Raevenfea

Maker of various fabric things

This is a static export of a blog I put on ice many years ago, that still has personally relevant content. No promises can be made around linkrot, styles, or working functionality.

Posts tagged: Feminism

Process: Quilting the F-word

Posted in Quilting

  • Feminism
  • Machine quilting
  • Process
  • Q015CD
  • The F-word Quilt

I had a very hard time figuring out how to quilt my F-word quilt. The final quilt looks a lot like my original sketches, but I made and then scrapped many other plans in between. A persistent idea with the quilt was obfuscation—hiding or obscuring the fact that someone is a feminist, whether because they have their own hangups with the word or because they don’t want to deal with societal baggage of calling themselves a feminist.

“The F-word”, Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.
“The F-word”, Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.

In that vein, iterations of the quilt plan involved quilting in “feminist” in binary, riffing on the equal sign pieced section (there, yellow is 0, black is 1), but couldn’t work the quilting in a way that seemed right. I also liked the aesthetic and suggestive meaning of quilting “feminist” spelled out in braille, but struggled with feeling like that was cultural appropriation. Both methods would clearly spell out the word, yet be illegible to most viewers.

f-word-quilting-braile
“The F-word” (sketch), Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.

A later plan involved quilting in quotes and definitions. This involved a lot of font-based machine embroidery that was ultimately too technically intricate for my tastes. I was able to create embroidery fonts of text outlines using free software that came with my machine, but the font kerning was horrendous, so I would have had to lay out each individual letter on my machine. I also never fell in love with a layout.

f-word-quilting-quotes
“The F-word” (sketch), Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.

I liked the interplay between anti-feminist quotes from celebritized dogmatists and pro-feminist quotes from celebrities, and sometimes wish I’d been able to work it in.

“The feminist agenda is not about equal rights for women. It is about a socialist, anti-family political movement that encourages women to leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism, and become lesbians.”

Pat Robertson

“I don’t know why people are so reluctant to say they’re feminists. How could it be any more obvious that we still live in a patriarchal world when feminism is a bad word?”

Ellen Page

“The feminist movement is not about success for women. It is about treating women as victims and about telling women that you can’t succeed because society is unfair to you.”

Phyllis Schlafly

“People feel removed from sexism. ‘I’m not a sexist, but I’m not a feminist.’ They think there’s this fuzzy middle ground. There’s no fuzzy middle ground. You either believe that women are people or you don’t. It’s that simple.”

Joss Whedon

I scaled back, thinking perhaps I’d use just the definition of feminist and feminism, but it was still too technically finicky in a way that wasn’t speaking to me. Perhaps the story would be different if I had a $3k embroidery software suite.

fem·i·nism

The advocacy of women’s rights on the grounds of political, social, and economic equality to men.

fem·i·nist

A person who supports feminism.

f-word-quilting-1
“The F-word” (detail), Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.

In the end, I used machine embroidery to quilt the letters that are starred-out, and freehanded “F––t” in the partial equality sign in the top right. The remaining quilting is straight lines and single echoes of the pieced shapes, using a lack of quilting to outline a second equality motif for a bit of visual balance. A well-placed black-stitched toroid turns the ‘t’ in “Feminist” into the cross found on the astrological symbol for Venus, widely considered the “female” symbol.

f-word-quilting-2
“The F-word” (detail), Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.

Finally, a hand-quilted “Feminist” overlaps the machined “F––t”, bringing the word to the front of the quilt in a visible, rebellious way—no infanticide or witchcraft needed.

The end result is a quilt whose front is inspired by “Votes for Women” sashes for color, with a nod to technology in the binary piecing, and a visible representation of the censorship that is so rampant when one discusses equal rights for women. The back brings to mind my grandmothers’ decor (complete with my childhood baggage of anti-feminist sentiment), yet has the word feminist clearly displayed.

In case it’s not obvious, yes, quilters can be feminists too.

September 27th, 2015

The F-word

Posted in Quilting

  • Feminism
  • Finished projects
  • Q015CD
  • The F-word Quilt

I don’t give a fuck about using or hearing a bit of blue language. In fact, whether such words are truly profane, taboo, or vulgar could be an entirely different essay that I’m not nearly pious nor pedantic enough to write (there are far more interesting things to hold sacred). Four letter strings can often sum up sentiment in an unparalleled way.

But, forget about that one particular bad word for a moment. Keep the first letter, double the character count and you arrive at the dirtiest, crudest, most offensive word in modern English: feminist.

“The F-word”, Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.
“The F-word”, Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.

This quilt came about because I’m tired of reading essays where the author says they’re not a feminist because feminism is icky while laying out arguments for what they actually are that are all dictionary feminism. I’m sick of reading screeds vilifying straw-men feminists written by people whose sole goal is fear-mongering. I’m weary from the constant low-level of discrimination I experience as a woman working in tech, even as I know that I’m privileged by a shocking level of near-equality compared to many of my cohort. I am absolutely exhausted by the media and people in the legislature telling me what is best for my body, income, career, mind, personality, and beliefs because I am a member of the so-called weaker sex.

It’s a rant in quilt form.

“The F-word” (detail), Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.
“The F-word” (detail), Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.

The F word. F——t. F******t. F#$!~+st. Feminist.

“The F-word” (detail), Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.
“The F-word” (detail), Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.

Details

Front: Kona Cotton Honey, Kaffe Fassett Shot Cotton Butter, Andover Textured Solid Magnum

Batting: Warm & Natural Cotton

Backing: Heather Ross Briar Rose Cricket Clover Lilac/Gold, Kaffe Fasset Shot Cotton Quartz, Kona Elegance White

Binding: Kaffe Fasset Shot Cotton Quartz

Quilting: A mix of machine embroidery quilting and straight line quilting using Guttermann cotton thread, with a small bit of hand quilting using white 28wt Aurifil.

“The F-word” (detail), Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.
“The F-word” (detail), Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.

Look for a longer post on the quilting of this project later this week.

“The F-word” (back), Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.
“The F-word” (back), Rachael Arnold, September 2015, 57″x57″.

September 16th, 2015

 

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