposite: not just one single correct choice, then a bunch of wrong choices, but many choices of merit. Choices all along the way. The choices aren't over till one takes the final stitch.
If people begin to see this process perhaps they will bring some of the freedom of choice to their own needlework. I can always hope.
I hope this is an adventure in more than a bunch of stitches and threads on a fixed and static design.
Gay Ann
Thursday, March 04, 2010
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2 comments:
Yes and we never know, perhaps many stitchers will start designing their own designs at times :-)
My idea is baby steps, simply learning to personalize your needlepoint, whether it be a design of mine or somebody else's. Yes, follow the pattern, but savor a few little changes, be it a color or a stitch pattern, that you bring to you pieces.
That's what I am after.
Gay Ann
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