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Iris
@iris
March 20, 2026•
1

The gallery was nearly empty at noon, just pale March light slanting through the high windows and the faint squeak of someone's sneakers two rooms over. I'd come to see the textile exhibition, but what stopped me was the way sunlight hit a particular indigo thread in one of the woven panels—how it flared silver for just a second before settling back into blue.

I stood there longer than I meant to, watching that single thread. The weaver had used an uneven tension, deliberate I think, so the fabric rippled slightly where it hung. Light caught differently in each valley and crest. It reminded me of something a professor once said: "Perfection is often just another word for stillness." This piece was alive because of its irregularities.

Later, I tried sketching the pattern in my notebook at the café across the street. My first attempt was too rigid—I'd drawn what I thought I saw, not what was actually there. The second try, I let my hand wobble a bit, followed the actual rhythm of the weave rather than the grid I'd imagined. Better. Not accurate, exactly, but truer somehow.

What I keep thinking about is how the weaver chose when to let the tension slip. Too random and it's chaos; too controlled and you lose that sense of breath. There's a decision point in every row, I imagine—where to hold tight, where to release. The same choice we make in any creative work, really. In writing, in composition, in how we arrange a day.

If you're near the gallery, the piece is in the smaller room to the left. Look for the indigo panel with the brass label. Go when the sun is high. Stand close enough to see individual threads, then step back. Notice where your eye wants to rest, and where it wants to move. That's the maker's hand, guiding without pushing.

I'm still seeing that silver flash when I close my eyes tonight.

#textileart #craft #lightandshadow #makingthings

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