Wishing you all the best of holidays with much joy and love....and a Happy 2011!See you in January, everyone.....
Wishing you all the best of holidays with much joy and love....and a Happy 2011!
Here is the convalescent with my nephew Paul. Behind her is an experimental garden scene from 2004. I never finished it as I could not figure out how to...but she rescued it from my UFO pile and I am glad she did. My favorite part is the knitting I did for the dirt!
I tried so many different techniques here that I will not bore you with them. But I did like that knitting.
"For Cadfael", 1997. I was reading the entire 20 novel series then and was mentally in Shrewsbury all the time. This raw-edged applique collage was my version of Cadfael's garden going down to the river.
"Take Heart" was for my sister when we needed some cheering up. I was going through an extended Louis Comfort Tiffany phase at the time.
This is about 30" x 30". Is it not great??
Silver lives up above the lizard's cage now.
It does look nice there I think.
It's behind the frame above their bed and not tucking someone cozily in, which is a shame.
Crazy quilting was just getting rolling for me then, in 2001. Qwennie here is 9 already!
Embellished prints had begun....
She has always loved this one and, while there are things I like about it, there are more that I don't. So I didn't mind sending it off.
"Sisters Scrapbook Page" is one of the projects in my soon-to-be-released book!
The flurries of snow actually act as a secondary frame--there is another across the lower left corner. They each cover a part of the photograph that would have been difficult to augment with stitching or just wasn't that visually "necessary" to show anyway.
This measures 12" X 15".
This was actually my second ever crazy quilt, made in 1999. It is all cotton (I didn't have anything but in those days) with cotton batting and backing, and you can still see the influence of all the strip piecing I was doing then in these blocks. I free-motion spiral-quilted it for a neighbor's daughter, who was going off to college.
This quilt also alternates bars of plain fabric with crazy pieced ones. This time some of the CQ bars are composed of blocks, and others are long pieced bars on a foundation.
As long as I went slowly, my Juki could handle the heavy thread just fine. I used a size 110 Jeans needle, a free machine foot, and the feed dogs UP.
One of those recessed sewing machine tables would have been nice, but we make do!
It doesn't fray.
First I zigzagged down the center of the rick rack with a narrow clear thread.
It is just so cozy, draped over a down comforter.
I used some Mickey Lawler SkyDye fabric in the frame to suggest a pale winter sunrise...had to get a smidgen of warm color in there. Mickey sure knows her skies!
If you wish to download the PDF with complete instructions for this project, look on AQS's homepage here. It is second from the right in the top row.
Yes, that is a hoop...I don't normally use one but for the fine stitching required (as the scale is so small), a hoop will help me stitch in an even straight line.
A strip of silk/rayon velvet awaits its transformation, from a longish scrap...
...to these perfect strips! How cool is that?
This picture shows me pulling a strip of velveteen through the folding tip, past that silver heating element. While the machine is actually running, the heating element has a safety case that snaps into place so you can't burn your fingers. A little electric motor movers the fabric through...but with velveteen and velvet both, I tugged it as well because it is so thick. This worked fine.
And would you look at that? The velvet is below, the velveteen above. There is no way on God's green earth I could have gotten such straight bias tape (without squished edges) out of that velvet with a rotary cutter, ruler, and iron.
This is 18" X 18" and it is going to be a pillow. I love the velvet with the flannel and wool...and you know it is impossible for me not to include flowers somewhere, somehow...
The rick rack is from Moda and the velvet ribbon/gimp is from Simplicity...
Kerry Murphy kindly sent me the velvet pink ribbon that is behind the wide lace on the right; both laces got a dunking in potassium permanganate to give them that light gold tint...and the jacquard woven ribbon is from Simplicity, too (JoAnn's.)
You can see I didn't quite have enough of the wide lace so I just patched in some others. Crazy quilts are not about perfection! If this was in a competition it would matter, but on my bed it sure won't.
After appliqueing the lettering on by hand (the word is about 7" across), I began needle felting a background for the frame that would go around it. That is lace and then 4mm silk ribbon.
More silk ribbon going on. The RiverSilks ribbon works great because it is sturdy. The needlepunching scrunches it up, but doesn't shred it.
I cut out some wool leaves and needlepunched them onto the frame background. Those three large leaves are made from wool roving and knitting ribbon punched onto green flannel.
You knew there were going to be flowers!
A few more details and the center was done. But I needed to set this in a larger background.
I used a doily over a foundation of green dupioni silk for the background..this quilt measures about 14" X 14" completed.
Isn't this so great?
That black diamond shape looks a little familiar...this got me thinking about finishing up that Vintage CQ of mine.
I'd really like to make this one day.
Love it, love it, love it!
Here's a detail. Look how the quiltmaker buttonholed the edge of the quilt, too...
This is a detail from one of Kaffe Fassett's quilts that was part of his special exhibit in Houston this year. It looks like he simplified the piecing quite a bit from the antique one. In fact, I think these are strips made of diamond and triangle shapes, with those little black fans appliqued on after the fact. So there really aren't any "Y" seams here, it just looks like it.
Can't get enough of these fans...
There are never enough variations on a fan!
This quiltmaker sure loved embroidery.
Pretty darn nice....
Ms. H. E. Merrill--there's her name!--snuck in some velvet applique while she was at it, too.
With lots of quilting of course.