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The mystery rug

 

Mystery rug.
The Mystery Rug! Still a long way from finished. (Tynan says to tell you that he’ll be back next week. He was at the groomer getting coiffed.)

By now many of you have caught sight of my “mystery rug.” And some have even figured out that it’s being hooked out of plastic bags. The ultimate in up-cycling! The ultimate, too, in cheap, rug raw materials. Though, the reality is, that by choosing sed materials, I’m limiting myself. See the black lines between the “cells”? I didn’t necessarily want to use black; brown would’ve worked better. But that’s the challenge of restricting myself to a specific material. Even though friends (thank you especially, Mary Ramsey!) provided me with their used plastic bags, and I saved my own, nowhere did I find a really brown plastic bag, never mind the several that I need for this particular application. But when one of the imperatives for your little work of art is that it’s to be made out of plastic bags, typically something we throw away after that trip to Walmart or even Savers, you use “what you got.” So I hooked those borders in black.

I suppose you’re wondering what exactly it is that I’m hooking, what the mystery rug is all about. Not telling! It’s enough right now that you know what it’s being hooked from. I’m still working the design, hoping desperately that it’ll be a fair representation of what’s going on inside my head. And that it’ll fit the requirements of a couple of shows that I aim to enter. More on them later.

Mystery rug.
Close-up of the Mystery Rug. Like pretty much everything I do, it’s being hooked on monks’ cloth.

This is new to me, sharing as I go something that I’m not sure of. But so many of you are brave enough to do just that on Facebook and in your blogs, that I decided to let you in on this project.

plastic bag hooked rug
Constance Old’s rug “Sea of Blue: Plastic Floats Forever”: 2010; mixed paper and plastic on linen; 52″x42″. This rug is still so very timely with it’s obvious message regarding plastic pollution.

 

I’ve worked in “limited” plastic bag before. Liking how the strips pulled and in the interests of recycling and trying something new-ish (back in 2014 I saw one of Constance Old‘s plastic bag rug in an exhibit in Connecticut), I decided to hook a mat comprised of nothing but plastic bag. I will advise you that, if you choose to do one yourself, do NOT do it in winter. The static electricity will kill you! Very annoying. There are now (and perhaps forever?) little pieces of plastic bag all over my living room-hallway-kitchen. They even make their way into the bedroom! Static Guard is the only answer.

 

 

As High on Hooking, I’ve made a “career” out of using alternative and less-than-traditional materials to hook my rugs. Have you gone out of your comfort zone to try something other than wool strips? Buffalo or wolf yarn? (Yes, they sell that out here in New Mexico.) T-shirts? Silk saris? Sari yarn is probably my favorite to hook with. Something really weird? Come one, tell us. Here at High on Hooking we do NOT judge. It’s only in stretching that the art of rug hooking will grow.

 

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Sourcing materials in a new town

So, even though we’ve completely upended our lives, and we’re in full house-hunting mode, some things don’t change. Thank goodness! The rug I (barely) started before I left home, I mean, Massachusetts, has been helping to keep my anxieties at bay. And I’ve made such good progress on it (despite the fact that I consider myself a s-l-o-w hooker), that I needed to source more materials.

The sanity-saving, hit-or-miss rug. Wonder where the inspiration for the color scheme came from? Hoping to put it on the floor in the new house.
The sanity-saving, hit-or-miss rug. Wonder where the inspiration for the color scheme came from? Hoping to put it on the floor in the new house.

All my wool, yarn, and t-shirt stashes are currently sitting in a truck rocketing through Texas by all calculations. I know this because we talked to the driver this morning after signing a lease at a storage facility. Knowing there was no way I’d access them for the few months we’d be looking for a new place to call home, I’d purchased a bunch of t-shirts before I traveled. I love working in t-shirts. The available color palette is pretty inclusive, and it’s much cooler in the summer – New England’s and New Mexico’s. Plus, the chance to up-cycle something and make it beautiful and useful makes me giddy.

Welcome to my new Savers on Carlisle Boulevard, NE, in Albuquerque.

Back east I tended to source shirts at Savers. I’d usually pay $1.99 to $3.99 per. And with America always getting bigger, scoring X-larges was pretty easy. I’d fretted about finding a similar market out here in Albuquerque. No need! Turns out that Savers is three miles down the road from our rental house. The kid and I headed there this afternoon. I got the goods, and she picked up a Stephen King novel. It was a good day for all.

What’s currently making your day? How do you deal with the loss of a vendor?

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