Studios, Fall 2010
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Availability: Out of Stock
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Studios, Fall 2010 is 148 pages full of organization and storage inspiration with a special focus on the quilt artist's studio.
Enjoy the beautifully photographed and inspiring studios of 30 quilt and mixed-media artists including: Deidre Adams, Pamela Allen, Seth Apter, Julie Fei-Fan Balzer, Gene Black, Tristan Blakeman, Annie Cesarz, Dayna J. Collins, Judith Content, Nancy Eha, Kaffe Fassett, Mary Hettmansperger, Teresa Kogut
Renay Leone, Vita Marie Lovett, Michelle Daisley Moffitt, Wen Redmond, Leslie Rego, Wendy Richardson, Ethel Shulam, and Tracy Weinzapfel.
For more studio tour fun, you’ll love the spooky and sprightly studios of Halloween artists: Sheila Bentley, William Bezek, Lori Ann Corelis, Vergie Lightfoot, Dani Nelson, Johanna Parker, Ed Pribyl, Debra Schoch, and Scott Smith.
Special features:
- The care and keeping of vintage quilts and textiles.
- A sharp look at scissors and rotary cutters: history, innovative designs, and how to care for them.
- How to choose studio flooring and lighting.
- How to create tabletop storage with peg board.
- Plus new products, storage and organization tips, and much more.
Item #: SU1009 148 Pages
Once again, another great issue of "Studios" magazine! Not sure if I have voyeuristic tendencies, but I so enjoy looking into other creative people''s workrooms and studios. I''m not sure if it''s because I feel the distance between the continent and where I live. So, when I read about and see other crafters'' and artesans'' creative spaces, I somehow feel connected.
This issue features Kaffe Fasset''s beautiful and elegant home/studio. As stated, he may have plain white walls, but you hardly notice, because everything displayed throughout,that are stacked and draped are filled with brilliant colors. How can you not be inspired in such a place of creative grandeur.
But, as you continue through this issue, you''ll find creative spaces that are as tiny as 8'' by 3.5'', also just as inspiring to get your creative juices flowing, like Annie Cesarz. Then there''s Deidre Adams, art quilter and painter whose studio is 15'' by 15''. I think it''s amazing that as creatives, we can utilize every inch of space to store our fabrics, art supplies and still carve out a work area within.
If you''re thinking of claiming space as your studio, you must checkout this issue, get ideas from these creative and organized studios of other artists and crafters. You''ll also find helpful articles on floor selection in this issue, but there is always a section on organizing and storage tips. Come on, get your issue before the stores run out!
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