The Patchery Menagerie
Monday, June 17, 2013
A Quick Side Trip
I had to use up all those mashed-potato beiges and creams somehow. They wouldn't fit in the bookcse I use for my fabric storage. So I've got a little something in the works. The blue-green batiks are part of a Bali-Pop I bought last year for a project that never went anywhere.
This is going to be a nice gift for somebody.
Saturday, June 15, 2013
Font Factory
The Font Factory is now a flimsy. I need to add a bit to the left, but it's done. This is a teaching quilt that shows how I construct the letters. I had originally considered adding goodies like asterisks and birds to this but I decided it would be too distracting.
** Brenda, Everybody tells me the A should be with the diagonals. But these letters are sorted based on how I think they are most efficiently constructed. When I make my A's I start with the crossbar, and then add the angled pieces to either side.
Friday, June 14, 2013
A pair of Crayons
So I brought these two flimsies to work yesterday and hung them in my workspace. Would you like to guess how many folks walked in and started commenting on how much they loved "this quilt?"
In other words... they all saw the black one and totally missed the light one on the right.
Yeah.
(In their defense, the quilts were hung in front of a large whiteboard.)
*PS. I suck at numbers. The Black Crayons measures 40" x 52" (not 30" x 52" as I mistakenly wrote the other day.) The Mashed Potato version is 30-1/2" x 45"
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Progress!
I've made progress.
The contents of the two big bins have been sorted. One of the small bins holds strips 2-1/2" wide; the other 2". The large bin is full of pieces I want to keep, and now have to sort. I sat down when I got home from work and went through the two big bins quickly.
How did I do it? What criteria did I use? Check out this list:
Is it bigger than 1-1/2" square? Keep
Do I like it? Keep
Is it sewn to something else? Toss
Has it got a bias edge? Toss
Have I got it in a larger piece of fabric? Toss
Have I got six thousand pieces of this stuff already? Toss
Do I like working with it? Keep
Do I hate it? Toss
Might I use it? Keep
Have I got too damn much of it? Toss
Do I really love it no matter how little I have? Keep
Am I getting tired of this? Toss
I hate it. Toss
It's boring. Toss
ACK! More of this damn stuff... Toss
I don't know. Toss.
Have I used it in the last year? No. Toss
It's tacky. Toss
Can you see the bin I have marked in the photo below?
It is a bin full of stuff that was sewn to other stuff. I've had it for six years. It was a lot easier to sort through after I did the two bins on the table. How easy?
I feel SO much better. I feel....
LIBERATED!
The contents of the two big bins have been sorted. One of the small bins holds strips 2-1/2" wide; the other 2". The large bin is full of pieces I want to keep, and now have to sort. I sat down when I got home from work and went through the two big bins quickly.
How did I do it? What criteria did I use? Check out this list:
Is it bigger than 1-1/2" square? Keep
Do I like it? Keep
Is it sewn to something else? Toss
Has it got a bias edge? Toss
Have I got it in a larger piece of fabric? Toss
Have I got six thousand pieces of this stuff already? Toss
Do I like working with it? Keep
Do I hate it? Toss
Might I use it? Keep
Have I got too damn much of it? Toss
Do I really love it no matter how little I have? Keep
Am I getting tired of this? Toss
I hate it. Toss
It's boring. Toss
ACK! More of this damn stuff... Toss
I don't know. Toss.
Have I used it in the last year? No. Toss
It's tacky. Toss
Can you see the bin I have marked in the photo below?
It is a bin full of stuff that was sewn to other stuff. I've had it for six years. It was a lot easier to sort through after I did the two bins on the table. How easy?
I feel SO much better. I feel....
LIBERATED!
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Save Me
You know you're in trouble when you have TWO worktables in your studio (one is 30" x 42" and the other is 37" x 52") and both are COVERED in fabric. Actually as I was finishing the black crayon quilt, I had an empty space barely 18" 24" in which to work.
So naturally I was feeling very virtuous when I cleaned the large table, and sorted all the scraps and put them away in the bins.
Until I cleaned off the other table, the bureau, and the stack of fabrics piled on the chair nearby.
I was left with this...
I have not one, but TWO, enormous bins full of scraps that need to be sorted.
And then all of that has to go here:
And can I tell you how irritated THIS makes me?
And I'd much rather be sewing than doing ANY cleaning. I have components of TWO quilts that can be put together, and I'd like to have both done by June 22, when I teach the free-pieced letters class at Quilted Threads in Henniker NH.
