Monday, March 25, 2013

think spring!

this past week's project quilting challenge was to "be inspired by spring." it was also the final project quilting challenge of the year :( i wanted to use this image of swallows in flight (which also happens to be one of my tattoos):

according to the book i got it out of "The Encyclopedia of Signs and Symbols," the image means "new beginnings," which is a perfect theme for spring!

i also wanted to make some flying geese, and looked through my various quilting magazines for some patterns. i lucked out with this copy of quilter's newsletter, which featured this gorgeous flying geese quilt:

there is a pattern for this entire quilt by Linda Cordell Wilkey in the feb/march 2010 quilter's newsletter, but i just used the part for the flying geese border. after i made the border, i enlarged my swallow image to fit on a white patch in the middle, and traced it onto the glue side of fusible web with a sharpie marker. after i had that done, i ironed it on to the white fabric. it didn't turn out quite as dark as i would have liked:


i decided the best way to deal with this would be to add some hand embellishments to the birds. i've been oogling an article in the april/may 2012 issue of quilting arts for a while now, called "extreme embellishment" by a quilter named Karen Loprete (that is a link to her site if you are interested.) here is a picture of one of the quilts i've been admiring, called "joy":


while i knew i wouldn't have time to do anything this intricate in one week, i had many dreams of a heavily embellished quilt square with birds in flight, resembling a kite for spring. well, here's what i got done:

i started off with some beads around the edges of the birds
then stitched around the edges of the birds, and added some "hashmarks" to fill make them blacker.


then i decided each corner needed it's own brightly colored "shisha"mirror. these things are hand-stitched, and boy did they take a LOT of time to do. but i think they look pretty bad-ass, so, completely worth the effort.
but after i did that, and quilted around the flying geese units, i found myself pushing the limits of how late i can stay awake on a saturday night, and the quilt was due the next morning! i went to bed with it about as done as it was going to get, with plans to make and add the binding in the morning before work. well, when i woke up on sunday morning, i realized that i had a BUNCH of stuff to do around the house, AND go to the grocery store, AND spend some quality time with my little two-year-old wild-man, AND show up to work at 3pm. so i just ended up zig-zag stitching around the edges for the binding real quick and submitting it as finished like this:


despite the many dreams i had for a beautiful kite-tail, strings of beads hanging off the edges of the bottom of the quilt, and a much darker image in the middle, i think it turned out pretty well. and i got to have a good time with the little guy AND get all my chores/errands done. oh yeah, and i went to work too :)

here are a few bonus pictures of rowan helping me with this project:

rowan actually took this picture of "mommy's thimble." as far as i know, this is his first photographic endeavour. not too shabby!

little hands with "mommy's thimble"
here he is looking into one of the mirrors. i think he likes it!
and here's the link to all the other amazing entries this week!

that's all for this one, bye bye!

Sunday, March 10, 2013

hexy tree

with the fifth project quilting challenge up on Sunday, it was time to stop the quilt-a-long blocks and get down to business. for those of you unfamiliar with project quilting, you can check it out here.

this week's challenge has to do with print publications, and--in a nutshell--we were asked to pick a magazine, commit to it, and then turn to page 28. this was to be the inspiration for this week's quilt. while it was tempting to peek at a bunch of "page 28s" and then pick the best one, this was a no-no.

i just want to take a time-out moment and say that i LOVE this idea for a challenge. also, i will NEVER AGAIN be able to look at page 28 in a magazine without wondering "what if..."

SO FUN!

well, we are never at a shortage for print publications in this house. my husband writes and collects zines, and we are both big readers. well, i guess i should say he is a big reader and i used to be one...until i started quilting. anyway, my top choices for publications were (with links included in case you're not familiar):

a zine

a found magazine

a baker creek seed catalog

vanity fair

thrasher

or this juxtapoz



eventually i decided i would have a better chance at a more interesting picture with the juxtapoz so i was thinking about going with that, when billy (my husband) looked at page 28 on the juxtapoz and said "interesting...good luck with that." of course i had to look, which sealed the deal, and i immediately regretted it.

here was what i found:

oh great. a bunch of effigies in the desert. swell.
i can only imagine this is some type of representation of either refugees or already dead folks from a war-torn region in africa: sad, and attention-worthy, but SO not my cup of tea. usually I try to avoid political discussions when possible.

right about now, i'm thinking, "why did i not pick the baker creek seed catalog?" 

broccolli, kale, cholorabi, beets, melons, whatever!

page 28 of baker creek seed catalog

 
page 28 of quilting arts
page 28 of Doris (a zine out of Asheville)

page 28 of thrasher

page 28 of found
page 28 of a lion brand yarn catalog
page 28 of vanity fair

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

well, once i stopped with the "shoulda coulda woulda's". i decided to get to work. what i do see in the african desert effigy picture is a semi-barren landscape. i also see people wearing some bright colors on their clothes. i also am inspired by the artist's statement about his piece, which goes as follows:

"The battle goes on as the world rapidly races ahead
The casualties litter the fields and gutters
waste, garbage.
I look at these outcasts, bruised and battered from the battle with abandon;
and their innocent bleedings evoke a compassion in me as I pick them, bathe them, give them roof, nurse their wounds; rear them with the emotional touch of a mother...until the new yam festival."

i can definitely relate to the concept of being a nurse/mother combo.

this also reminds me of one of my favorite bukowski poems, "alone with everybody"
you can follow the link if you want to read it. it's pretty depressing though...just a warning.

while i initially wanted to post a nice blog with pictures about how i made the quilt, and the way it evolved throughout the week, it is almost 60 degrees outside and i think i would rather go outside and play than sit behind this computer screen. so without further adieu, here is my latest masterpiece!






basically, i just tried to emulate the shape and colors of the photo without getting too political. i also felt compelled to use hexagons for the first time, which i think turned out pretty well. the materials i used were an old shirt, a couple of curtains, some yarn from the gigantic antique/craft vendor store in my town, and of course some quilting cottons.

i think I'll call it "hexy tree."

YAY!

also, all the project quilting quilts for the week are subject to a public vote. so if you like my quilt (or even if you don't), and it's between the dates of 3/11/13 and 3/15/13 you can go here to VOTE FOR IT!

thanks for reading, I'm headed outdoors with this guy:

bye bye blog!




Saturday, March 2, 2013

MFB QAL

it is 1:35 in the morning and I could have kept quilting for another two hours, but I decided to be a responsible adult and go to bed. my goal for today was to complete a wonky star block from the blog fiber of all sorts--the most recent block for my favorite block quilt-a-long, and the only one I haven't yet made. and I did!

wonk wonk

but I didn't stop there. I decided it might be time to add a little grey into my quilt. and I found a terrific grey cuckoo clock print from pink castle fabrics in my stash.

it's the one draped over the chair in the foreground


i am also digging the star theme tonight, so I went to town on four small "road to oklahoma" blocks (you can find the link with instructions here on amy's creative side) which I am planning to place together in such a way that they will form a nice bright white star in the middle:


well, i looked at the clock when i was done cutting all that out, and noticed it was already 0100. i thought i'd better just leave it at that, but then the sewing machine started calling my name, and i ended up doing a little tiny piecing before calling it a night. here's what I have done so far:

the block for the top left corner


                                                                          and this

i love assembly line piecing!



and now i am officially BEAT. good night!