Indigo Farming and Dying at rickettsindigo

Hi, I am getting ready for our first show of the year, the Creative Stitches and Crafting Alive show in Victoria BC.  Possibly I already told you that.

The again, maybe not, I’ve been so busy scrambling to get patterns published, new samples made, and meters and meters and meters of cotton and linen/cotton fabric cut and folded.  Who knew that would take so long?

So…I’m just going to send you somewhere else for your sashiko/indigo fix this week (-:  Once again, you can see how indigo and sashiko are so linked in my mind that I think of one as the extension of the other.

The process and textiles on this site make me feel like crying they are so beautiful.  I want to quit everything I am doing and do this too.

http://rickettsindigo.com/indigo/Farming/IndigoFarming.html

 

Talk to you soon,

Susan

Why Sashiko Designs Don’t Bore Your Brain

You have noticed, possibly, that I called my Sashiko History pages “History and Probability”.  This is because I am not persuaded that we get the stories and explanations for the past accurate.

That being established, here is something I wondered about and am drawing my own conclusion.

Why don’t we get tired of the traditional sashiko designs?   What makes them still ‘work’ for us even after looking at them for several years, as I have been doing?

They are, after all, pretty simple looking geometric designs.

Here is why I think our brains remain pleased and interested.  I took the following passage from a book called Fractals, The Patterns of Chaos, Discovering a New Aesthetic of Art, Science and Nature by John Briggs.  He writes:

“To make great artworks, artists must find ….just the right balance of harmony and dissonance to create tension and the illuminating ambiguities that can flow from it.  That proper balance is the one that catches the brain’s processing by surprise and subverts habituation.  It’s the balance that forces our brain to experience the words or forms or melodies as if for the first time, every time, no matter how many times we have encountered them before.”

What holds our interest in the traditional sashiko designs is the perfect balance between the strong geometric design, and the “wait, what’s this?” surprise of discovering that the design might not be the design, and yet still being sure it is.   In other words, when we look at sashiko stitching we see a repetitive pattern and our brain enjoys that, but it doesn’t become habituated to the pattern (bored) because it is repeatedly engaged and stimulated by having something to figure out and finish.

Some sashiko designs are more strongly appealing that others, and this, I think, is created by the effect of the extra stimulation of the brain in figuring out which design to see.   For example, in the design below, you may see the flowers, or you may see linked circles, or your brain may focus on the long oval lines.sashiko runner circles or flowers?In the Sayagata design below the brain switches back and forth, trying to decide whether the key fret goes to the left or the right.  This would be tiring if the overall design were not so strong, but the definite white lines on the dark blue background assert a strong enough pattern that the brain is intrigued by the option of left or right.

One more example.  This design is a particularly complex one for all it’s apparent simplicity.  I see hexagons, wreath like circles and triangles, and all of them please me enough that I want to see them, so my brain is kept entertained and interested moving from one to another.  Once stitched, the strong fractured, white lines on a dark blue background will add another layer of interest, in the brains need to connect the stitches into lines.

The technique for making  sashiko stitches creates a balanced broken line: long stitch, short space, long stitch, short space.  If you want to see how this also keeps the brain pleased and interested, try stitching some even stitches and spaces, some irregular stitches and spaces, and some good sashiko stitches where the stitches are 2/3 the length of the spaces between them.  You will see that your brain finds the even stitching less engaging, and the irregular stitching intriguing only for a short time.  The 2/3 , 1/3 patterning of the sashiko stitch lets the brain easily see and enjoy the design, but leaves it something to do to keep it engaged (it ‘fills’ in or ‘finishes’ the design)

There is one more element that lends to the enduring quality of sashiko design, or put the another way, that gives the brain enough to do while looking at the sashiko that it stays engaged and interested.  It is the relationship between the stitching and the background.  In some designs this may be one of the strongest dynamics of the design.  Take the Diamond Waves design for example. Are the waves the white lines or the blue spaces between them? It doesn’t matter, but the design is more interesting because of the choice.

Talk to you again soon,

Susan

  • Susan Fletcher,
  • February 2012

My Sashiko Stitched Stash

my stack of sashiko stitching

And there is more.

The thing is, once I started sashiko stitching I couldn’t stop.  I keep some in my purse in a baggy with a needle and thread, and nail clippers instead of scissors, since all there is to cut is the thread.  I keep some thrown in a messy heap on the back of my couch where I sit to watch TV at the end of the day.   I have always hated to not have something for my hands to do, and sashiko is so easy and peaceful that I’ve become addicted to stitching it.

I love the low tech, no equipment, nature of sashiko. I love the way it can be utilitarian or a work of art.  I love the way it keeps me calm in the ferry line up (-:  It’s a ferry trip from where I live to, well, anywhere, so the ferry terminal line up is just how it is.  Sometime I’ll post a picture of where I live and show you why its worth it, but I digress.

What to do with it all now?

sashiko stitched bearSome of the pieces were experiments.  The bear didn’t really work, tho it looked like he was going to along the way. Finished he makes you cross eyed and dizzy!

sashiko stitched teddy bear piecesI was and am still, interested in using sashiko to stitch images.  This drawing worked quite well, I think.

sashiko stitched image, tree in potBut I once stitched a  flying crane in white sewing thread – I’ll go take a picture, you can see what you think….

Here it is:

sashiko stitched craneBut the majority of my stash are traditional designs stitched on dark blue fabric with white thread

pieced sashiko scrapsI thought I’d try cutting some up and piecing it.  You know you have a lot of stitching on your hands when you are willing to go that far!

I think this might work tho, if it were bed size and quilted.  The amount of the repeats would probably give it an over all cohesiveness, and the quilting would soften the cut effect.   Or it might be like the bear and make your eyes swim! (-:

Maybe I’ll find out, or maybe I’ll think of some other way to use these pieces!

Happy Stitching,

Susan