Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Wedding Quilt

A week or so ago, I was chatting with Kristal about wedding quilts.  Basically, I lamented that I would love to make a wedding quilt for Josh and I, but that I just won't have the time to get it done.

Then, Kristal started snooping.  And then my friends offered to make us a wedding quilt!  Because I love star blocks, the group had decided to make wonky stars in various sizes.

Wedding Quilt Inspiration

Above is my inspiration for this quilt.  We saw a lot of snowfall this winter, and perhaps my favorite sight to see was wet, black branches weighed down by snow.  The color scheme comes from the winter landscape.

I can't wait to see this quilt!

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Windows


St. Mary's Squares
Originally uploaded by Todd Klassy

Here's some inspiration for my next quilting project, which will remain a secret. I'll give you the only hint my mom ever gave me about secrets: windows. You can view a gallery of inspiration here.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Look, Mom!

Today my friend Jenny came over to play.  We stuffed our faces, saw a dead possum, and I taught her how to make a quilt!  Well, sort of.  I taught her how to make a quilt block.  A Sawtooth Star to be exact!

DSCN0567

We dug into the old stash (which is really just large pieces of fabric leftover from finished projects, since you guys know I don't stash) and chose some cute fabrics, including some Amy Butler and a nice batik.  I showed Jenny how to use the rotary cutter and grid ruler, and I also taught her about 1/4" seams and pressing seams between steps.

DSCN0566 

The whole thing is only 4.5" square.  What a tiny block for a first-timer!  She did a great job, and I was quite proud of my teaching, too (I should be good at that, though, right?).   Next time I'm going to have to teach her how to do binding.

DSCN0565

Here's Jenny and her finished quilt.  Don't you love this picture?  She looks pleased as punch!  Actually, Jenny looks like this pretty much all the time, except when she's really furious.  She's the happiest, smiliest person I know.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

MT Swap Inspiration

MT Swap Inspiration

I love quilts!  There's something about all that patchwork that just makes me absolutely giddy.  My favorite quilts are bold and geometric.  Quilts that exhibit brights against a pale, neutral background are especially gorgeous.  I really love star blocks (couldn't you tell by my Round 2 picks?) of all types.  Flying Geese are some of the coolest traditional blocks I've ever seen; I love them en masse or just a few sprinkled over a solid background fabric.  Right now I'm really digging quilts that use the same block in multiple sizes, like these two.

There are no colors that I hate, but I'm not a fan of dusty colors or a shabby chic look.  I especially love chartreuse, magenta, and gray.  Prints, batiks, and solids are all acceptable fabrics in my book.

Perhaps the only thing I really hate is when a quilt isn't squared up properly.  I think it makes the overall piece look badly done, no matter how nice the piecing and quilting may be.  Any shape is fine, but I particularly love equilateral square quilts.

I can't wait to see what my partner makes for me!  I wonder if I'll be able to pick it out of the flickr pool...

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Joy in the New Year

I never posted on Jacquie's Joy in the New Year challenge post, but I have been keeping a mental list of the items I would like to have finished before the start of 2010.

Original List

  • Black Eyed Susan
    • finish top
    • quilt
    • bind
  • Go Navy! T-shirt Quilt
    • make top
    • drop off for quilting
    • bind
  • French Braid Quilt
    • quilt
    • bind
  • Alexander Henry Cars Quilt
    • quilt
    • bind
  • Ugly Eye Spy Quilt
    • quilt
    • bind
  • Brick Road
    • bind
As you can see, there's a lot of quilting and binding that needs to be done.  I can finish tops with no problem, but I usually get paralyzed at the quilting stage.  I get nervous about wrecking my work in the quilting stage, and so the tops languish in their unfinished states.

I feel a renewed dedication to finishing these projects and have worked on things, finished things, and also taken things from storage so I can stare at them and feel guilty about not finishing them.  Feast your eyes on the updated list!

Updated List

  • Black Eyed Susan
    • finish top
    • quilt
    • bind
  • Go Navy! T-shirt Quilt
    • make top
    • drop off for quilting
    • make binding
    • bind
  • French Braid Quilt
    • quilt
    • bind
  • Alexander Henry Cars Quilt
    • quilt
    • bind
  • Ugly Eye Spy Quilt
    • quilt
    • bind
  • Brick Road
    • bind


Go ahead.  Congratulate me on some progress.

PS-- I went to the Handmade Holiday craft show, saw Krystal, bought some cute junk, and had a lot of fun.  I will definitely go again next year.  I love craft shows!

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Tree Skirt


Tree Skirt
Originally uploaded by mamacjt

Absolutely wonderful. I would love to put this round my Christmas tree. I wonder if there's any chance of a pattern or tutorial...

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Mad Scientist

Last weekend I did a few experiments. Exciting, right?

Firstly, I finally (and I mean finally) used the free motion quilting foot that I bought at the end of the summer. I'll admit, I was afraid of it. I had no idea how easy (or hard) it would be to use that thing. I could only imagine what it would be like, fighting the quilt sandwich around, dragging it through the machine, using all the muscles I could muster.

Turns out it was really easy. Must have been because I didn't have to work against the feed dogs.

Secondly (this is the real news), I designed my very own mini quilt top. As far as I'm concerned, it's gorgeous.

My inspiration came from The BooDilly on flickr (who, I discovered, has a blog). These two quilts inspired in me by their quilting motif and boldness of color. And, I agree, simpler is better.





Wonderful, right?

So I made some plans.



Then I cut some fabric and sewed it together and ended up with this.



It's not quilted yet. I've got it hanging up in the sewing room so that I can keep looking at it and make up my mind about what quilting motif to go with. Lines or arcs, that's how I'm leaning.

Improvisational Quilting

Movements spread easily across the web, especially among a ring of connected bloggers. I'm noticing this more now than ever, as a result of Jacquie's (Tallgrass Praire Studio) new endeavor, Project Improv.

Of course, many quilters have already been inspired by the improvisational style of Denyse Schmidt (yours truly included), but the idea seems to currently be spreading like wildfire.

A bad thing?
Hardly.

Many quilters who read Jacquie's blog are stepping outside the block, so to speak, and trying something new.

Up to this point, what I usually see in the way of improvisational piecing is what's called a "wonky" log cabin block-- a cattywampus log cabin block. I first saw this in Denyse Schmidt's design Drunk Love in a Log Cabin quilt. (See what I mean about the internet being a petri dish of collective consciousness?)

I've been thinking about this a little bit. Jacquie asked specifically for quilters to create that style of block for the Project Improv charity quilts, and so that's what's getting made. I'm not participating, but I am challenging myself to do my own thing, if you get my drift.

I'm not a hater, but my own thing does not include wonky log cabin blocks. I do not like the messy look of free piecing. What appeals to me about quilting is the sense of geometry and symmetry, the sense of color and movement, and balance. I don't get a feeling of satisfaction from free pieced blocks.

Improvisation does not have to be the random sewing of fabrics together. There can be neatness and balance and symmetry.

So that's where I'm at. Producing a contemporary piece that follows my own pattern and appeals to my visual senses of space and geometry.