Thursday, June 27, 2013

Heather's progress


Well, it's all built and now let the quilting begin! I've only owned my sewing machine for a year (a little less, actually!) so the chance to do some really custom quilting, given the small size of this project, was an absolute delight for me!

I knew that I wanted to really delineate each building, really make each individual building pop from the one next to it, so I did a LOT of pivoting and quilted straight lines on each building, but quilted vertical in some, horizontal in others, and diagonal on still others (and changing the direction of the diagonal, too!).  I started at the left edge and just slowly pivoted my way from one edge to the other, lots of slow sewing, stop, pivot; sew, stop, pivot; and sew on...! 




I added a straight across zig-zag stitch in the road section, and I love how it turned out.  I left the SP (the actual inspiration part) bare, as a bit of trapunto (remember, it has an extra layer of batting) to help it really pop. Now I have some ideas for the background bits, so off to work on that. I think I'll follow the contour of the hills, but still thinking of what to do with the water.  Maybe a decorative stitch to resemble waves? We shall see!

Heather V.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Skyscrapers and the Beach Hut




I think it's finished, though I am always open to suggestions.  Initially I thought there would be multiple huts but then decided on one with more detail.  I wavered on the skyscrapers, whether to make the fabric pieces smaller to represent distance or to leave them as they are, more slab like.

The bottom represents the ocean and a base to the busier middle and top.  I also wanted the top and bottom to be blue so the middle orange hut colors would be a sharp contrast.  The bottom of the hut is purples though they look black in the photo.  My husband saw the "sand" area as very blank (I agree); my plan is to do quilting there to make it look more textured.

Architectural Challenge - First Try

Well, I sat, uninspired for a long time.  To tell the truth, I am still.
I decided to make fabric with my blacks to use for the shadowy window areas.
I was using some white linen for the stucco portions for texture.
I scaled my photo to fit the challenge thinking it would be good working size.

This window is the upper most left one.  I wasn't going to trim the left side until more was done and I picked my "brick" fabric.  I can make this work, but I am asking myself, why? There are other things I'd rather be playing with. 

But...

I'm not feeling the love and joy of creation with this one. Maybe I am too literal?
How do I find my Modern Groove?
I may try again in a few days and change the color palette or something or I may sit on it longer.
Let me know what you think?



Sunday, June 23, 2013

Another post on New York Blooms


Hi again everyone - just been trying out another arrangement and I really like the blocks set this way rather than in the square format. So two photos, one with just the four blocks and then another with a piece of the subway fabric just pinned to see what it looks like. This fabric I had intended to surround the blocks no matter what arrangement. I tried them in a horizontal line but that did nothing for me at all and I am more than happy with this one.  The "blooms" are 7" square.

After borders it will not end up looking so long and skinny.
 
I haven't got them quite straight in the line-up, intending to get a hold of some of the grey gridded fabric which is on the market now instead of my old flannel!

See you!!




New York Blooms

Hi all, taken me longer to add to my two previous blocks due to my hand surgery but I have now completed four, next step is to decided if this is the configuration I am happy with or not, then whether to sash or not and I intend to do a made fabric border of course!!


After I had made two of them I wasn't happy with the result but after encouragement from a fellow blogger I thought I really should persevere and make the four.  I think part of the problem was that this is quite different from my usual quilting and patchwork so I had to get my head around just going with the flow instead of working with set pieces. Also had it not been fro Helen very kindly sending me another lovely piece of the Manhattan subway fabric I could have been in trouble!

More sewing time on this planned for tomorrow and hope I have another post quite soon.
Hope everyone has a good week.

Saturday, June 22, 2013

My Ice Castle So Far

I finally got a start on the architecture challenge. I found some really cool fabric that works well for the ice. This is what I have so far, for my ice castle:


This is the mess I made while auditioning fabrics and cutting little pieces:


--carol e.

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Bermuda Tea Towel Quilt Finish!

