Archive for the ‘Fiber Arts’ Category

We Welcome Three New Teachers in 2012

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

  Betty Glynn Carlson has been a weaver since 1972, but when she discovered Navajo weaving she felt a special kinship with this simple way to weave that invites stillness and reflection.  When she lived in Madison, WI, Betty studied with Fran Potter for several years and like Fran, sought out Navajo weavers from the Navajo Nation to continue to study the cultural context of their weaving.  Betty regularly teaches Navajo Rug Weaving at the Weavers Guild of Minnesota and we are happy to include her class in Navajo Rug Weaving at Sievers in 2012.

  Mary Fons grew up around Sievers and has many heart and family connections to Washington Island.  She co-hosts PBS’s nationally aired Love of Quilting program with her Mom, Marianne, giving a voice to “junior varsity” quilters everywhere and is creator, co-producer and host of Quilty, an online show for rookie quilters.  (Visit www.heyquilty.com to learn more.)  Mary is also Creative Director of Quilty magazine, set to launch in May of 2012.  Last summer she rented space in the barn studio with her Mom and Ellen Graf, while working on this quilt:

Mary will be the first “second generation” Sievers instructor to offer a class at Sievers and we’re excited to have her teach Beginning Quilter “Boot Camp” this summer.

  Robyn Spady is a fiber artist and master weaver who has been weaving for many years.  In 2004 she completed the Handweavers Guild of America Certificate of Excellence.  She teaches throughout the United States and Canada and has authored many articles and publications.  (Visit Robyn online at www.spadystudios.com.)  Robyn has been recommended to us by many teachers and students and Carolyn was able to meet and speak with her at the Midwest Weavers Conference in Houghton/Hancock, MI last June.  We are eager to welcome Robyn to Sievers where she will teach a weeklong class on Exploring Weave Structures with a Single Warp.

Our Sievers Instructors: Some Retiring, Some Returning, Some New

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

In 2012, two of our instructors are retiring from teaching at Sievers, Jeanne Pfister and Natalie Sewell.  We will see a number of instructors return after a year or more ”on sabbatical” joining those who taught here last year, and we will welcome three new instructors.

Jeanne Pfister first came to Sievers as a student in 2002 for a quilting class with Ann Fahl, but had been quilting for over 30 years, beginning with traditional quilts and designs and gradually moving toward art quilts. Many of her quilts have been seen and received awards at national quilt shows.  She uses a variety of techniques to express her thoughts in fabric, often embellishing her quilts with decorative machine quilting, stitching and beads.

  

Starting in 2007,  Jeanne offered eight classes here, one with her good friend Ellen Graf.  Jeanne is pictured below with a student in her Machine Quilting class.

 

  Jeanne had donated this wall quilt to Sievers to be used to raise funds for the Sievers Scholarship Fund, which many of you saw or heard about during our class introductions last summer. A total of $500.00 was given to the Scholarship Fund, thanks to Jeanne and to all who contributed.

 

Natalie Sewell initially studied traditional quiltmaking techniques before developing her landscape style, which reflects her love of trees, flowers and humble nature scenes.  Leaves, foliage and flowers are ”cut-outs”, machine appliquéd onto a background fabric with fabric paints, oil pastels, etc., applied before, during and after to enhance the colors and add detail and dimension.  Then, each piece is machine quilted “within an inch of its life”, using free motion stitching.  Many of Natalie’s quilts have won awards in national quilt competitions.   She co-authored three books with her friend Nancy Zieman, Landscape Quilts, Landscape Quilts for Kids and The Art of Landscape Quilting (the cover of which is a quilt made from a photo taken at People’s Park here on Washington Island).

 

Natalie began teaching at Sievers in 2003 and offered eight classes in Landscape Quilting.

  

Natalie (front and center) with one of her Landscape Quilt classes.

Natalie graciously donated this landscape quilt to the Sievers Permanent Collection which now hangs in the Sophie Studio:

Thanks to Jeanne and Natalie for sharing their love of quilting and so much more with many students in their time here at Sievers!

We have a number of instructors returning to teach classes in 2012 after one, two or even eleven years “on sabbatical”.  We welcome back Mary Curran, Marianne Fons, Barbara Heike, Mary Hettmansperger, Flo Hoppe, Anita Luvera Mayer, Stephanie Robertson and Heather Winslow.

New teachers at Sievers in 2012 include Betty Glynn Carlson (Navajo Rug Weaving), Mary Fons (Beginning Quilting) and Robyn Spady (Weaving).  Look for more about our new teachers in a future post!

 

 

 

 

Wind and Waves

Wednesday, December 28th, 2011

With just a dusting of snow on the eve of Christmas,

only the wind and waves yesterday help us remember that we really are in the season of winter.  (It will certainly make for an easier Polar Bear Plunge at Schoolhouse Beach on January 1st.  Lucky folks!)  Strong Northwest winds swirled the seagulls in Jackson Harbor,

pounded the shore of Washington Harbor,

and polished more stones at Schoolhouse Beach.

 

Looking for Winter and Finding it at Little Lake

Wednesday, December 21st, 2011

Although today is the first day of winter on the calendar, there’s little evidence of it here (and perhaps where you are, too).  A hunch on where some evidence of the new season could be found proved itself at Little Lake, where a glassy sheet of ice covers the expanse of the Island’s only lake.

