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I think I have finished this cloth – deciding against background stitching as the figure is stitched directly into the cloth she may well disappear if I add more. The cloth is hanging at the foot of my bed and I have been looking at it and looking at it for days and days. A procrastinator at heart I have been trying to make up my mind whether, in fact, this is truly finished. I feel that if I keep fiddling and adding bits here and there I will lose the essence of what I have already. To make this into a truly completed work it has yet to have a backing attached and the edges bound, which I will also do by hand. I have not done so already because of my lack of a final final decision. Life may be a spiral, my mind certainly follows that route over and over
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I have added more stems and completed the stream at the base of the cloth – it is there that I am undecided about – should there be more?????

This would be it, in its raw state …. I am delighted to have managed to focus on this for the whole year …. already I have in mind where I am going next, creatively speaking.
Well, I really didn’t anticipate that this would take me a month to do but it has. However crow number two is now flying into the blue moon. I stitched the crow off-cloth thinking it would be easier and, whilst the actual stitching of the crow was more manageable, the attaching took so long I think working on-cloth in future is the way I shall go. All good learning!

slightly different view:

I think I have just about finished the pictorial aspects of this cloth, what remains to do are more stems and a lot more stitching/quilting of the cloth itself. I am hoping I make my self-imposed deadline of the end of the year – I do appear to be on course.
Once we have a dry and non-windy day I shall take a picture of the full cloth as it is now.
is worth ? Well in this case about two to three weeks work with life etc intervening of course.
I took the sketch from my book and printed it onto cotton, adhered this to the cloth and begun to fill in with stitching. For the next one, and I am more than sure there will be at least one other crow on this cloth, I shall work it off-cloth and then appliqué – it was very fiddly doing it the way I did as the stitching is so heavy and dense, think that’s why it has taken so long. This beautify measures 9″ from the tip of her tail feathers to the tip of her beak. Apologies again for the quality, or lack thereof, of the pics – have finally realised it is not the camera but the operator with the shakes that creates the blurs
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and finally, blowing in the wind:

She has arms, well to be precise, She has sleeves, but I am sure that within those sleeves there are arms, oh and perhaps much, much more – I am yet to find out.


I have included the next two pictures, because, although they are the same as the above two, the way the sun has fallen across them makes it look, to me anyway, as though there is steam bubbling from the cauldron – rather a nice touch by nature I felt


After finishing the initial part of the Wild Mother herself I felt a little stuck. Much thinking time – then plotting and planning on paper before any further commitment to cloth takes place:
First a sidetrack: playing with crow:
How to proceed:


I think I prefer the standing figure, though some adjustments to the ‘arms’ needs to take place, but this I can do when transferring the idea to the cloth before stitching. The cauldron I shall work separately and appliqué to the cloth.
Looking at this again now I think I want to explore her pose more fully – try different options – standing definitely – but arms may be extended……don’t know yet.
I let the cloth lead me and as I have said in my journal notes on the Page “Process” I could see a face in the centre of the cloth, so I went with it. I began to stitch the face of the Baba Yaga who is residing there.
“Process” charts the making of this cloth which will be the ground upon which the story will unfold from hereon in.

It was completed by 24th December 2008 and is hand-pieced and dyed and measures 50″ x 60″.


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