Well, that took awhile but it is done (except I have to snip threads) and was claimed by my son for his bed!  Ultimately, I think it will be a picnic quilt for concerts on the green and the like. 


It's not quilted heavily except on the tea towel which is nice and cuddly.  Close up below:


Quick review - I hadn't worked with so much "made fabric" before and there are some spots that came apart which I will have to hand sew back together (small price to pay!). 
Initially, I though this might be a low volume quilt, but I found that terribly boring and started adding lots of color and orphan blocks. 
As I played, it did all flow together and take shape on it's own.  Adding the ribbon was a new trick which I quite like and I pieced large scale concentric squares for the backing. 
Wrapping up, making this quilt made me realize that I prefer to go with the flow rather than follow patterns, although I do both.  I tend to start with patterns and adapt or modify them as it suits me.
Thanks for a wonderful learning experience Victoria!!!  Now I can start my architectural challenge - although I will probably miss that deadline : )

Click Clack

I'm still on the track constructing another section for the architecture challenge.


D.H. visited the studio and inquired "what are you making for me?"  Tilting my head toward the design wall indicating this section. He scrutinized it, removed it from the design wall and held it up to himself declaring. "Ah a vest for me ; a fancy vest."

All of the above antics were delivered with a straight face until he looked at me and we both  dissolved into tears of laughter. You just got to love em.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Riding the Rails

I'm riding the rails today with the first part of my challenge


Today is my day to visit the N.S.W. Quilt Guild Annual Show. Over 400 quilts on exhibit as well as traders. I will walk, bus, train and light rail to get there but it is always worth the journey.

You never know perhaps I will return with a new view on the challenge.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Starting ...


Here's my sketch to help with the correct size ...
I've condensed and edited the original photo.




Starting to fit chunks of made fabric into the sketch
and sew together parts ...


Architectural Challenge

Monday, June 10, 2013

Ellen's play


Ellen sent me a tease of a photo of her architecture inspiration. ;-) She says, 
Mine might be more 'from my window' than architectural, but I'm loving what I'm doing. Thank you Victoria for the inspiration. 

Saturday, June 8, 2013

New look Train Station

I cropped and  flipped and lots of other options in paint shop. It was a lot like cut and stitch type of quilting. The end result is the starting point for my quilt.

 
 
 
I'm happy with the result.
 Federation Homes ; early 1900's Australian houses had corrugated iron veranda roofs which were often painted in colourful stripes. The new train station continues the tradition.




apiece of made fabric from an earlier challenge .... it was in the parts department and is a perfect place to start.  Next some red and white stripes ..

Friday, June 7, 2013

susan's inspiration



I admire this house every time I go to Placida, close to where I live. I think it will be a fun one to use for the challenge. We do things bright here in Florida!
Thanks, 
Susan

LOVE the HOUSE!!! and COLOR!!!! ~V

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Playing Catch-Up

Hi All:

I am finally posting my inspiration photo for the architecture challenge.


I'm combining our challenge with my guild's challenge quilt for our show in October. We are supposed to make a "Charming Cottage".  My idea of a cottage is really more of a cabin and I want to have it set in a garden.

I'll post later to show you the challenge fabrics: 5 bright charm squares. I think my cabin - cottage is going to be quite bright!


Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Inspiration photo before/after

I said it might not happen, but it did: your comments totally influenced my Architecture challenge decision, and deck stairs and geraniums it is. Here's the original photo (left) and after some Photoshop play (right), so I have something more abstract to work from:



"After" is the result of several rounds of copy/paste/flip/rotate/scale, followed by application of the "dry brush" effect. This would make a lovely quilt at, oh, 60"x72" or so, but is now way too complex for a smaller work, so I'll be sampling in some way.

