I am an artist from Birmingham, United Kingdom. I work in various media; mainly textiles (specialising in embroidery), watercolour and ink pen and markers, digital illustration using Procreate and mosaic. This site is about my art work and my main inspiration; the beauty of nature and all its mysteries.
I always knew I wanted to be an artist ever since I was little… it must have been all that obsessive drawing of patterns with compasses and colouring them in with felt tips pens and excessive doodling on any notepad within reach. When I was 5 years old my mother gave me a needlework set: scissors, thimble and needle-case. Since then I have been passionate about colour, pattern, design and textiles especially embroidery. I usually start off painting on blank fabric, often silk…I love the feel of the brush swishing across the fabric. I then embroider onto the silk and develop the images, layering fabrics and painting, embroidering, sequinning and appliquéing until something magical appears.
Embroidery is such a flexible medium to work in… I enjoy using free machine embroidery and more controlled digitized computerized embroidery as well as the slow therapeutic way of hand-stitching. It’s very exciting to combine them together to get the best of every world. My desire is that people enjoy and cherish my works for their joyous, inspiring, life-affirming qualities. I hope my work touches your heart as it has touched mine and brings to you the feeling of those wondrous things that cannot be described with words.
What Inspires Me
The imagery I use is inspired by nature; the secret lives of trees, birds, and animals that we can only guess at, ancient stories and symbols, poetry and prose. My travels in Bulgaria and Romania and more recently Morocco. Folk Art; especially costumes, wood carvings and folk paintings. In short, things of beauty, mystery and delight.
Nature: floaty umbel heads of creamy Queen Anne’s Lace, birdsong, birds in general especially finches and magpies, ooh and I love peacock feathers, shells, fish, coral, dragonflies and butterflies, pretty pebbles, found trinkets, beads and crystals. I’m a bit of a magpie and love anything sparkly and shiny.
Fave Artists: Gustav Klimt, Hunderwasser, Paul Klee, Charley Harper, Susan Seddon Boulet, Tanya Kugai, Yuri Vasnetsov, anything Russian, Eastern European children’s book illustrators whose names I can’t pronounce.
Fave Textile Artists: Hmmmmm hard to choose! I admire the work of many people.
Fave Ethnic Textiles: those of nomads; the Qashqai of Iran, the Sami gypsies of Pakistan, the Banjara gypsies of India. Anything from Central Asia, especially suzani and printed Russian textiles. As well as eastern European folk costume and interior textiles because of their hardcore hand-stitching, amazing colour combos and just general gorgeousness. Particularly Bulgarian, Romanian, Hungarian, Polish and Russian embroidery, weaving and lace for their intensity and complexity.
Use of Images
If you are wanting to use my images for your project please credit me as the artist and as the photographer. Images are to be used for personal projects only and not to be copied or used as part of your artwork or used for profit without prior permission from me the artist. For other than personal projects, image license fees will apply.
General Info About Me
Nicky has been working as a freelance textile artist since 1988 when she graduated from Manchester Metropolitan University, United Kingdom with a BA(hons) degree in embroidery. She has completed many private commissions, designed greeting cards for Decorum and Paper Rose, and exhibited and sold work in numerous shows. In addition to the United Kingdom Nicky has sold work to customers as far apart as Canada, Qatar and Australia. She has also worked in the bridal-wear manufacturing and commercial embroidery industries, lectured in textiles at North East Worcestershire College and held private workshops in silk painting and embroidery.
-I was born in 1966 in Gloucester, UK.
-I studied at Bournville School of Art, Birmingham where I did a Foundation Course in Art and Design in 1984.
-I obtained a BA(Honours) Degree in Textiles and Fashion – Chief Study Embroidery at Manchester Polytechnic (Now renamed Manchester Metropolitan University) – I graduated in 1988.
Other interests: I’m also a mum, professional gardener and permaculturist, shamanic practitioner and energy healer.
Materials:
Silk, velvet, felt and tweed and some printed fabrics
Acrylic inks and paintmarkers for painting – mainly Liquitex for painting on fabric.
Acrylic paint – Liquitex soft body.
Acrylic paint dilutant – I used Liquitex airbrush medium.
Metallic gutta
Printing foils
Sequins
Threads of rayon, cottons, silk, wool.
For watercolour painting I use Daniel Smith Watercolour paints
Mars Lumograph Black pencils
For sketching I mainly use a propelling pencil with Ain Stein 2B pencil leads.
Various markers and pens – Liquitex, Sharpies, Pigma Micron, Posca.
Various watercolour papers – I prefer cold pressed from St Cuthbert’s Mill.
