Johanna Raczyk has a passion for fabrics, needles and thread.
Johanna Raczyk has a passion for fabrics, needles and thread.

With an easy laugh, Johanna Raczyk said her passion is working with fabrics.

โ€œItโ€™s an addiction. It really is.โ€

What began in high school as a sewing hobby, creating scarves, handbags and pillows, has become the focal point for Raczykโ€™s unbridled creativity. A reflection of her own opposing characteristicsโ€”fun yet serious, quick to giggle yet firmly groundedโ€”her wall-hangings, or quilt art, are centered and powerful while also being whimsical with elements of pure cute and precious girliness. With no formal training in art or sewing, Raczyk has an innate feel for attractive materials, color combinations and detail that create a sense of serenity.

A three-year Tahoe resident, the 28-year-old Raczyk creates depictions of places, people and symbols that are close to her heart. Her choice of rich velvets and silks and penchant for deep reds and purples add further weight to the works. But she strikes a balance by using playful materials and by adding accents like butterflies and flowers. Her patterns are simple, which allows details like beadwork and ornate fabrics to be the complexity of her works.

โ€œHead of a Womanโ€ features a peaceful woman with big, earthy dreadlocks; the heavy fabrics and warm colors are calming and grounded. A strand of bright turquoise highlights the subjectโ€™s lively hair. A delicate feather decorates the chest as do flowers complete with rhinestones.

The work โ€œMarthaโ€™s Vineyardโ€ is named for Raczykโ€™s โ€œsecond home to Tahoe.โ€ The piece shows an outline of the island with added details: butterflies and pink strips for waterways. Itโ€™s a simple piece with accents that keep the eye interested and let the mind relax. Singling out the Vineyard reminds a person how sacred a place can be.

โ€œMy work is an eclectic combination of fabrics,โ€ Raczyk says. โ€œI always use Japanese silks, and a lot of animal prints and polka dotsโ€”I just canโ€™t get away from polka dots. โ€ฆ [My style] is mostly Asian, hippy, environmental. Thatโ€™s what I always lean toward. And I like patchwork.โ€

Raczykโ€™s creative process is ongoing and multifaceted. Although a piece like โ€œHead of a Womanโ€ might take 20 hours from conception to completion, thatโ€™s not the whole picture. Raczyk always carries a sketchbook.

โ€œIf I see things I like, Iโ€™ll draw them, and then Iโ€™ll take that idea home and think about it for a while.โ€ She then lays a piece out and draws it to scale. โ€œThen I have to pick my colors. That takes longer than you think it would. I go through magazines and cut out color combinations that I like and put them on my wall.โ€

Next, she chooses the fabrics, which she has on hand, in plenty. She doesnโ€™t buy fabric to create a project; she buys fabric she loves and uses it when the time is right.

In the immediate future, Raczyk plans to create a series of hangings that represent the seven chakras. She has already finished the first hanging, โ€œOm.โ€ She decisively hung this piece over her boyfriendโ€™s sushi station at Fredrickโ€™s Bistro and Bar, where her work is featured.

Raczyk also has her popular and growing handbag businessโ€”in which no two bags are identical. Lately though, sheโ€™s been focusing more on her wall art than her bags.

โ€œPeople look at [a wall hanging] like itโ€™s a piece of art and itโ€™s not something that has to match an outfit or hold up to wear and tear. So I can add a delicate accent like a frilly feather to it, and I know itโ€™ll be OK.โ€

Wall hangings have allowed Raczyk to expand the materials she can include in her work. She is interested in making her pieces more three-dimensional. Specifically, she wants to add texture to her work by using burlap and textured fabric, incorporating more beadwork, and adding papier-mรขchรฉ, wire, decoupage, glitter and mirrors.

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