And of course, I have two more quilts in my head... and I have to write my speech for St Louis, finish reviewing the first draft of my book, rewrite certain sections of that, send a four letter word on a trip (very hush hush), reconcile the checkbook with the bank statement, figure out a way to get Millie to the vet for her checkup, make a top for my favorite cutie-patootie, plan travel arrangements, hotel and flights for what has become the St. Louis - Los Angeles trip, and OH, it's bedtime!
See ya!
So naturally I was feeling very virtuous when I cleaned the large table, and sorted all the scraps and put them away in the bins.
Until I cleaned off the other table, the bureau, and the stack of fabrics piled on the chair nearby.
I was left with this...
I have not one, but TWO, enormous bins full of scraps that need to be sorted.
And then all of that has to go here:
And can I tell you how irritated THIS makes me?
And I'd much rather be sewing than doing ANY cleaning. I have components of TWO quilts that can be put together, and I'd like to have both done by June 22, when I teach the free-pieced letters class at Quilted Threads in Henniker NH.
And of course, I have two more quilts in my head... and I have to write my speech for St Louis, finish reviewing the first draft of my book, rewrite certain sections of that, send a four letter word on a trip (very hush hush), reconcile the checkbook with the bank statement, figure out a way to get Millie to the vet for her checkup, make a top for my favorite cutie-patootie, plan travel arrangements, hotel and flights for what has become the St. Louis - Los Angeles trip, and OH, it's bedtime!
See ya!
Monday, June 10, 2013
Now You See It...
The Black Crayons flimsy is complete.
It measures 30" x 52"
(I had to improve the contrast a bit since the black looked like grey in the photo.)
Here is the bland Crayons, for comparison.
Interseting, isn't it?
(I had to improve the contrast a bit since the black looked like grey in the photo.)
Here is the bland Crayons, for comparison.
Interseting, isn't it?
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Saturday, June 8, 2013
Beeeee-cause!
OK! I'll admit I want to make everybody work a little bit harder to read the letters in this version of the Crayons quilt. Having made each letter from one fabric however, limits my options for the remaining letters. I have to find appropriate fabrics for the letters I have left. It isn't easy, as you can probably tell.
I've had this Jane Sassaman fabric for a while. I like using very large prints for the backings of my quilts, but the quilt I was planning for this fabric grew too large, so I selected something else.
I knew that if I just made a letter out of this fabric without regard to the pattern the letter would be rather disjointed looking. The letter B has curves, and this fabric has plenty of those. How should I use them? I didn't think the pink flowers would work well, and I knew the blue orchid would require too much cutting into the yardage. So I cut a couple of 2-1/2" strips crosswise and played with them.
I decided to use the leaves with the blue stems on either side of the lower "bowl".
I cut a piece of the same leaf and placed it on the bottom, underneath the black rectangle to look like a mirror image. Then I cut a piece on the bias to use in the corner. I didn't like that light area in the lower right corner, but a B is a curved shape, so I knew I could simply chop that out and make that corner suggest a curve.
Finding something to use for the upper part of the B was a bit trickier. I needed a longish, narrow piece of green.
I kept the top piece and the horizontal strip connecting the upper and lower parts of the letter in line with how I had used the fabric in other parts of the letter. That swirling green piece that connects to the blue is no accident.
Lastly I needed a long strip for the upright along the left side. The pattern on its own was a bit too big, so I did a bit of tinkering.
This is the finished letter B.
The pink dots on the left edge may disappear in the seam allowance when I sew the letter to the backing.
When I teach letter-making, the afternoon is devoted to teaching students to get the most out of their fabrics in this way.
I've had this Jane Sassaman fabric for a while. I like using very large prints for the backings of my quilts, but the quilt I was planning for this fabric grew too large, so I selected something else.
I knew that if I just made a letter out of this fabric without regard to the pattern the letter would be rather disjointed looking. The letter B has curves, and this fabric has plenty of those. How should I use them? I didn't think the pink flowers would work well, and I knew the blue orchid would require too much cutting into the yardage. So I cut a couple of 2-1/2" strips crosswise and played with them.
I decided to use the leaves with the blue stems on either side of the lower "bowl".
I cut a piece of the same leaf and placed it on the bottom, underneath the black rectangle to look like a mirror image. Then I cut a piece on the bias to use in the corner. I didn't like that light area in the lower right corner, but a B is a curved shape, so I knew I could simply chop that out and make that corner suggest a curve.
