Friday, December 22, 2017

59 and four quarters

One day I was wearing my favorite apron, when I realized that if I didn't make something else out of this cute fabric, my world would be lost.


so I went on a hunt . . .




And found a couple jelly rolls.  




I had a scrappy log cabin in mind . . .





I'm a little too OCD for true scrappiness . . .  I have to have SOME order. . .











I wanted some chunky lines 


This is where this quilt got bottle-necked for a few months . . . on the dining room table, waiting for the chunky lines.  










Someone in our house just turned 59 and four quarters !! (can't say that other number :)


 That is "T-bone" in the back ground, he's probably in the freezer by now :)







quilt stats:
76 x 84 (washed) - made to fit a twin bed
top - log cabin with 2 1/2 inch strips
blocks - 10 "
fabric - "road 15" by sweetwater, and a few others thrown in
back - scraps for the blocks and "ink" by Zen Chic (gray and black)
quilting - fmq random spirals
chunky stitching - No. 8 in white
batting is 80/20 comfort by Winline










Linked:
by crazy mom quilts





Sunday, December 10, 2017

African Quilt

A client brought me this beautiful quilt top earlier this year that she had made from fabrics which she had purchased while living in Africa.   She made this quilt top for a memory of their time there.  

She wanted to have the option of being able to wash it.  I was VERY concerned about the colors running since she had not pre-washed her fabrics.  So I asked her to take it home and gave her some specific washing instructions (cold water,  delicate/hand wash cycle to minimize fraying, with a box or two of those Clorox Color Catchers, and to repeat the process until the rinse water came out fairly clear)

It sat on my dining room table for a few weeks while I came up with a quilting design.

The focal fabric was this gorgeous elephant in the middle.  It's one of those waxed prints from Africa made like a batik on a soft canvas.   I free motion quilted around all the parts of the elephant, especially those ridges on his trunk, and buried the threads.  

I knew I wanted to incorporate a diagonal tile design to repeat the lines of the log cabin blocks.



My client asked that I incorporate this African design into the quilt.  So I sized it to fit in 4 corners.  
I copied it onto that special thin paper used for quilting, pinned it down and very slowly quilted over the design, burying the threads.

I added an echo around it, separating it from the tile quilting.  I stitched over the design several times to make it stand out.




My favorite fabric on her quilt (besides the elephant) was this border batik.  I love the contrast of the bright yellows and red/orange against the black (it was also used for the backing) I knew that free motion quilting around the fish and curved lines would add a nice contrast to the rest of the quilting and would make these fish pop.


I was very happy with how it turned out.