Sister Dream

By kkrullrobart

I firmly believe that sometimes it is better to be lucky than good. Call it the hand of fate, Lady Luck, the finger of God, or a slap from the Universe, but sometimes things just come together and become much greater than the sum of their parts. “Sister Dream”, another of my pieces from the Sisters in Stitches: Sibling Revelry show, is one of those pieces.

Sister Dream

This is the very first piece of hand felted wool that I ever made. It was a project that my sister started me on when I was visiting her while she was living in Anchorage AK in the fall of 2004. I had no clue what I was doing, and was not trying for a specific design when I was laying out the wool fibers; I was just laying out colors that I thought looked good together. After what seemed like years of scrubbing with the hot soapy water, when I layed it out flat to dry I was not very impressed with result. A couple of days later, after it had dried (need I mention that it is a very thick piece of felt…), I pinned it up on her design wall for one last look before packing everything to head back to Nebraska. There in the upper right corner, to my surprise, were four heads with white hair.  Thought that was rather interesting, but it was time to pack up so I didn’t do anything with it at that time. And of course when I got back to Nebraska I had a three week backlog of mail and gallery work to catch up on, so this piece went into the box with several other attempts at felt making.

Fast forward to the spring of 2007 when I was working to get things together for the September show opening. I pulled out the box of wool roving, and there on top was this piece. Thinking now in the theme of sisters, it all fell together for me: I have three sisters, it had a dream like quality to it – and Sister Dream was born. The moon was originally a yellow disc, but was needle-felted into a moon because that seemed more appropriate. The horse was also a “happy accident”; I was concentrating hard on the left side trying to find a way to balance out the sisters, and the maroon area looked an awful lot like a horse to me. So I needle-felted on a mane, added some lighter colors around the edges to give it definition, added dresses on the sisters, and it was complete.  Fate – kismet – luck – call it what you will, but it was definitely on my side that day in Alaska!

5 Responses to “Sister Dream”

  1. Julia Says:

    This is a great story, Karen! Love the piece for its dreamy quality, too…

  2. kkrullrobart Says:

    Thanks, Julia! Glad you stopped by.
    Karen

  3. Anna Says:

    Karen,
    this is a fabulous piece; i do like the imagery….the billowing hair, the horse. The piece involves luck, yes, but also talent…to see what is there and make it emerge.

  4. Con Daily Says:

    I love the story of this work. Isn’t it interesting, the meaningful images found in the texture and colors.

  5. kkrullrobart Says:

    Thanks, Anna and Con, for stopping by to check out my new blog. Appreciate your kind words about it, and hope you will check in often.
    Karen

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