Little Lake is spring fed and covers about 640 acres.  It is an area rich in history, back to the time of the Pottawatomie.  Recently, the Door County Land Trust added an additional piece of property to its Little Lake Nature Preserve.  This is taken from their website:

Recent Purchase Completes Land Protection Work at Washington Island’s Little
Lake

May 2010- The Door
County Land Trust
announces the purchase of property on Little Lake, located
on the far northwest side of Washington Island. This 1.38-acre parcel adds 200
additional feet of protected shoreline to the Door County Land Trust’s Little
Lake Nature Preserve. This purchase is significant in that it completes the Land
Trust’s immediate land protection goals for the Little Lake area. With the
recent purchase, the Land Trust has protected a total of 33 acres and 5,546 feet
of shoreline at the Little Lake Nature Preserve.

Karen Yancey, chair of the Door County Land Trust’s Washington
Island Committee, explains, “This is very exciting news. Little Lake is the
island’s only inland lake and it is a favorite spot not only for islanders and
visitors, but also for wildlife. This is truly one of the island’s magical
places. I feel good knowing that my children will be able to bring their
children here someday and find the same serene place.”
Little Lake is fed by
groundwater springs and surface run-off water and has a maximum depth of 5.5 – 7
feet. The present lake level is three feet above that of Lake Michigan. It
supports a productive population of perch, rock and smallmouth bass and is part
of a wetland complex that hosts a variety of rare boreal-rich plants such as the
northern bog sedge, showy-lady’s slipper orchid, lesser fringed gentian, and
dwarf lake iris. It also hosts old growth white cedars and stands of hemlock and
provides critical habitat for a large number of migrating and nesting birds
including bald eagles, white pelicans, osprey and great blue and black-crowned
night herons. Its location provides an ideal resting point in the annual avian
migratory trip to Canada from points south.

Terrie Cooper, Land Program Director for the Door County Land
Trust, explains, “Few places in Door County can outshine Little Lake for its
scenic beauty, ecological importance, and cultural and historical significance.
By preserving the land surrounding the lake, the Door County Land Trust hopes to
protect the health of the Little Lake ecosystem far into the future. We are
thankful for the help we’ve received from willing landowners and from granting
agencies such as the Knowles-Nelson Stewardship Fund, the Natural Resource
Damage Assessment Fund and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife’s Coastal Wetlands Grant
program. Critical support also came from private individuals who support our
work and have made private donations.”

The Door County Land Trust is a local, non-profit organization
supported by over 2,000 contributing members. Its mission is to preserve,
maintain and enhance lands that contribute significantly to the scenic beauty,
open space and ecological integrity of Door County. Since its inception in 1986,
the Land Trust has protected over 5,200 acres throughout Door County and over
700 acres on Washington and Detroit Islands. Many of the lands owned by the Door
County Land Trust are open to the public for hiking, hunting, birding, skiing
and other low-impact recreational and educational activities.

Wind and Water

Although the Door County Land Trust’s work at Little Lake began
less than a decade ago, Mother Nature’s story goes back much further. The
formation of Little Lake began five to eight thousand years ago with the
collision of wind and water. These forces eroded portions of the massive 200-ft
vertical limestone bluff now known as Boyers Bluff causing it to shed small
pieces of itself into the turbulent waters of Lake Nippising below. The waves of
Lake Nippising, now known as Lake Michigan, tumbled the rocks until they became
smooth, baseball-sized cobblestones. Eventually, these cobblestones were pushed
southward, closing off the opening to a small bay and creating what we now call
Little Lake.

When H.R. Holand wrote his history of Door County, “Old Peninsula
Days,” he recognized the unique character and beauty of Little Lake. “The little
bay became a little lake, and the stormwrought belt of beach stones that closed
it in became a dense belt of woodland. Now the little lake lies peacefully
embosomed by steep hills…Among all the scenic delights of Door County this
little lake is well toward the top.”

Native Americans and a Famous Economist

In addition to its ecological import, the Little Lake area has
significant historical value as well. It was once home to a large village of
Woodland era Native Americans and hosts a Native American burial ground. It was
also the site of early French missionary efforts. The Jens Jacobsen Museum on
the southwest end of Little Lake showcases a large collection of artifacts found
in the area dating back some 3000 years. An Archeological Preservation Covenant
with the Wisconsin State Historical Society protects the integrity of the
village site.

More recent events add another layer of cultural significance to
Little Lake. In 1915, Thorstein Bunde Veblen (1857-1929), one of American’s most
famous economists and social theorists, purchased the property just acquired by
the Land Trust. Veblen is perhaps best known for his treatise, “The Theory of
the Leisure Class,” and for coining the phrase “conspicuous consumption.”
According to “Washington Island’s Thorstein Veblen,” written by Islander Esther
Gunnerson, Veblen first visited Washington Island in the early 1900s to learn
and speak the Icelandic language with its inhabitants. He soon fell in love with
its quiet beauty and purchased the Little Lake property for $300 in 1915 for use
as a summer retreat. Older residents of the Little Lake area recall Veblen
rowing across Little Lake with his stepdaughters each morning in a homemade
skiff to purchase milk and butter from a nearby Icelandic farm. Veblen’s
step-daughters inherited the Little Lake property upon Veblen’s death and
eventually sold it in 1943. A study cabin built by Veblen was recently moved
from its original site on the west side of Little Lake to the grounds of the
Jens Jensen Museum by the Washington Island Heritage Conservancy. Renovation
efforts are underway.

 

No Snow, Just Ice

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

The Island hasn’t had a snowfall yet but some ice is already forming in the harbors.  (With rain in the forecast, we’ll see if the ice stays.) For the past two years, we’ve had 12″+ snowfalls by this date, so it looks like walking in the woods to find a Christmas tree will be a little easier this year!