Techniques:
Painting on base fabric with such as silk, I use liquitex acrylic ink. These inks fix on fabric without using heat from an iron or steamer.
I use normal paintbrushes for various sizes, old toothbrushes for spattering and ink rollers. I also sometimes use salt sprinkled on the silk paint to get dappled effects.
Machine stitching – I do free motion embroidery generally without an hoop. I use felt as a backing underneath delicate fabrics because it is lovely and stable and doesn’t bunch up like interfacing does.
I have use some pre-programmed stitching patterns to create marks and textures especially “quilting” patterns that look like grasses and stems of plants.
I am also experimenting with my own digitized embroidery designs to mix in with the other stitching.
Hand stitching – I do lots of hand stitching on some pieces. my favourite stitches are feather, chain, seeding, couching, buttonhole cartwheels amongst others. I do try to experiment with my stitching choices but I always return to my favourites.
Appliqué – I add scraps of other fabrics onto the base fabric; usually silk, some organza, velvet or whatever seems right at the time to create the textures I want. I use Bondaweb to help me adhere the smaller bits of fabric onto their backing.
Embellishing with sequins. I sometimes melt the sequins to distort their shapes. I also layer them to create different shapes and colour combinations. This can get a bit obsessive! I’m always searching for the perfect sequins!
Foiling – I add sections of printing transfer foil to the textured surface of my stitches using Bondaweb. I like to break it up so it adds a more subtle effect rather than just a flat metallic surface.
I stretch out my textile work while it is wet to make it as flat as possible – a process called “blocking out”. It is then stretched over a deep box canvas and secured with stainless steel staples at the back. The rough edges are then covered with with bonded felt to make a neat finish. Metal D rings and picture cord are attached to the back so the work is ready to hang on the wall.
Some people choose to hang my embroidery work as is on the wall so they can still touch the textile textures. Some choose to frame it either with or without glass – it depends what effect you want to go for. There is no right or wrong. My art prints are sold unframed for you to choose the frame of your choice depending on your decor and to keep shipping costs to a minimum.
Equipment:
I have an old Husqvarna Viking embroidery machine – a Designer 1.
I use wooden frames and aluminium push pins for stretching fabric to paint on.
I have a large noticeboard on one wall which I use as a “design board” – it helps me to see what I need to do to the work when I can see it pinned up from a distance as well as for inspirational images.
I use a lot of tracing paper and spray tack to move shapes around during the design process.
I have a wooden drawing board that can be lifted up and down.
Other equipment: Ipad Pro and Procreate for digital art.
For mosaics I use glass nippers and cutters and a Taurus Ringsaw for cutting mosaic materials including sheet glass and tesserae. For adhesive I use Weldbond. I’ve worked mainly on Wedi board and ply wood as substrates and my favourite grout is Mapei in black to make the colours pop.
Previous Exhibitions and Stockists
Alpha House gallery, Dorset
Art for Living, Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Artifex, Mitchell Centre for Art and Craft, nr Sutton Coldfield
Botanical Gardens, Birmingham – joint and open exhibitions
Christmas Exhibition, Possi Gallery
Common Threads, LCB Depot, Leicester, Leicestershire with Midlands Textile Forum
Connoisseur Gallery, Bourton on the Water
Craftworks Exhibition, Leamington Spa City Gallery
Crafty Tales exhibition, Rugby Art Gallery and Museum, Rugby
Ginger Gallery, Bristol
Winter Open Exhibition at the Heart of the Tribe Gallery, Glastonbury, Somerset.
Highbury Theatre Centre, Boldmere, West Midlands
Jinney Ring Craft Centre, Hanbury, Worcs
Kingfisher Gallery, Spon Street, Coventry
Liberty of London
Malvern and Droitwich Libraries, Worcs (as part of Midlands Textile Forum exhibition)
New British Craft (touring exhibition)
Summer Collection, Obsidian Art, Buckinghamshire
The Warwick Gallery, Warks
Open Exhibition, Midlands Art Centre
Friends Exhibition, Royal Birmingham Society of Artists, Birmingham
Vicki Norman Studio Gallery, Shropshire
Yule Fayre at Makers Dozen, Wolverhampton Art Gallery
Published Work & Articles
-Greeting cards published with Decorum and Paper Rose
-Creative with Workbox Magazine – ‘Creative Crushes’ – Issue 160 March/April 2017
-Creative with Workbox Magazine – Artist Masterclass ‘ Intricate Imitation’ – Issue 159 January/February 2017
-Workshop on the Web ‘Covering the Ground’ – on Bokhara Couching – June 2013
See Nicky’s work in the Press click here.