I've not yet started working with fabric, other than to acquire yardage, as this palette bears no relationship to my stash (other than those pops of bright red!). A wildly fauvist approach to color would be fun but is not where inspiration is leading. All those grays will be giant step away from usual for me, so that's what I'll be doing. This required a stop in at my LQS where I spent 3X budget for pale green and gray fabrics, including a "Bali Pop" jelly roll ranging from ivory to black that will be very useful.

Of course, even a fistful of fat quarters and a Bali Pop quickly adds up to more yardage than a small quilt needs, so my insanely over-ambitious muse is whispering, "a triptych could be fun."

Sometimes I wish she'd just shut up or go bother someone else for a while. I'm aiming for one and we'll see what happens.

moving right along...




Now for some contrast.
The color splash that's part of the Academy chapel structure that you see in this picture actually  occurs on every spire..   The spires are built with a one-foot gap that's filled with stained glass.   The long view only shows the splash of color at the head of the chapel, but is apparent when you look up from where ever you stand.  The off-white stained glass rectangles are an understatement to all of that.  Symbolism everywhere.
The chapel was completed in 1962.
It's hard to stay focused on just one aspect of the chapel.  There are so many directions one could head.
PR

Train Depot Progress

I am making some progress on my architectual quilt and it's starting to look like the Santa Fe Depot in San Diego.  I drew a "blueprint" on paper and it is really helping with size and lay out of the building.

After seeing Peggy R's Air Force Academy quilt, I see we both have the same creative ideas - way to go Peggy!!

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Two Options, One Decision

When the architecture challenge was announced, I immediately had in mind what I'd like to do.. the St. Paul Winter Carnival Ice Palace. They don't make one every year, but when they do, it's always so beautiful. We have a poster of one hanging at work. I took a picture of it.. and I'm pretty sure this will be my inspiration.



I could also have fun with the Milwaukee Museum of Art, but...maybe I'll do that one another day. For this one I decided to go with my gut instinct and use the Ice Palace. Haven't started on it yet. We're getting company, and I need to clean. After the company leaves, I'll start on this project!



--carol e.



Peggy's progress





I jumped into this project because I remembered the subdued stained glass in this photo -- simple off-white rectangles.   I had stacks of off-white rectangles left from Bonnie Hunter's last mystery when I took a detour from her design and ended up not needing these sets of rectangles.   So here's another detour from Easy Street, this time to Colorado Springs Air Force Academy chapel interior.  Thanks Victoria for the challenge.

~Peggy Rs' 

Roccagal update

so far... process by roccagal

So, I started out making a very elaborate plan of the quilt I planned on a full size paper and had also decided to use only solids in my quilt. 
The very second I started to sew that whole idea went down the toilet (as usual) and I began intuitively grabbing fabric,keeping my inspiration pic close at hand.  I made these 5 on Sunday and a couple more late in the evening.  I haven't got pics of those yet.
 Picking the fabrics and deciding what syle I will make is so much fun!

 I am happy with the results so far but I may scrap the pink house which is supposed to have old,peeling paint.  I think it looks cracked instead!    


I also plan on a more irregular setting of the windows than what I had initially imagined. 

I think I may actually get this done on time! (famous last words)

I think I decided on a name- Vista;Burano e I Suoi Colori

Monday, June 3, 2013

Architecture inspiration

I have been through several ideas for inspirational pictures for the Architecture Challenge. The first that popped in my head was a picture I took at the Canary Islands a couple of years ago. I loved the rounded shape of the white stairs against the red.

However, looking at it now, the picture itself was not as great as I remembered (are they ever?), so I moved on to my favourite architect and favourite building – Casa Batllô by Antoni Gaudi (none of the following pictures of the building are mine). On my first visit to Barcelona we only got to see the exterior, which by all means is simply amazing
 
 
but when I happened to stroll by on my second visit there years later, the building, at the time owned by an insurance company I think, was open to the public as part of the celebrations of the 150 year anniversary of Gaudi’s birth. It was the most amazing feeling walking around in the house I had read so much about about in my Gaudi books, looking at all the details everywhere. I was surprised to see all the clever and highly decorative solutions to simple things like ventilation and light shafts. I bet yours look nothing like this.

