I snapped this picture yesterday while the sun was setting. A few of the borders are partially sewn together, but I still haven't decided how to join them together at the corners. Maybe cross them like shown, but a set in corner piece would look wonderful, Y-seams and all! There is no more fear of inset piecing, thanks to Mary Huey's dvd, but I can't tell if it will work yet. Each border will need to be together before I can make a decision. Not everyone feels good working this way, but I do.
The catch in this process is when you design-as-you-go. The center blocks came from the book, Quilt Lovely, by Jen Kingwell, but she completed the project as a pillow. I wanted something else. Let's look at it.
I rearranged the blocks from the way they were initially on the design wall like this--
...to the picture below. Can you see the difference?
It looked fine to me in person until I took a picture, and uploaded it to my phone and computer. I saw the 2 blocks on the right were deeper in color, and would look more balanced if they were opposite each other. Then I turned the fan points so they looked less matchy-matchy.
It looked fine to me in person until I took a picture, and uploaded it to my phone and computer. I saw the 2 blocks on the right were deeper in color, and would look more balanced if they were opposite each other. Then I turned the fan points so they looked less matchy-matchy.
The idea of a border stuck with me, and I found this Mona Luna in my stash. Very modern. The gold is a very traditional print with roses. Using a border at all was a more traditional layout.
The gold border was on, and I realized I had slightly less brown print than was needed. No worries. I slashed off an inch on each side of the gold, and came in just under the wire. There wasn't enough fabric left unless I wanted to piece the borders, and I thought it might ruin it with the big print. The problem I was encountering with it becoming a big square quilt was solved, too.
The dark border separates and frames the stars, and the border color unifies the yellows. It falls right in the middle of the yellows color-wise, and helps the bright yellow tone down while lifting the palest yellow. You might not see it yet, but the brown borders will be different widths. Yet another method to stretch the limited brown fabric.
The overall size was still too small, and begged for another border. I made a new template that somewhat followed the size and dimension of the fan blades, and started through this new stash another quilter had given me. New as in 'new to me'! These pieces are from the 70's back to some feedsack scraps. I pulled out parts of clothing with seams attached, and creatively cut some pieces from them. That gave me a real sense of how past quilters gathered their fabrics. Rarely did a quilt come from new fabric off a bolt. It was made from fabric that had lived another life before it was made into a quilt.
This isn't everyone's thing, I know, to go through old stacks of fabric. Some of them are bitty pieces, but I can see the potential here for beautiful things, and it lifts my heart. Can I let you in on a secret? Some of these belonged to my husband's grandmother, were passed through households, and found their way back to us. Isn't it romantic that my children and future generations will enjoy them?
Today I will simply sew, and live in the moment. The project is taking on a life all its own. Maybe the quilt will beg for another border when this one is on. Maybe it will be a fabric that begs to be given new life. Who knows, but this is why I am a quilter. It feeds my soul.The Pet Project Show opens tonight at midnight, and will feature some of the Doxie girls' and my favorite link ups from the past month. Look for it in the next post.
Until then...
Come on, Doxie girls.
Let's go sew.
Linking up with~
Monday Makers
Show Off Saturday
Sew Stitching Cute
Crazy Mom Quilts
Quilt Shop Gal
A Quilting Reader's Garden
Quoka Quilts
Confessions of a Fabric Addict
3 Day Weekend Sale!
6 comments:
Yes, the balance is good now for the block placement - amazing what happens when you snap a photo, step back, and take a look at it. I do that when I have a big quilt laid out - I see things differently when it's not right in front of me, lol. And I LOVE bags of scraps! In fact, I think it's an illness. About once a month I rummage through the scrap bin at our LQS and buy a $5 bag of scraps, picking out ones that I believe can be cut to usable size and call my name. I don't have any immediate plan for them, but one just never knows. See - it's an illness! Enjoy.
What a great balanced top. The blocks are so beautfiful. I will come back to see it finished. Thanks for sharing.
beautiful blocks! and look at those scraps!! I'm keeping my scraps and don't know when I'm going to use it, maybe I should sort it out color wise so it'll be easier to use or giveaway
That is such a wonderful quilt block that makes for a beautiful quilt.
I love that block, and yes, I do have Mary's DVD - it is so helpful. I photograph my work all the time. It is amazing what reality looks like through a lens. I, too. use repurposed fabric. Love what you've done so far with yous spontaneous construction. Thanks for linking to WIPs Be Gone. Always enjoy seeing progress.
These are beautiful blocks - with y-seams no less! I really love the fabric choices in this quilt, and the border too.
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