And the threads on the iris were two strands of hand-dyed silk floss by Vicki Clayton.
Wish I had better lighting....but you can get the idea of how things are shaping up....
Wish I had better lighting....but you can get the idea of how things are shaping up....
As an experiment, it worked pretty well.
Once the flower was dunked in water and then ironed dry, it looked like this.
It was just a matter of a few pins to hold my "unit" in place while I stitched it on.
See, once the button hole stitching went on, that raggedy edge with the machine stitching completely disappeared.
Which brought me to this point.  But then I decided there should be one open flower...
All of a sudden my quilt is dominated by the presence of this iris!!!
You can see the two blooms I picked to bring inside while coloring my lace flowers.  I am using Tsukineko ink for this.
Here is a real bloom next to the textile one going on.  That's Edmar rayon thread in the stamens.
Fast forward...here they are all sewn on.  That is ribbon from Riversilks in the leaves.  Great stuff...it really doesn't run while being stitched!
And here it is in place on the quilt, in the lower left quadrant.
If the #$%^& sun would ever come out, these blooms would pop open in no time.  But I kind of like the idea of putting some buds on the quilt...they always suggest growth.  These make a nice vertical element, too...and will go on next.
Yes, it is a snail, though to me it is just like the slugs that cause us grief around here.
You don't think I have forgotten about my Embellisher, do you?
All felted down, this piece is ready for its bath.  I hope those little holes go away.
It took about 5 minutes for the stabilizer to dissolve.
Hmm....interesting.
This is stiff and flat, not too thick.  The holes are mostly gone, and this doesn't have the fuzzy surface that so much embellishment-type work has.  I did not want fuzzy; Dame's Rocket petals are smooth.
The edges of the petals are nice and sharp and will not shred when I tack these onto the quilt.
And here we are!  Couched stems and burnt-edge leaves will be a recurring theme, no doubt...
I plan on doing a stylized version of these next....
...all over my car (a '98 Subaru Outback wagon, the best car I've ever owned).
Those pink petal beads were made to become dogwood flowers, don't you think?
Here is a detail.
They actually look more like clover to me.
As you can see, I have settled on the shape for the center...mocked up in freezer paper at the moment.
He never lets me take my work too seriously, as you can see.  And thank you, Susan, for your very special input here....*wink!*
Let's start with the wisteria....
The blooms are a little more violet colored here, but that was the ribbon I had on hand.
This is a nice way to get a finished edge, and you get that little black outline, too.
These were a favorite flower of my mom's so I love growing them.  The ants love them too, and crawl all over them.
Cornflower supplies!  (*Freda, do you recognize the shiny ribbon and the cool black thread?*)
The first clump.
I just love this stitch.
Here is the upper left arc.  You can see I stitched the rather blobby-looking lace applique leaves on there too.
Here is the upper right arc.
I will start with blooms from the alium family...these chives are flowering, and my giant alium is about to pop open.
So she got me the Omnigrip 8 1/2" X 24" that you can see here, along with Tracy's strips and business card and my pathetic old ruler.  The 8 1/2" width is going to be so great for cutting out fabric sheets for the printer.  Thank you, Quilt Whisperer!
I bought the stencil on the left from a company new to the States--they're from Scotland--called Stewart Gill USA.  They provide "Professional textile paints and accessories for seriously demanding multimedia artists".
Here's another page from their info sheet, showing all their different paints.  I am no seriously demanding multimedia artist and couldn't begin to appreciate all the doors these paints open...but I felt the fabrics they were painted on and the hand was soft and they are washable.
What beader and embroiderer isn't always looking for new and great needles?  These supposedly are long beading needles that do not bend.  They take beads as small as #11s.
This one could be cool...it is the "Big Eye Beading Needle".  It really is two wires joined at top and bottom...so you can fit yarn in there and then bead onto it.  (How could you fit yarn through a regular beading needle?)  They might be a little fragile, so I bought three of them.  I think these open up some neat possibilities.
This is the Grip-n-Grip rubbery sheet that you use as a work surface.  Say you are writing on fabric...it will grip your fabric and keep it smoothly in place while you write on it, or draw with fabric crayons, or whatever.  No longer do you have to iron your fabric to freezer paper to stabilize it, or tape it into place.  I tested out some silk chiffon on it and it really didn't move!  I left this photo big so if you click on it you can read the information on the sheet.  This is washable, you can heat set on it, and it seems like it could be very useful....
...like for when you are using the foiling pen here.  This is like having a ball point pen write in glue.  You lay out your fabric on your Grip-n-Grip and then write on it with the pen.  After 3 minutes the glue becomes tacky and transparent, and will stay that way indefinitely, until you either rub glitter into it or a mylar foil sheet over it.
Here's a little demo, with the little packet of foil sheets I got.  I thought this would be a great way to add some veins on leaves, for example.
Tracey and Holly Casey have just begun booth set-up here on Thursday.  That is Tracey's famous "Bento Box" pattern directly behind them, along with a new Scotty pattern, the Interweave pattern, and you can just see the LavaLamps quilt on the right.
Less than 24 hours later they are hard at it selling patterns, taking orders, giving out promotional info, answering questions....and doing plenty of schmoozing.
Here is Kathy Mack, of PinkbyPost.com and also PinkChalkStudio.
Here is the front of the Note Taker....
And here is the inside.  Very slick.  Best of luck to Kathy!!!
Paul Kreinik, a sharp businessman and funny guy.  His company in West Virginia employs 20 people, and they bring us the wonderful Kreinik threads that we CQers (and others) love so much.
And here is Penny McMorris, author of the highly collectible Crazy Quilts, long out of print.  (The link takes you to Amazon where they have several used copied available!)