Those of you who follow my blog posts will know that the Parallel Practice residency at King's has been full of ups and downs.
I’ve moaned about how small I have had to work; I am used to working
in metres and now I am working in millimetres. My piece for Cloth and
Memory 2 was featured in the December '14 issue of Embroidery
magazine in a feature about monumental scale textiles, and I am
currently finishing two quilts for the ‘Error in the bone’ project that
are each 3msq.
Today I am emailing about whether the PCB is 17 or 20mm; just so you
know, a penny is 20.3mm. I am not complaining about this but using this
as a stark illustration of the difference in the way of working for me.
The other challenge I have had is the technical one: that circuits
aren’t right or contacts aren’t good enough; that threads have shorted
or that work has been just ‘wrong’ and often I have struggled to find
the ‘right’ way.
So here is a lovely positive image of getting it right. The image on
the little screen is a wave form of the electrical impulses (or EMG) of
Ali’s bicep moving. The sensors are embroidered; the band making
contact is textile. Result!