Finding something to use for the upper part of the B was a bit trickier. I needed a longish, narrow piece of green.
I kept the top piece and the horizontal strip connecting the upper and lower parts of the letter in line with how I had used the fabric in other parts of the letter. That swirling green piece that connects to the blue is no accident.
Lastly I needed a long strip for the upright along the left side. The pattern on its own was a bit too big, so I did a bit of tinkering.
This is the finished letter B.
The pink dots on the left edge may disappear in the seam allowance when I sew the letter to the backing.
When I teach letter-making, the afternoon is devoted to teaching students to get the most out of their fabrics in this way.
Friday, June 7, 2013
O-migoodness
Brenda, you are right. These Black letters are hard to read. I think their readability will improve when they are completely surrounded by black fabric. However, this exercise is designed to push the boundaries of what is easy to see.
Thursday, June 6, 2013
More Black
I thought the ladies would make the "U" pretty special, but I am not sure the letter will "read" properly. All the other letters are made from one fabric, and this letter should be too. The fabric of the "S" isn't working. The design is too large and the rabbit is too distracting. But you never know until you try.
I've been thinking a lot about WHY I like to make letters that make you look. I think it's because as an artist who loves to draw, I live in the land of subtle value changes.
Check out this Milton Glaser poster. It's called "Looking Is Not Seeing."
After I make this black version, there will be two more. One is the quilt "I" would make, using all colors, all values, using all the fabrics to their peak potential and including all my usual "inside jokes" and surprises. I'll make that one AFTER I make a "minimalist" version, which will include no color.
Oh I can't wait.
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Not-So-Basic Black
I made some more black letters. I am really happy with these. I like the sheer unexpectedness of them.
They will look so much better when completely surrounded by black. I haven't sewn any of these letters together yet.
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Black is Back!
Here's another version of the Crayons, and this one will be made from fabrics with all black backgrounds. It is very similar in concept to the "low volume" quilts, but in reverse. I am very excited about this version too!
Heh.
Sunday, June 2, 2013
I used to know how to do this...
My best pal Julie has asked for stars for a quilt for her 60th birthday. So I thought, I can do one of those.
Oops. Apparently I have forgotten a great deal. (LOL!) And yes, I did this for each of the four blocks. I had to rip out all four seams. I really did know how to do this once.
This is okay, but I used the wrong colors! Too funny!
Fortunately Julie always finds something to do with the orphans I send her.
This one is better. I hope Julie likes it!
Oops. Apparently I have forgotten a great deal. (LOL!) And yes, I did this for each of the four blocks. I had to rip out all four seams. I really did know how to do this once.
This is okay, but I used the wrong colors! Too funny!
Fortunately Julie always finds something to do with the orphans I send her.
This one is better. I hope Julie likes it!
Friday, May 31, 2013
Rejected!
It came in an email today:
"Dear Lynne,
Thank you for submitting your work for the "What's My Line" exhibit. We regret that the work was not accepted for inclusion in this particular exhibit. The jurying process was indeed challenging due to the superb quality of the art quilts submitted. The quilts were chosen based on technique, quality of workmanship, relation to theme and visual appeal..."
I admit to being disappointed, but I was never sure either of the quilts I submitted was entirely appropriate to the theme. I submitted The Quick Brown Fox,
and the Black Rules.
The jurying was done from digital photographs, and I know mine aren't great.
I won't know where I went wrong until I see the actual exhibit. My gut instinct is my quilts really didn't take advantage of the theme, i.e., I didn't play a lot with the concept of the "line." That's a fair criticism.
Bright lights, big city. That's the way it goes. No harm, no foul.
"Dear Lynne,
Thank you for submitting your work for the "What's My Line" exhibit. We regret that the work was not accepted for inclusion in this particular exhibit. The jurying process was indeed challenging due to the superb quality of the art quilts submitted. The quilts were chosen based on technique, quality of workmanship, relation to theme and visual appeal..."
I admit to being disappointed, but I was never sure either of the quilts I submitted was entirely appropriate to the theme. I submitted The Quick Brown Fox,
and the Black Rules.
The jurying was done from digital photographs, and I know mine aren't great.
I won't know where I went wrong until I see the actual exhibit. My gut instinct is my quilts really didn't take advantage of the theme, i.e., I didn't play a lot with the concept of the "line." That's a fair criticism.
Bright lights, big city. That's the way it goes. No harm, no foul.
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