Photos by hailey hoffman/The astorian TOP: Hutchings at her gallery. LEFT: Hutchings’ ‘Don’s City’ is based off a painting by Don Knapp. Continued from Page 4 She changed her focus once her children were grown. Hutching’s pieces are largely inspired by photos, she said. Hutchings finds inspiration from stock photos on the internet, photos her friends take and send to her and images she captures with her camera. “My pieces are often a simplified version of whatever the photo was,” she said. One of Hutching’s favorite pieces she’s created is known as “Don’s City.” Measuring 59 inches by 59 inches, the wall quilt is made from hand-painted fabrics based on a painting by her long- time friend, Don Knapp. Hutchings said she has translated many of his paintings to fabric pieces over the years. Once Hutchings has found a photo that has inspired a fabric piece, she’ll blow the photo up and work with that rather than sketching an outline to fol- low. From there, she weaves together fabrics with a mixture of shapes and patterns to mimic the photo she is work- ing from. Often, these pieces become quilts. Hutchings paints the fabric she uses in her projects. She decided to paint fab- ric because she couldn’t always find commercial fabric that fit her vision for her projects. “I’ll use fabric paints and mus- lin, white muslin, so I’m starting with a good, solid background,” Hutchings said. “It’s a watercolor technique. The fabric paints can be diluted just like watercolors and you work wet-on-wet just like a watercolor would too.” By combining commercial fabrics with her own creations, Hutchings has a wide range of patterns to work with. Since fabric art is a rare trade, she said she has learned skills from online classes given by other fabric artists. “There are a lot of excellent fab- ric artists out there who teach classes so I’ve taken a bunch of those,” Hutch- ings said. “In the fabric world, (the skill) almost has to be self-taught since there is no degree in fabric art.” Thursday, March 25, 2021 // 5