Monday, April 20, 2009

Quilt show at my place yesterday



Just for fun. I'm still working on and thinking about the scrap quilt. I don't have as many scraps as I thought, or as much variety as I thought. The red/blue/brown color scheme would be heavily weighted toward blue (light) and pink if I rely on the scrap boxes. I've also got a few more orphan blocks than I remembered, and I really want to include them, although they don't seem to fit yet. Maybe these can be the start of my doll quilt wall - much better idea. Anyway, I think I'll keep making blocks with the scraps I've pulled, and then pack it all up again until the scrap pile has what I need.

I read Color Harmony for Quilters by Weeks Ringle and Bill Kerr last week, and it's really influenced how I'm approaching projects. They discourage the matchy-matchy appproaches of using a single collection (egad!) or pulling a color scheme from a focus fabric, and recommend instead that quilters begin with a theme that they want to convey and explore how it can be achieved through variations in contrast and hue. Their illustration of more than a dozen themes with quilts and the methodical breaking down of quilts into simple palettes is, so far, the best outline of a creative approach to selecting colors and fabrics I've come across.

Something else that has been going through my mind since Sunday has been symmetry and variation. The idea of symmetry is interesting: where are the fold lines? how much additional repetition is there within the repeated pattern? I'm also thinking about what makes some symmetrical patterns interesting, and others boring -- I guess that is the central question. I'm also thinking about integrating odd bits: how they can become part of the design without losing their difference, what they contribute to the overall impression. These thoughts are sometimes about stained glass (rose windows in our church), sometimes about quilts, and sometimes about society - mostly all mixed up together.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Inspiration for Quilters: Tanya Davis's "Art (I Want You)"

This song makes me want to do everything I've ever dreamed about. (And, like a true Canadian according to Ira Glass, I have to note here that Tanya Davis is Canadian. From PEI.) Isn't she amazing?

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Flannel wall, April 18 2009


Flannel wall, originally uploaded by *Yellow House*.

Scrap-box lap quilt. This is a true scrap quilt. I have six clear shoebox-size scrap containers, one color for each, and they're getting full. I thought it would be fun to see what I can do with just odds and ends -- not the nicely folded yardage or FQs from my stash, but leftover blocks and fabric from other projects. We'll see how it goes, anyway. I'm thinking of a 40s color scheme, with reds, blues, and browns; something both light and substantial, but not primary-bright.

Central command


Central command, originally uploaded by *Yellow House*.

I thought it would be fun to post about my sewing room today. It's pretty small, but it's bright, and nicely located in a former pantry between the kitchen and the playroom. I do the big cutting, and certainly the pinning on the dining room table or a floor somewhere. The two cupboards on the left are fabric storage.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Closeup, Train quilt for Peter

Another look at that sweet one. Anna, 2009, on Peter's quilt, 2006.

Train quilt for Peter


Train quilt for Peter, originally uploaded by *Yellow House*.

I made this one in May 2006, but this picture was taken this afternoon. It was a compromise quilt. Peter chose the bright train print. I really didn't like it, but was sure I could do something with it. I chose bright colors for the center, not the primaries that are the focus of the border print, but yellowish-grayish tones of those colors. Anna is lying on some of my favorite blocks -- there's quite a bit of the orange batiky metallic stripe. (My favorite fabric ever. I wish I had bought the whole bolt.) Anyway, I backed it with a print I loved, and for a long time, always folded it with the backing out. I'm not sure that it's entirely successful, but I'm pretty happy with it as a solution to working with a fabric that I really didn't care for. I wanted to introduce a bit of complexity and subtlety, and also make it brighter and lighter. For a kids fabric, the dark green train print was just too dark. Machine quilted, cotton batting, all cotton fabric. Orange variegated thread, concentric squares, wave pattern in border.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

90 Stars for Grammy

October-November 2008. Handquilted (1/4 inch outline around big and little stars), bamboo/cotton blend quilt batt (Quilter's Dream), contrast binding, backed in blue tone-on-tone print. Handquilted without a hoop because I was just way too pregnant to manage a hoop on my lap. (Anna was born 11 days after this photo was taken.) Loved, loved, loved making this for Grammy: she's done so many quilts - and big ones, of course - for so many people and causes, and I think it's been quite a while since someone's made one for her.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Simplicity Pinwheels


Simplicity Pinwheels, originally uploaded by *Yellow House*.

