20 Wednesday, September 6, 2017 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon ART QUILTS: Display will be at library through September Continued from page 3 Joaquin Valley in California. Carvahlo and her mother both enjoyed sewing, but she didn’t know anyone who was a quilter. She began quilting by taking an adult educa- tion class to learn to make a wall hanging for her home. Shortly after moving to Sisters, Carvahlo took a class on art quilts from Jean Wells. “That class spun me in a totally new direction,” she recalled. She refers to her process as “intuitive quilting.” Her pieces range in size from small square-foot pieces to 40-by-40-inch quilts. The size is determined by the size of the wall on which the quilt will hang. Just last month, Carvahlo had three quilts accepted into juried shows – the Studio Art Quilts Associates (SAQA) show in Beaverton; the 2017 Northwest Quilting Expo in Portland; and the inter- national Quilts=Art=Quilts 2017 exhibit in Auburn, New York. Carvahlo is excited to attend the opening in Auburn in late October. The exhibit will hang through the end of the year. Carvahlo’s art quilts are full of small details that require careful study to appreciate them all. Most of her fabric is digitally printed on an inkjet printer, using designs she creates on her computer using Photoshop Elements. The fabric comes with a backing that allows it to pass through the printer. She uses not only fabric, but also paper on which designs and photographs are printed. “I love to control my fab- ric,” Carvahlo explained. She manipulates pat- terns and designs and often merges photos and/or pat- terns together. One of her quilts hanging at the library was created using leftover scraps of material that she cut apart and reassembled into a quilt. “I dabble in other art forms – watercolor, sketch- ing, mixed media – and my quilts are a continual mash- up of all of those,” remarked Carvahlo. Torrie Gordon, who has been quilting for 17 years, said whenever she saw quilts, she would think to herself, “When I’m no longer work- ing I will take up quilting.” She considered herself a “dabbler” when she started out with traditional quilts, but is now fully hooked on art quilts. She admits she isn’t prolific, as she spends a great deal of time on each quilt. What she does create is usually the result of a class she has taken or a SAQA challenge. Gordon said the hardest part of the process for her is coming up with the idea for a quilt. She enjoys get- ting inspiration from others or from photographs. One of her pieces at the library was inspired by a class she took dealing with the four ele- ments, taught by Rosalie Day. “I chose water and wrote Enjoy the bounty of summer! Patio seating available Breakfast & Lunch 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. | 7 days a week 403 E. Hood Ave. 541.549.2699 PHOTO BY SUE STAFFORD Sharon Carvahlo, left, and Torrie Gordon, right, in front of their art quilts on display in the Sisters Library computer room until September 29 as part of the Friends of the Sisters Library September art exhibit. down as many words as pos- sible describing what water does – gushes, reflects, cas- cades, gurgles, bubbles – and each piece in the quilt was inspired by one of the words.” “Quilting is hard work for me,” Gordon admitted. “I wrestle with every single tiny piece. I spend lots of time looking at what I’ve done to figure out what’s next. When it is close to being finished, then I get jazzed when I can see the whole picture. I don’t do things I really like quickly,” Gordon said of her process. She generally has some- one else do the quilting of her pieces. “Quilting is where I ruin it. If I value it, I get a profes- sional to do the quilting.” She has, however, done some hand quilting and does do embroidery. Gordon and her husband moved to Sisters five years ago from Salem, where they had lived since the mid-70s. After graduating from col- lege in California, they lived in Arizona for a time. The quilts will be in the computer room until September 29. In the com- munity room, Dennis McGregor’s animal art is on exhibit for the month. McGregor is starting a GoFundMe account to help publish a children’s book featuring the animals. On Friday, September 22, after the Fourth Friday Art Stroll, McGregor will be at the library playing music and talking about his art and the book from 7:30 to 9 p.m.