DeborahTirico.com
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DeborahTirico.com
Profile Designers Across America Deborah Tirico by Cheryl Sharp Deborah Tirico Technology changes our lives. Sometimes we benefit, but often we are forced to adjust and find other ways of doing what we enjoyed. In 1990, Deborah Tirico, a graphic designer and business owner, realized that the graphic art she had always enjoyed creating by hand must instead be worked using computer software if her business was to survive. While she didn’t relish the change, she moved forward, learning to use the new technology. However, Tirico found that she missed doing creative work with her hands. Three years later, she found a way to satisfy that need when she and her mother enrolled in an evening quilting class at the local high school. They learned to make a nine-patch block and a log cabin quilt and how to strip piece. She said, “My life changed forever with that one class! The precision, color, and design work used in quilting was just the artistic handwork I longed for.” She had found a new creative outlet for handwork she had utilized in her professional life. Tirico continued to learn quilting techniques and developed a special interest in Baltimore album quilts, a form of intricate appliqué that was worked primarily in Maryland between 1840 and 1860. Baltimore album quilts have experienced a revival for more than thirty years, fueled in large part by Elly Sienkiewicz. Tirico took classes in embroidery, piecework, and hand and machine quilting for seven years at the prestigious Elly Sienkiewicz Academy (TESSA) in Williamsburg, Virginia. In 2013, the final year Sienkiewicz held TESSA, Tirico was invited to be Artist in Residence. Tirico began working appliqué in wool felt after being introduced to the technique at an EGA seminar. In 2004, she began teaching the techniques she had developed. Within two years, she began to sell a series of her designs in felted wool appliqué with embroidery embellishments. Celtic Charm by Deborah Tirico Photography in this article by Dan Katz and Frank Luca Tirico Harvest Penny Rug by Deborah Tirico 4 September 2014 Needle Arts_Sept2014.indd 4 Needle Arts 7/28/14 3:55 PM Tirico specializes in articulating a sculptural dimensional look in felted wool appliqué. She developed a process of layering and stuffing appliqué pieces and attaching them to a base fabric with a needle-slanting technique. Unlike the popular primitive felted wool embroidery, Tirico’s designs feature matching and overdyed wool threads and embroidery embellishments which enhance and define her subjects. Tirico explained the difference between felted wool and different types of felt. Felted wool is actually woven wool yardage with a weft and a warp. It is felted by shrinking it in hot water then drying it in high heat, which causes it to constrict and become dense. “This fabric is easy to needle because the holes between the warp and weft remain,” Tirico commented. Wool felt, on the other hand, is made from wool roving which is pressed into sheets using hot water and heat, causing it to become dense. “The result is more difficult to needle since there are no holes to begin with,” Tirico said. “Some wool felt is actually a blend of 70% wool and 30% polyester, and it behaves well in a variety of applications because it doesn’t fray. Craft felt is made from 100% synthetic materials (some from recycled plastic bottles), giving it a much different hand and structure.” Tirico uses felted wool for all of her ground fabrics and the majority of her appliqué fabrics. She felts all of her ground fabrics, starting with white, off white, and black wool. “My artistic husband dyes and overdyes some colors that I am unable to locate from other manufacturers,” Tirico added. Each project starts with a sketch which is then scanned into her computer. She uses Adobe Illustrator to make refinements. She prints several reduced copies of the design and then colors them in a variety of color schemes, using Prismacolor pencils that perfectly match some of her felted wools. She places the various colored versions of the design side by side to decide which one she prefers. Tirico traces the full-sized design on acetate sheets with a thin Sharpie marker to make an appliqué placement guide. She cuts the appliqués and bastes each piece in place using the acetate pattern to make sure her www.egausa.org Needle Arts_Sept2014.indd 5 Nutcracker by Deborah Tirico Jacobean Impression by Deborah Tirico September 2014 5 7/28/14 3:55 PM Profile Designers Across America Detail of Heastsease by Deborah Tirico Heastsease by Deborah Tirico Detail of Heastsease by Deborah Tirico 6 September 2014 Needle Arts_Sept2014.indd 6 placement is true to the design. She said, “After each appliqué is stitched in place, I am anxious to remove my basting and admire it. This is the point where my husband will say, ‘It doesn’t take much to please you.’ And I admit, it does not. For me, admiring the success of each small accomplishment is the ultimate pleasure in creation.” For the past two years, Tirico has studied textiles she has selected from the online resources of The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Its collection includes rugs, tapestries, quilts, coverlets, lace, and many forms of embroidery. On a typical study visit, Tirico drives into New York for a 2:00 p.m. appointment at the Antonio Ratti Textile Center on 5th Avenue, where the textile collection is housed. After checking her purse and coat in a locker, washing her hands, and signing a release form, she accompanies her guide into the research lab where the textiles she has requested are displayed on large tables in the center of the room. “I am able to walk around the large pieces and can climb a ladder to gain a bird’s-eye view which is valuable for studying large works,” she said. “I use a magnifying glass to view fine details. I measure each piece that interests me and various areas to get a size ratio for my photographs. I have been studying quilts and coverlets thus far, but I plan to expand my studies to tapestries and samplers in the coming year.” As a benefit in turn, Tirico shares with The Met what she has learned from studying the pieces. Needle Arts 7/28/14 3:55 PM Tirico observed, “When I study a particular piece, I become as interested in the maker as I am in the textile, and this sends me on another journey of investigation.” One of these pieces is the unfinished Tulip Panel by Candace Wheeler (1827–1923), needle artist, designer, and entrepreneur who endeavored to change the role of women in America. Wheeler taught women how to appliqué and create designs that would be commercially viable, offering them an opportunity for economic independence. Tirico remarked, “Peering at the panel through a magnifying glass, I felt almost as if I knew her and her focus on perfection in stitching, and I identified with her. When I discovered that she was an entrepreneur and had founded a school of needlework for women, I was both impressed and enamored.” Tirico also admired Wheeler’s workmanship. She said, “I was particularly impressed with Wheeler’s pulled couching technique, which created a scalloped edge around the tulip petals.” However, Tirico decided to Swirling Tulips by Deborah Tirico interpret the design using her own techniques. Tirico took a section of the panel and gave it a dimensional felted wool design, couching metallic braid and using crewel wool. Swirling Tulips is the result. Tirico is working on her second interpretation of a historic work. She is adapting a block from a Baltimore album quilt in the collection of America Hurrah Archives. The quilt is attributed to Mary Heidentoder Simon and was made circa 1850 for Eleanor Gorsuch, whose family owned much of what became Baltimore. Tirico focused on an openwork basket filled with flowers, and translated it into a penny rug worked in wool appliqué. Sometimes, Tirico feels that she and Simon have led parallel lives. She is confident that she will continue to be influenced by Simon’s work. Detail of flower from Swirling Tulips by Deborah Tirico Detail of flower from Swirling Tulips by Deborah Tirico www.egausa.org Needle Arts_Sept2014.indd 7 September 2014 7 7/28/14 3:55 PM Profile Designers Across America Detail of Huo Long by Deborah Tirico Huo Long by Deborah Tirico She related, “As a history buff I am drawn to the creative efforts of those that have gone before us. Early in the seventeenth century inventive homemakers reused the wool from worn clothing by felting it and creating penny rugs. At the time, a penny was a rather large coin and they used it as a template for small circles that would be sewn together into rugs.” Depending on the maker, these rugs were used to either decorate tables, beds, and mantles or for more utilitarian functions in a mud room where boots were cleaned or in front of a fireplace to protect the “good carpet” from flying embers. The pennies were stitched together using the blanket stitch which Tirico still uses today on all her designs. Since her college years in San Francisco, Tirico has been fascinated with Chinese graphic design. Dragons are present in Chinese décor, especially in restaurants and stores in Chinatown. “I had always wanted to design a dragon,” Tirico said, “and in 2012 I began to spend time surfing dragon images online. My friends always send me a Chinese New Year’s card, and it so happened that 2012 was the Year of the Dragon! The day that card arrived, it dawned on me that it would be interesting to have on my circular kitchen table a penny rug with a dragon image to celebrate Chinese New Year rather than the customary valentine hearts.” After finding a lot of reference material, she sketched the dragon, scanned it into the computer, and began illustrating it. She used the Chinese celebratory colors red and gold and added a bright green to bring the dragon to life. She used net stitch to illustrate the dragon scales. “In keeping with the Chinese New Year theme, I named him Huo Long which means ‘fire dragon’ in Chinese,” she said. Tirico adds more detail and unusual materials to her designs in wool. She said, “When I was working on Huo Long, I found that the smoke in the design would not work if I used wool fabric. It overwhelmed the piece and took away from the central figure, the dragon. While searching for a solution and going through the bolts at JoAnn Fabrics, I decided to use tulle as a solution to something that would create a transparent, smoky look. I think it’s all in the final artistic look and feel.” Detail of net stitch on dragon leg, Huo Long by Deborah Tirico 8 September 2014 Needle Arts_Sept2014.indd 8 Needle Arts 7/28/14 3:55 PM Development of Sincerely, Mary Simon Tirico uses acetate from a local fabric retailer to create a placement