Community Quilt 253

21 02 2016

How to quilt this quilt? While I decided, I stitched in the ditch along all the zigzag lines for the verticals of the ‘hexagons’ created from the half strips. Then, because the quilt top design was so geometric, I decided to quilt circles. But they aren’t real circles — in fact, not one would meet the criteria for a real circle, but they give the illusion of circles.

I didn’t use any rulers for the circles — instead, I did very curved ‘S’ shapes coming close the centre point of each edge, then crossing in the middle of a join to do the other side of the ‘S’ on the other side of each hexagon, all the way to the top edge, then back down. If you look closely at the stitching you’ll see how I did that. It was pretty quick, and HOURS quicker than using rulers! The effect was still the same, and as this quilt isn’t for a show, these simple circles fitted the bill perfectly.

And I liked how the stitch-in-the-ditch stitching set off the circles, too.

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Back:
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Threads used:

  • Top: Superior Rainbows (40 wt, trilobal polyester, colour 818)
  • Bottom: Fil-Tec Magna Glide Classic pre-wound bobbin (white)

 





Community Quilt 252

21 02 2016

The busy-ness of this big scrappy quilt didn’t lend itself to custom quilting, so I quilted it with a single-line, all-over ‘open headband‘ motif using a variegated thread.

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Back:

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Threads used:

  • Top: Fil-Tec Harmony ‘Autumn’ (40 wt, cotton, colour 14081)
  • Bottom: Fil-Tec Magna Glide Classic pre-wound bobbin (light tan)

 





Community Quilt 251

14 02 2016

I liked the Asiatic (Japanese?) feel to this red, white, and blue quilt. But how to quilt it? I started by stitching in the ditch along the diagonals. Then stitched straight lines around the inner white squares, with arcs at each corner, thus creating little flower shapes.

For the large border, I emulated the fabric by stitching flames coming out from the inner blue border.

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Back:
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Threads used:

  • Top: Fil-Tec Glide ‘Cardinal’ (40 wt, trilobal polyester, colour 70001); Isacord (40 wt, trilobal polyester, colour A3941/Fb4133 [dark dusky blue])
  • Bottom: Fil-Tec Magna Glide Classic pre-wound bobbin (red)

 





Community Quilt 250

14 02 2016

I know these quilts are a great way to use up scraps, but they can be the devil to quilt, especially if the person making the top hasn’t flattened out the 8-way joins in the middle of each ‘circle’. The big bump of fabric can break a needle and throw out your timing really easily (a $100 repair at least). Fortunately, the joins on this one weren’t too bad.

I did a large all-over meandering stipple so that I could deliberately avoid the 8-way joins, and because the colour etc. were so busy no-one would be likely to notice the quilting anyway!

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Threads used:

  • Top: Floriani (40 wt, rayon, colour PF546)
  • Bottom: Fil-Tec Magna Glide Classic pre-wound bobbin (light tan)

 





Community Quilt 249

14 02 2016

What a bright quilt this was! To highlight the sunny yellow, I did all the quilting with yellow thread.

For the main body of the quilt I did half arcs/semicircles. I needed to get my muscle memory back after not quilting for 6 weeks or so and this was the perfect motif for that.

Other than stitching in the ditch, I left the black border unstitched, and just did piano keys in the coloured border strips.

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Threads used:

  • Top: Floriani (40 wt, rayon, colour PF546)
  • Bottom: Fil-Tec Magna Glide Classic pre-wound bobbin (light tan)

 





Community Quilt 248

1 02 2016

This big quilt took me a long time to quilt, both in actual hours (about 10) and over time. I started it a few days before I had shoulder surgery (19 Dec 2015), getting all the stitching in the ditch done. Then I couldn’t quilt for a couple of weeks, then the weekend I set myself to get back to it we evacuated the house because of the threat of a major bushfire, then other stuff got in the way. Finally, I got back to it this weekend and finished it!

To make the stars ‘pop’, I stitched diamond shapes in the white space between them, then filled the white background around each star with some elongated ‘n’ and ‘u’ shapes, which made both the stars and the diamonds ‘pop’. All that stitching created an interesting effect on the back, too. I left the borders unstitched.

