OK, my sincere apologies for the very long delay. I have thought of writing a blog post for 2-3 weeks now, but never sat down long enough to do it. I got back from MQX 6 weeks ago, whipped out some client quilts and happily set off on my personal hiatus.
Yup, you read that right. I am on quilting vacay for a while. I have not quit taking the client quilts, but I am not quilting any but a baby quilt this month, and probably only one next month. The girl needs a little holiday shopping money!
I have been feeling the burnout for several months now. I watch my own projects get pushed to the back burner, and then when I do get to work on them I feel rushed and guilty. This is ME time to recharge my batteries, and hopefully get something into the works that I love for next year.
My first order of business was to get this quilt off the frame, finished, etc AND bound. I still have some detail work, and embroidery to finish, but for all intents and purposes, she is done. In April I will show a full shot of it :-) We had a day without power thanks to a very windy night, and I sat for about 4 hours by a window hand-stitching the binding. After about 5 scalloped-piped bindings, I think I have finally gotten the knack of it. This one is very well done.
I also loaded a piece of peach silk that was marked in September. I first did this design on a piece of green Radiance in the summer with colored threads. I thought that it would look cool, but it takes so much patience and control to quilt with black thread on green fabric, that I really didn't think it stood a chance of becoming a show quilt. Maybe I will convert it to a fancy pillow - LOL. Rather than ditch the WC idea and design, I decided I'd go for round #2 and try a monochromatic approach. The silk is peachier than the photo shows. Also, it is wet in the picture.
This gave me an opportunity to tweak things about the design that were a PIA the first time, and modify other areas. Much of it is the same. I am just sick with love for this herringbone filler. It is tedious, but so worth the time. I found that this color silk did not match any of the silk threads available. I opted to go to Wonderfil's Invisifil, a poly thread. This is such a fantastically fine thread - lesson to you, it is a royal pain to remove so make sure you like what you stitch!.
My plan is to get a binding on this before December 1, and enter the little beast in the Paducah show. It may be glued to the backside, but it will have a finished photo by then!
I have also been making a couple of fun magazine quilts on feathered wreaths and Cathedral Windows, but you will have to wait until next spring to see those.
My boxes of classroom handouts and fabrics are getting packed up to ship off to Road to California next month. OMG...what a lot of things to ship. Teachers, if you teach for MQX, you know that we have a great deal there - they bring the batting for us. The box of batting I am shipping is enormous (but it will save me from cutting batting in the wee hours should my flight not be on time!).
I am also getting the class things readied for my 6 classes at Mid-Atlantic in February, just a month after Road. Thankfully, this show is a wee bit closer to home. I have 2 new classes debuting there, the details for which I am still ironing out. I have 2 new class samples on Templates on my machine as I type! I love the templates classes, but what I learned from doing them in 2015 and 2016 is that one class does not fit all. For next year, I have split the material into Templates I and Creative Templates 2, to hopefully better serve the needs of more quilters. This week, the classes open for MQX East (show in April 2018), and these will be 2 of my 6 classes offered there.
Phew...that really has been a lot of work, but let me show you something that has been a crazy bit of fun. OK, maybe its just crazy.
A couple posts ago I showed a snippet of a design I came up with for a cathedral window, based on an ultra cool church in Barcelona. I gathered (by that I mean, I went through my stash then I bought 30 yards of new colors) batiks of all shades of the rainbow. I have not worked with batik in a long time. It is nice to sew, no raveling.
Being that batiks are notorious bleeders, I presoaked every fabric about 4 times until nothing bled.
There was A LOT of excess dye, for every color.
Even the yellow.
My first attempt was to free-piece sections of windows. It was just not coming out as I wanted. Seams were in odd places, sometimes bulky. It resembled the actual church windows, but not my vision of this glorious window.
On a moment of total crazy, I decided I'd try repiecing one of them using 1" squares -- about 800 of them. Here it is layed out on my cutting mat, which of course, I planned to use the next day for something. That was foolish.To assemble these into the 16" circle below, it only tool me about 8-9 hours. Talk about a crazy amount of time! I am fairly anal about my seams all pressing the right way (Good Lord, not open!), and about these 1/2" patches having good matches. I just failed to recognize that 3/4 of every 1" square was going to be on the backside in the seams! BUT...it is just the look I wanted -- one that glows more and is luminescent. The first attempt just did not satisfy this.
I have this next section started. It has nearly 3 times the area though.
I am trying a different approach for these. I am partially strip-piecing them.
These have small sections of 3 or 4 pieced units. I don't have enough prepped to know if this will be a seam nightmare, but seams can be pressed the other direction too. The prospect of spending 4000 hours to piece the 10000 squares in these windows will undoubtedly make me move on to another quilt!
Lastly, some of you probably know already, as this is old news, but my Twisted Sister quilt won a 2nd place at IQF Houston 2 weeks ago. I wish I could have gone to see it there, but part of me really needs the rest too.
Later, quilters!
7 comments:
Happy to hear that you are creating again, at least blog wise. I hope that you will do a new book or two on your template classes. I cannot go to the big shows, fixed income, so the internet and books are my world. The cathedral quilt will be a show stopper for sure, will enjoy watching you create it.
Looks like you have been very busy. I have aquired an interest in Batiks, but haven't tackled them. I have washed almost 65 fat quarters waiting nw to be pressed. Me time is important to be creative. Keep on going forward. Chris
Love the photos today, just gorgeous. May I ask about the fabrics used in the lovely floral applique border? Besides the piped, scalloped binding being off the hook, the fabrics used with the applique are so lovely. Are they hand-dyed? So pretty and so precise! I am super excited to be taking your "Fearless Feathers" class at Road to California, and am wait listed for your "Dainty Fills" class. What an opportunity, omg. I just received my very first LA machine - a HandiQuilter Fusion that is sitting in boxes in my garage, getting ready to be put together! Thanks for the post, always so inspirational to see your work up close in a photo!
Congratulations! I had the pleasure of being able to see your beautiful quilt in Houston. It was prominently displayed on an “end cap” and really caught everyone’s eye as the walked by. Absolutely stunning. I have seen your blog posts about this beauty, but pictures really don’t do it justice. ❤️
I love your little squares SO MUCH!!!!!! You're right about that approach catching a better luminosity. It's going to be absolutely worth the time and effort in the end.
Congratulations on your quilt. As always, your quilting is amazing and it's interesting so see what you're going through in the design process of your Barcelona quilt. I think I better
soak the batiks that I have. That's a lot of dye.
Don’t worry. I was there to see your Twisted Sister for you. It was wonderful seeing a quilt made by someone I cyber-know, if only through your blog! Congratulations!!,
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