guide for the shapes. She provides students with full-sized patterns to trace their guides. To create the basket, Tirico used strips of red wool cut on the bias, which makes them easy to curve. The basket is thoroughly basted prior to stitching the remaining appliqués. The appliqués begin to show dimension as a result of needle-slanting techniques. This illuminated letter was embroidered first, then cut to size and appliquéd to the gold ground. The whole was cut again before being placed into the center of the book and appliquéd. Sincerely, Mary Simon in progress www.egausa.org Needle Arts_Sept2014.indd 9 September 2014 9 7/28/14 3:55 PM Profile Designers Across America Detail of Lady Bird’s Legacy by Deborah Tirico Lady Bird’s Legacy by Deborah Tirico Bee, detail of Lady Bird’s Legacy by Deborah Tirico Detail of bluebonnets from Lady Bird’s Legacy by Deborah Tirico 10 September 2014 Needle Arts_Sept2014.indd 10 Lady Bird’s Legacy, a design featuring Texas wildflowers, evolved from a student’s idea. Candy Jepsen, a proud Texan, suggested the theme while in one of Tirico’s classes. Soon Tirico received reference material on Texas wildflowers from several students who embraced the theme. She designed a table penny rug of dimensional flowers, leaving the center void where a vase of flowers could be placed. Once the basic design was conceived, Tirico began planning the appliqués by choosing wool fabrics, wool threads, and embellishments. She noted, “This is always the most challenging process, and the place where I make the most changes. I consider both the student experience and the ease in appliqué. I decide what can be accomplished using appliqué and what should be embroidered. I move the flowers, auditioning them in different places to make the colors and design work.” She settled on eleven flowers around an oval rug with forty-three pennies. She added a bee, ladybug, spider and web, dragonfly, and butterfly. In class photographs, all of Tirico’s students are smiling. She creates an atmosphere in which students can become more expressive in their own work. She reported, When I develop a class, I focus on the piece and its overall appeal, the student’s experience, and the kit. For my students, I think about what they will learn, how that knowledge can be applied to other forms of needlework, and whether they will have fun, because that is what I want when I am a student. I want my kits to be delicious and lush, to excite students for the journey ahead. When they discover how fast they can see results, they are happy. Students seem to enjoy the larger size, look and feel of the material, and seeing the dimension unfold. Needle Arts 7/28/14 3:55 PM For Tirico, one of the most rewarding aspects of teaching is viewing an EGA region exhibition and seeing that students have completed the class projects she has taught. “Seeing their work and how they made my patterns their own has been both impressive and satisfying to me,” she said. “This is the reason I teach; to have these exciting experiences and to grow as a needle artist and a teacher.” Tirico finds pleasure in all that she does. She lives by her father’s example. He never worked a day in his life; everything about his job was fun. She, too, enjoys the task at hand, whether it be cleaning the kitchen, writing directions, or designing; whatever it is, she puts her energy into it. She is an independent spirit, always focusing on where she is going, ignoring any around her who are negative. She works on the most daunting problem until it is solved. She is willing to tackle any project, even if initially she has no idea how to develop it. Nor does starting anew bother her. Tirico’s life can testify to her mother’s adage, “You are blessed to have something you love to do.” To learn more about Deborah Tirico visit her website and blog at deborahtirico.com. Detail of Lady Bird’s Legacy by Deborah Tirico Cheryl Sharp is a contributing editor for Needle Arts. If you will be attending Seminar in Phoenix, she would love to meet you. DESIGNERS ACROSS AMERICA PROJECT Buttercup Pin Cushion by Deborah Tirico The oversized Buttercup Pin Cushion features a yellow buttercup in a roundel of green leaves. The petals are embellished with French knots, rays of straight stitches, and detached chain or lazy daisies. The instructions include directions for making and using freezer paper patterns, working with placement template guides, utilizing a variety of basting techniques, and executing needle-slanting techniques. A kit is available from Deborah Tirico for $45. It includes all the felted wool and threads to complete the project, craft stuffing, freezer paper, template plastic, and crewel needles. Contact her at info@deborahtirico.com. To receive a copy of the instructions, send a check for $7 payable to EGA, to Designers Across America EGA, 1355 Bardstown Road, Suite 157, Louisville, KY 40204. Please provide the address where the instructions should be sent. This pattern is available until November 30, 2014. Orders received thereafter will be returned. Previous designs from the Designers Across America and the Designers Around the World series are no longer available. A yearly subscription to the project series (four projects per year) is available by sending name, address, and payment of $25 (10% savings) to the EGA address above. www.egausa.org Needle Arts_Sept2014.indd 11 September 2014 11 7/28/14 3:55 PM