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Back:

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Threads used:

  • Top: Fil-Tec Glide ‘White’ (40 wt, trilobal polyester, colour 10000)
  • Bottom: Fil-Tec Magna Glide Classic pre-wound bobbin (white)

 





Making stuff for our tour

31 01 2016

I’m off on QuiltVenture 2016 later this year, about a three-week tour for mostly Western Australian quilters organised by my good friend Michelle. I went on the inaugural tour in 2014, and it was fabulous. This time we’re ‘doing’ New England in the fall, then finishing at the Houston International Quilt Festival. For the last tour, I made a luggage handle wrap for everyone, which was fantastic when identifying baggage as belonging to our group — you just looked for our unique wraps and grabbed that bag, whether it was yours or not. It made for a very efficient system in retrieving our bags.

For this tour, I’ve made luggage handle wraps AND luggage tags for everyone, plus a couple of spares. Michelle gave me the waratah fabric and Velcro from her store, and I provided the stitch and shape, plastic inserts, webbed straps, batting, and time and expertise in making them. I made them over a weekend.

We’ll give them out at our first QV2016 meeting on Saturday 30 Jan 2016.

Before (everything prepped ready to sew):

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After — 27 luggage tags and luggage handle wraps:

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Pretty Rocks: Kunzite

28 01 2016

Stephanie Bateman-Graham, my friend and an ex-work colleague, takes microscopic photos of slivers of rocks and minerals. All her images are just amazing and many emulate pictures of the universe taken from space. She sells these images in various formats (cards, calendars, phone cases, etc.) via her website http://www.prettyrockdesigns.com/, and through Spoonflower, the on-demand fabric printing company: http://www.spoonflower.com/profiles/prettyrockdesigns

I’ve purchased several fat quarters of Steph’s photos via Spoonflower, all in Kona cotton. And for the first time, I’ve now stitched one. The others are all ‘in process’! I’d held off stitching them as the fabrics are so pretty and I deemed them ‘too good’ to touch and possibly ruin. But I can’t keep fabric forever…

The first photo-printed fabric I stitched is of Kunzite, a variety of Spodumene. Here’s the finished art quilt (yes, it is ‘square’ — the photo distorts the edges), which is now available or sale from my Etsy store: https://www.etsy.com/au/listing/618943875/kunzite-art-quilt:

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The process

I knew I had to stabilise this quilt really well because dense stitching warps and distorts the layers and edges. And I knew it needed ‘puff’ to emphasise various areas. Beneath the top printed fabric are two layers of batting (Pellon and a wool batting) as well as a stabilising layer of buckram. I added backing fabric at the end when I finished off this quilt, but not while I was thread painting it.

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Next came choosing the thread colours. First, I auditioned all the likely colours against the fabric, then stacked them in colour variations off to the side, ready for use (first two photos below). The third photo shows the actual threads I used.

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I started by stitching all around the edge of the photo-printed fabric, using invisible thread. This was both to stabilise the layers and hopefully  prevent too much distortion of the finished quilt. Then I outline stitched all the major elements in the photo in invisible thread, starting from the diagonal central elements and working back to the edges. Again, this was to stabilise the quilt in preparation for the dense stitching to come.

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The back (buckram side), showing the outline stitching:

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Once I’d outline stitched the main elements, I started the dense stitching. I began with the dark colours first, then added layers and layers of progressively lighter colours on top and as the photo dictated. I left some areas unstitched so they’d ‘puff’ (or ‘pop’).

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After finishing all the stitching, there was a little bit of warp/distortion in the piece, so I steam pressed it and then squashed it under some heavy weights for a day or so, then steam pressed it again and pinned it securely to my design wall for a couple of weeks (I couldn’t do much more at that stage as I had shoulder surgery a few days later, then it was Christmas, etc.).

Finally, I got back to it this long weekend just past, adding some backing fabric, trimming it square, and binding it with some fabric from my stash that picked up many of the colours in this quilt. Then I added a hanging sleeve on the back and a label. It’s next destination is a local art competition in mid-February.

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I really enjoyed giving a different life to Steph’s great photo!

Finished dimensions:

  • Width: 17.5 inches (44.5 cm)
  • Height: 20.5 inches (52 cm)

 





Fabric gift bags

12 12 2015

What a clever idea! Take an existing paper gift bag and make a fabric one from it. All the instructions are in this YouTube video:





Community Quilt 247

11 12 2015

How to quilt this quilt? I thought of doing an overall motif, but those straight strips kept calling me 😉 Instead, I decided to do straight lines extending past the straight strips in both vertical and horizontal directions.

The border fabric was so ‘busy’ that a large stipple was all that was necessary to stitch the layers together.

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Threads used:

  • Top: Robison-Anton ‘Raspberry’ (40 wt, rayon, colour 2426)
  • Bottom: Fil-Tec Magna Glide Classic pre-wound bobbin (dark gray)