On occasion, I will run into someone who is looking at my rugs who will say, I didn't think you could do it this way. Or even more strongly, you can't do it this way, or use that fibre, or that pattern, or etc etc etc.
I am self taught. I got the loom at an auction sale. I figured out how to warp on my own, prep rags, weave, finish, etc.
That being said, I do a lot of reading, looking around asking of questions. So I'm not TOTALLY self taught. I didn't recreate the wheel or anything!
I've always been the type of person who is willing to try something, to see if it works.
Or to do something another way, since I might not have the 'right' tool, or material, or technique.
I think it's freeing to not have such artificial constraints on me!
Sometimes I have a good result, some times not so much. But I learn something and can apply it to the next big experiment!
These are rugs that I finished this weekend wouldn't have come into being if I had followed all my own 'rules'.
They are made out of polyester. Strike one.
They are stretchy. Strike two.
They are not your normal rug making fabric. Strike 3.
But I liked the color, and from experiencing another fuzzy type material in a rug (that was a request to use from a friend) I decided it was worth trying it out.
They make some really squishy, fuzzy, delightful rugs.
They aren't very heavy. They aren't stiff. And I don't think i would use them in a heavy traffic area because they would probably get matted and not look great pretty quickly. But I think they would be heavenly beside a bed or other such area that could use a soft and warm place for some toes.
I pretty much live my life the same way.
I am a person who wants to know the rules so I can follow them - but if the 'rules' are arbitrary or don't make sense to me, I do my best to find out why they don't make sense and if I can't, I do my best to work around them, or get them changed.
I think I drive some people crazy, because I 'do things differently'. But I also hear from many people that "Julie is good at everything". I don't agree with that, but I do agree that I am good at trying new things.
That is something I have tried to instill in my children, and also in the many 4-H club members I have interacted with over the last 30+ years.
So the takeaway from this is this.
"No rules" doesn't mean to be a rule breaker.
It means to me 'Be an innovator'.
All for now,
JULIE
1 comment:
Great post, Julie!
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