Photos above and below by Lucia Carpio for My Fashion Connect. |
Along with flowers and plants, wildlife and animals, she may spot found fragments that no one else would notice. She then rescale her photographs and images to create unique stories that bring her memories from her travels around Britain to a new medium. She captures these unique moments including experiences and adventures with writers, musicians, painters and other designers, while travelling through various parts of the UK, from Cornwall to Kent, from London to Scotland, through photographs and transfer them into digital imagery printed on scarfs.
Along with her scarfs, Jacqui has produced a catalogue explaining her stories and insights behind each scarf design.
In the picture below, Jacquis holds up her Nettlebed Blue scarf based on photographs she had made while strolling in the winter through the countryside surrounding the Oxfordshire village of Nettlebed and with the photographs she created a montqge of found objects.
Jacqui explains: "I was walking with my brother-in-law, who asked why on earth I would photograph discarded debris, twigs and leaves. My response was 'everything' has its own beauty - and you never know when these images might come in useful," said Jacqui Sinnatt whose scarf designs can be found on www.stagneseve.com
Living near Kew Gardens in west London, Jacqui often goes to photograph the plants and discover new beauty in the old trees. On one visit, a peacock was encountered in the garden and provided inspiration for the Peacock of Kew design. "A close-up of his feathers, colours and textures inspired the scarf design," says Jacqui.
Here above is one entitled Exmoor Shale that Jacqui designed based on a trip to west of Ashburton with friends of a book club, after enjoying an evening of fine wines and gossips at a local bar followed by a morning walk on the moor. She said in her catalogue, "Visions of literary spirits past and present accompanied our windswept walk on Exmoor and I was inspired by the complex textures of rock and stone balanced by hints of a clear turquoise sky glimpsed through scudding clouds.
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Close-ups and magnified shots of plants and flowers inspired the kaleidoscopic design of another scarf shown above. According to Jacqui, "The spiky burrs in the Pricklehead Blue scarf design were found on the banks of the river near Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire. But when magnified they took on a whole new life reminding me of giant thistles found in the Scottish Highlands."
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