Hi everyone
I hope you all had a magical festive season and welcomed 2023 with peace and happiness. The start of a new year is always so full of possibility, with new opportunities and adventures ahead, but, it is also a time of reflection and looking back at memories past. The topic 'Shrines', naturally led me to thinking about how we remember those no longer with us, who won't join us on 2023's journey.
Pocket shrines have been used in many religions, over hundreds of years, as a way of keeping faith close during travels. Traditionally containing imagery of religious icons and prayers, they are extremely personal pieces and highly portable. The concept of something, or someone, leaving a mark also ties in nicely to the first theme of 2023 'Tracks'. Tracks leave a mark and this led me to thinking about the many ways marks may manifest. I started to consider the physical marks left behind by a person, through objects and possessions (e.g. jewellery, photos, clothes) and the emotional marks made in the memories of those they leave behind (e.g. characteristics, sayings, favourite pastimes and music).
It struck me that instead of using a pocket shrine as a religious object, one could also be made to celebrate the life of a loved one and so, I decided to create a deeply personal pocket shrine project, for my Mum, who I sadly lost in 2021. This would literally carry her with me into the new year, keeping her memory alive and make another kind of mark, one on the present from the past.
My finished pocket shrine is perfectly imperfect. It's a little treasure trove of Mum and provides a beautiful visual reminder of her. It celebrates who she was and offers a way for me to figuratively hold her close. And it got my new year off to a positive start, encouraging me to grow by developing new creative skills with embroidery, almost like Mum was giving me a little nudge.
I started out by deciding what objects and materials to use for my pocket shrine. I wanted to use fabric from Mum's old clothes as the main substrate and gathered some photos and jewellery that she was really fond of. In her final years she had dementia and she kept a small jewellery box of treasures close at hand which offered comfort and reassurance in her times of confusion. These were the perfect choice for inclusion in my pocket shrine.
I wanted to keep the project within my pretty floral style. My love of flowers comes directly from Mum and she nurtured my creativity from a really young age, so the combination of the two was always a very natural direction to take my creative practice in. I selected two PaperArtsy A5 stamp sets by JOFY (
JOFY102 and
JOFY103) and decided to use the simple outlines as a template to create some floral embroidery as a focal point on the finished piece.
Finally I decided to construct a tri-fold shrine case from fabric using a rectangular template which would be easy to put together with my limited sewing experience. My plan was to decorate the outside using the JOFY florals before placing Mum's jewellery and photo's on the inside.
I selected one of Mum's denim skirts (some of her favourite items in her wardrobe) to use for the fabric in the project. I marked out a rectangular piece of fabric (15 x5.5 inches) and split it into three sections (5x5.5 inches) before cutting it out.
Next I ironed in a folding line for each section to help me place the images on the top side. I then repeated these steps with a second piece of fabric (natural cotton) which I could use as a lining on the inside of the project.
I then selected some of the stamps and stamped out the images on the top of the denim using StazOn (Cloudy Sky) as I needed the outlines to be clearly visible but not too dark, just in case my embroidery revealed some of the outline. Remember that the finished panels will be folded, so the direction of your stamping needs to change according to each panel so that stamps are all the right way round once finished.
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