March 2009. I kind of forgot about this one. It was from a $15 dollar bomc club (not $15/month, but $15 for the whole quilt, minus backing of course). The shop owner increased the membership after planning the club, and so included quite a few fabric choices that hadn't been in the original quilt. But for $15 dollars, it's hard to complain. In any case, I scrapped her pattern and made something else. I had been using the "Anna's Stroller" quilt so much that it was being washing a few times a week. Now I have one to alternate with it. And also lots of left-over blue and striped Simplicity fabric, as well as some Moda choices from other lines to play with. The backing of this quilt is pieced from the same line in an uneven 9 patch block. Machine quilted in diagonal lines, after in-the-ditch stitching to provide some stability. Cotton batt, as usual.

Anna's Stroller


Anna's Stroller, originally uploaded by *Yellow House*.

For documentary purposes, I guess this is a better photo than the last. Blocks measure 12 inches. The pattern is traditional, but inspired to some extent by one that appeared in American Patchwork and Quilting -- I'll look that up I guess. The sawtooth border is my own. I'm really liking sawtooth borders these days, and pieced curves. The bias binding is a yellow print. DH wondered what I was doing there, but I really like it. I often use something that really contrasts with the rest of the quilt, though not usually a completely different color. So sue me.

Hand-sewn birds, from Last Minute Patchwork Gifts

Bird pattern from Joelle Hoverson's Lat-Minute Patchwork Gifts. Our little bird, born Dec 31 2008.

Pat's Irish Chain


Pat's Irish Chain, originally uploaded by *Yellow House*.

December 24-25, 2007. The colors don't look quite right here. Machine quilted: outline on chains, motifs in alternate patches. Backed with yellow flannel, contrast bias tape. Lap size.

Anna's Stroller


Anna's Stroller, originally uploaded by *Yellow House*.

December 2008, handquilted in parallel diagonal lines, concentric circles, outline quilting on border triangles. Symmetrical (mirror) sawtooth border, plain corner blocks. Backed with pink floral from top, contrast bias tape. Small crib size.

Nine patch with sashing


Nine patch with sashing, originally uploaded by *Yellow House*.

January 2008, machine quilted in parallel lines. Strip pieced nine-patch from jellyroll (Figtree Allspice), plain sashing. Backed with contrasting print, contrasting bias tape (from the Posh yardage at upper right). Shown by Peter! Loved the Figtree fabric collection, and wish I had waited to find something more interesting to do with it. I've just noticed that this photo was taken before I finished the quilt! Hilarious. I don't tend to have UFOs, or at least not at this stage.

Beatrix Pinwheels


Beatrix Pinwheels, originally uploaded by *Yellow House*.

August 2008, machine quilted in parallel lines, about an inch apart. Pinwheel four-patch blocks, alternating with fussy-cut one-patches and square-in-a-square blocks. Pieced bias tape, using scraps from top. Backing pieced with another print from Beatrix Potter collection and fussy cut square-in-a-square blocks. Small crib size. Baby gift for a dear cousin.

I just realized that you can see the corner of the first quilt I ever made behind this one -- it's the diagonal floral bit hanging out on the left. Too funny. Well, I still like it.

Play cabins


Play cabins, originally uploaded by *Yellow House*.

March 2008, machine quilted. Freeform log cabin-ish quilt, with fussy-cut centers. Plain muslin backing, contrast bias. Lap size, of course.

I like the narrow plain sashing and non-border, and might do something similar again. The blocks finished at 12", trimmed after piecing.

Gift for a friend.