Euonymus Alatus 8.0
This piece is a part of a mini series within the Plastic Nature series. This started as an experiment of how many different ways I could use very different plastics in the same image.
I had so much fun that I started using it as a sample every time I taught a Plastic Nature workshop, just so that I could keep creating this image in the wackiest print and color combinations.
Recently I decided to finish all the samples, and had way too much fun figuring out how to stitch each one differently by hand and by machine.
Too bad Euonymus Alatus aka Burning Bush is considered a noxious weed that is not native to the US. I won’t be planting any, but I can revel in its color scheme, especially made from that other noxious weed, single-use plastic.
This artwork measures 5”x7” and is stitched onto a stretched canvas which is wired for hanging. Of course you can also pop it into a frame, I would suggest a shadow box frame so that you can see the edges.
This piece is a part of a mini series within the Plastic Nature series. This started as an experiment of how many different ways I could use very different plastics in the same image.
I had so much fun that I started using it as a sample every time I taught a Plastic Nature workshop, just so that I could keep creating this image in the wackiest print and color combinations.
Recently I decided to finish all the samples, and had way too much fun figuring out how to stitch each one differently by hand and by machine.
Too bad Euonymus Alatus aka Burning Bush is considered a noxious weed that is not native to the US. I won’t be planting any, but I can revel in its color scheme, especially made from that other noxious weed, single-use plastic.
This artwork measures 5”x7” and is stitched onto a stretched canvas which is wired for hanging. Of course you can also pop it into a frame, I would suggest a shadow box frame so that you can see the edges.
This piece is a part of a mini series within the Plastic Nature series. This started as an experiment of how many different ways I could use very different plastics in the same image.
I had so much fun that I started using it as a sample every time I taught a Plastic Nature workshop, just so that I could keep creating this image in the wackiest print and color combinations.
Recently I decided to finish all the samples, and had way too much fun figuring out how to stitch each one differently by hand and by machine.
Too bad Euonymus Alatus aka Burning Bush is considered a noxious weed that is not native to the US. I won’t be planting any, but I can revel in its color scheme, especially made from that other noxious weed, single-use plastic.
This artwork measures 5”x7” and is stitched onto a stretched canvas which is wired for hanging. Of course you can also pop it into a frame, I would suggest a shadow box frame so that you can see the edges.