| Root Domain
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posted: 3/4/2003
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May 2003 Quilt of the Month Winner
Sponsored by
Prize: $50 Gift Certificate
37" x 67"
Construction: machine pieced and appliquéd, machine quilted
(over 300 yards of thread sewn). Thread sketching, acrylic paints,
inking, fabric collage, scrunched fabric (for rocks), fused fabric.
Edges of quilt turned under (no binding); bottom section is unquilted
and unfaced.
Materials: cotton fabrics, velvet, yarns, ribbon, netting; cotton,
rayon, nylon and metallic threads; polyester/cotton batting. Hung
on a straight branch.
Original design
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Look around you at the lovely northern woods. It is the peak
of summer. The sunshine filters down through a full canopy of
leaves. Some late wildflowers may still be blooming on the forest
floor. It is a calm and peaceful scene.
Now look down. What is supporting the
visible forest, and in a figurative and literal way, supporting
us all? The soil, the "root domain", is the basis for land life
on our planet. Most of us don't give it a thought, as it is dark
and inaccessible to us. What is going on under the surface? I
envisioned a place of unexpected color and pattern, filled with life
and activity, where things are not always what they seem on the surface.
Going deeper, one may contemplate the connectivity of the universe.
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Reading the essay by soil scientist and
geographer Francis D. Hole, "Some Patterns in the Earth Beneath
Our Feet"* , I was taken by his description of the beauty to be
found in the living soil. He recommends starting "outdoor soil
clubs" similar to bird watching societies. Hole suggests becoming
"...amateur soil walkers, exhuming soil profiles for temporary admiration...
contemplating with affection 'the root domain of lively darkness and silence.'"
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* Wisconsin Land and Life. Edited by
Robert C. Ostergren and Thomas R. Vale. The University of Wisconsin
Press, 1997.
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