Since January, I have been slowly working my way through a series of crazy quilt journaling blocks as part of the Crazy Quilt Journal Project.
From the beginning, I had wanted the series to be about Reflections. Knowing that my subject matter for each individual block was likely to vary widely, I made the decision to use mirrors and reflective materials in each block as a unifying element.
I set about gathering mirrors and mirror components that I might be able to use in my blocks...
In
January Reflections, I used lots of silver and mirrored components including the mirror in the hole of the trunk of the tree...
And in my current shelling piece, the shell below is actually a vintage mirrored cabochon...
I have been enjoying adding these reflective elements and intended to frame the pieces with mirrors much in the same way as my
Breakfast at Tiffany's piece.
Imagine my surprise on Sunday, when I saw
this article in the Wall Street Journal:
And once again I was amazed that I could be working with mirrors at the same time that the fashion, home decor, and art/design worlds are simultaneously using the element as well.
Let's just face it. Nothing is new.
Mirrors are popping up everywhere from mirrored purses,
mirror-heeled shoes, mirror furniture, and mirrored clothing.
This dress is from the Fall 2012 RTW collection by Thom Browne...
As if all that isn't enough, the movie about Snow White starring Julia Roberts titled
Mirror, Mirror was also released this year. Go figure.
But it happens all the time, doesn't it? The simultaneous generation of ideas...
I remember when Jim and I gave Jack his name. We were certain that we were giving him a name that hadn't been popular since parents named their children for President Jack Kennedy. It had been at least 30 years since the name was really popular...or so we thought.
When Jack hit first grade, there were 7(!) Jacks in his first-grade class...evidently, everyone else had the same idea.
This phenomenon has been studied and written about fairly extensively regarding scientific discoveries, with hundreds and hundreds of inventions throughout history being discovered at approximately the same time by very different inventors in different parts of the world.
It's referred to as the
phenomenon of simultaneous discovery and it turns out that it's fairly common. I found this great article by Malcolm Gladwell in
The New Yorker Magazine titled "In the Air"; which proposes that perhaps scientific discoveries are inevitable...that inventions are not necessarily the result of a single, solitary genius but, in fact, that they are in the air, products of an intellectual climate at a particular time and place. Calculus, the telephone, evolution, decimal fractions and oxygen were all discoveries that had multiple discoverers, having their Eureka! moments at roughly the same period in time.
So here I am working away in Baltimore, MD, using mirrors just like everybody else.
In needlework, mirror or shisha embroidery originated in India in the 17th century and its use spread through most of South Asia, including Iran, Afghanistan, India, China, Pakistan, and Indonesia.
There are lots of online video tutorials on different methods of attaching mirrors to fabric that can be yours for the searching so I won't repeat them here.
I will, however, point you to the work being sold in the
Dinesh kumar Rathi Etsy shop, where vintage Banjari textiles are being honored and re-purposed into wonderful pieces of textile art.
It's Monday and we just returned from a long weekend away so I'm back to crabbing...
See you next time!