Wouldn’t it be the perfect inspiration for a quilt! I thought so, but then I remembered we are to use made fabrics in the quilt and somehow that did not work with what I had in my head. You can read more about the building here.

Having spent too much time browsing through Google Images, in the end I landed close to home, at a trade school near where we live. The building is a couple of years old and I still haven’t been inside even though I was following the building process eagerly. The façade is very modern and striking, and would fit perfectly for this challenge.

I want to use this opportunity to experiment with free-form-but-not-improvisational piecing, so as a first exercise I made a rough sketch, just catching how the light and shadows and angles create dept.

Next I did another sketch focusing more on proportions and angles.

I think I’ll use this as a blueprint and I already have the made fabric ready to go. I just need to finish another quilt first, oh where, oh where did that inspiration go...

Tea Towel Challenge - Progress!

My goal for the weekend was this:
My back for the quilt was finished and I layered everything.  But first - I added this:
Can you see it there? Just outside the blue wave-y HSTs?  It made such a positive difference to the top - just like V was explaining last week.  Although I had always planned to add it, I didn't know if it would look good - and I was really glad it did.  So, this counts as another new thing I'd never done before.

This one is going to be a tough one to quilt - she doesn't lay flat.  I figured I'd start with the tea towel since it's in the middle and the stretchiest part - I'm quilting latitude & longitude lines on it. 
I don't quilt by hand - only by machine, although I admire folks who do any or all by hand. 
Now that the quilting is started, this probably won't get set aside until it's done.  That's how it is with me - there might be long pauses during piecing and especially before layering, but once it comes together, I'm usually ready to finish it.

This is also the first time I'm posting, so please forgive any errors or omissions and let me know best practices!



Sunday, June 2, 2013

Scrap-Swap Block: "Afterlife"

This scrap swap was a true challenge, a mishmash of stuff very unlike what I usually work with. Best of the lot was a large piece of "day of the dead" dancing skeletons that I immediately knew would be the focus of ... something.



That little guy face down on the dancefloor cracks me up!

Something turned out to be a 24-spoke Dresden plate with ric-rac trim. I used a set of coordinating green/mustard/black prints from the swap for the spokes, cutting whole pieces from a large floral, and making slice-sew-slice fabric from the others. I added more solid spokes from a leafy green/black/white stash floral to reach the needed number of pieces. Alternating spokes were tipped from the swap with a basket print (would have used more of that one, but I'd already cut into it for an applique project, whoops!), and a pink 1930s-look faux gingham that I disliked so much I included it to make the challenge that much more interesting:


The red and yellow rings are strips of bias-cut near-solid batiks from my stash, folded in half and unserted under the seam. Also from the swap are the celestial prints and pink tulips in the corners. The tropical print on the sides is from my stash. It's quilted with blue and orange metallic thread in a spiral pattern.



Best surprise is how the dresden wedges, from a distance, look (to my eye) like a Mayan heiroglyph. Wish I could take credit for that, but it's a happy accident. I'm also thrilled with how well all these very un-related pieces come together as a whole.

The block is now 26"x26" (quite a bit larger than intended!). That second ric-rac and bias rim is quite ornery about lying flat, although the quilting has tamed it significantly. Rather than rush to add binding, I've zig-zag stitched all around the edge and have tossed it in with a load of laundry. None of the swap fabrics were pre-washed, and I've used cotton batting, so shrinkage might turn out to be my friend.

If it's still not laying flat after a ride in the dryer, I'll make a large 24" pillow sham from it and use it as my reading-in-bed pillow.

Thanks for organizing this challenge, Victoria! Although my first reaction to the swap fabrics was to wonder what I could possibly make from them, necessity has once again been the mother of invention, and I've had a fun couple of days creating something truly unique!

{Stephanie}