Mighty Lucky One Fabric Challenge Take Two

Mighty Lucky One Fabric Challenge with Tula Pink

Take one bold stripe and play. That's it. See what happens with no plan in mind.

The center of this piece started as I was prepping for the Mighty Lucky Quilt Challenge in July. I wanted to see what would happen with the stripe and the quarter square triangle. Then I added one border for fun. Now I am adding more borders. I want to see what I can do with the stripe. How many ways can I manipulate the directionality? How can I fussy cut? Can I make it confuse you that it is only a single fabric?

After the first round I went out and bought a couple of metres of the fabric. I'm going to play until I run out, or I get bored. Welcome to the current Morning Make.

Fabric is the Tick Tock Stripe in Mint from Chipper by Tula Pink.

Antonio's Quilt - Modern Improv Quilt for Blogger's Quilt Festival

Modern Improv Quilt

Sneaking in under the wire for an entry for the Blogger's Quilt Festival. I remember when Amy started the festival, in part a way for those of us at home to share, be busy, and get excited while a large part of the industry was at Quilt Market/Festival. This was before Instagram even. Now, it really comes down to all the delicious eye candy in one spot. With prizes!

I'd hoped to have a new finish to share, but I am only just getting the binding on. So I am reposting one of my favourite finishes of the year.

Antonio's Quilt started with an image shared by Katrina Hertzer of her son and his painting in progress. I was so drawn to Antonio's shape that I immediately went into the sewing room. It took me a few years to actually get to a finished quilt, but it was worth the wait!

Completely improvised. Some clear intention in shape making, some slabs for the background, and rather dense quilting with Aurifil to make the design really pop.

Modern Improv Quilt Detail

To read more about the quilt check out the original post.

To see all the quilts in the festival, and they run the gamut of style and technique, make sure you check out all of the Blogger's Quilt Festival.

And did you know I teach these improv techniques? Check out my Classes Offered for all the details and options.

Quilts Under Construction - September 2016 Update

Quilts Waiting to Be Quilted - Tag Fabric

Oy.

Things seemed a little crowded in the studio lately and my hand written Quilts Under Construction list hard to read. A lot of movement on the list! Then I added things up. Rather than go down, the number went up. So be it.

45.

Yes, 45. Still, I am totally okay with that. It sure represents a lot of making. But it is always around this time of year that I get in the mood to finish. Finish. All. The. Things. I don't know that I could actually do that without starting something new. But I can make my way through a good chunk. Starting with quilting the 5 quilts I have basted. That seems like a good place to start a finish.

Quilts Being Quilted

  1. Low Volume Circles - oh, the hand quilting. But it intimidates a lot less now so maybe this winter.
  2. A potential book quilt, if I decide to write the book.
  3. Tag Fabric quilt 1 - a future pattern.
  4. Tag Fabric quilt 2 - another future pattern.
  5. Tag Fabric quilt 3 - alternative to a pattern.
  6. Kenzie's Quilt - a baby quilt I've never shared here before.

Quilt Tops

  1.  Arkison in Australia
  2. Forgiveness
  3. Kawasaki's Theorem/Maze and Vale
  4. Scraps Go Round
  5. Inception Pillow from the Mighty Lucky Challenge in July
  6. Mod Christmas Tree II
  7. Giant Hexagons
  8. Circle Lattice
  9. Low Volume Shoeman's Puzzle
  10. Red Oh Canada
  11. Cirrus Solids Pinhweel Play
  12. Checkerboard

Blocks/Unfinished Tops

  1. Evil Genius' triangle quilt that only needs side borders to fit her bed
  2. Kids' clothes quilt started in Gee's Bend workshop
  3. Hand pieced Diamonds
  4. Neutral Values
  5. Studio Slash/Edges Improv Piece
  6. Indigo/Book of Negroes/Slaveship quilt
  7. Mid Mod Bee quilt
  8. X-Plus blocks from Creative Live Low Volume Class
  9. Respite from Bill Kerr design workshop
  10. Chandelier quilt that needs to be fixed and resewn
  11. Monster's name Quilt
  12. Park Blocks
  13. Pink Pinwheels from Creative Live Pinwheel Play class
  14. Nobody, a bias tape experiment from January Might Lucky Quilt Club
  15. Tula Stripes from July Mighty Lucky Quilt Club
  16. Summer Bloom
  17. Water
  18. Y2K
  19. March blocks
  20. Small Wonders
  21. Liberty Circles
  22. Sherbet Stars
  23. Diamonds and Logs
  24. Up, Up, and Away
  25. Beach Grass version two
  26. Splendid Sampler
  27. Lotta blocks from pattern testing

Now, as I'm writing these, I see there are a number of projects I haven't blogged about. Some I can't blog about yet, but others are long overdue. Sharing them with you here will help move them forward. And I can tell you this, I won't be sewing anything else until at least 5 of the quilts listed at the top as being quilted are bound and done. Yay for deadlines! I'm sure I will need some playtime after that, so expect to see more then for sure.

People often say that seeing a list like this of their own work is frightening or depressing. Not I! It merely represents a heck of a lot of creative action.

What's on your list?

 

 

The Power of a Quilt - Why Do You Quilt?

Reasons To Quilt 1

Originally sent to newsletter subscribers, but I've decided to share this here as well.

This is the story of a quilt. It is a quilt that is showing it's age - the binding is coming undone, there a few marks from who knows what, and the label can hardly be read anymore for the fading on the back. Sometimes it smells a little because it got damp, I didn't notice, and then it sat in the car for a few days before I washed it. 

I started the quilt about a decade ago. The top was assembled in my first ever attended mini retreat. My memory is a bit off on this, but I think there were 6 of us gathering at my quilt mentor's house. I was the youngest by at least 20 years. But gather we did and in one afternoon we assembled a quilt top. Then we had a little raffle and I won the top! It took me a few years, but I added to it - one of the few quilts I've ever made with borders. And because it was one of the largest quilts I'd ever made at about 90'' square I sent it to a long armer, the mother of a girl I worked with. I remember obsessing about which panto to use, then learning that on a busy quilt it really doesn't matter. Then I likely obsessed about the right binding fabric. I was still a relative beginner and every decision seemed so big.

In the past few years that quilt became our picnic quilt. We take it for after school relaxing while the kids run around. It comes to the beach as a respite from the sand. Basically, if the opportunity arises where we have to sit on the ground, this quilt comes.

Reasons to Quilt 3

So, of course I had it one day in the mountains last week. We were meeting up with friends who'd spent the week camping. The quilt laid by the shore of a pond while the big kids ran around exploring. One adorable 18 month old kept trying to pick the candies on it, mistaking polka dots for M&Ms. After our picnic it went back in the car. Adventures by the river, rock balancing, a potluck dinner all came next. The kids explored the woods and staked claim over secret hideouts. A fire was lit, marshmallows emerged. A tree was climbed.

Then someone fell. She fell from the tree and the collective gasp of eight adults and twenty kids sucked all the breath from the forest for a minute or an hour. We parents jumped into gear, a flight attendant calling on her training, Dads calling on their instincts, Moms keeping the calm, kids trying not to freak out. At one point I recall someone asking for a blanket for the girl, or maybe I just thought she needed one because the sun was setting and she must be cold. I ran for my quilt, my old and stained picnic quilt. I covered her legs, one broken badly from the fall. With assessments done and a fear that the ambulance may never come despite one Dad racing down the road until he could get a cell signal, the call was made to move her, to take her to the ambulance. This girl was so strong, so brave in those moments.

So we made a bed in her family truck, a king cab. The tent and pillows of one family, packed up for a departure before the rain, extended the comfort of the seat. Someone, maybe me? Placed the quilt over the seat. One small gesture of comfort for what was likely to be a harrowing ride. We moved her, calmed her and her parents, and they sped away. The rest of us reeling and picking up the pieces of the nearly shattered, remaining children. There were tears and confusion and fear. All I wanted to do was wrap them all up in a giant quilt and giggle and feel safe. That was to come, but not just yet.

Only broken bones. Only. We cannot What If? for the days and days to come, even though it feels nearly impossible not to do so. Two days after the fall I got a text from the girl's Dad. He was almost apologetic for the battle scars the quilt now bore. There was blood. Just blood? Only evidence of a life lived, for the quilt, and a reminder of survival. The quilt helped move the girl from the truck to the ambulance, like they use sheets in the hospital. Then it helped keep her warm in a drafty hospital room. But the quilt's job was over now. Later that day I delivered a different quilt, one whose only purpose to that point was as part of my act telling stories in a trunk show. It deserves a better life, a life of true comfort.

This, this is a story of why I quilt.

Reasons To Quilt 2
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