The Dancing Jewels quilt is now a flimsy. I am really happy with it. It's 65" x 83."
Now that the flimsy is all sewn, all the blocks fit on the design wall and you can see how the blocks play together. I really like that interplay.
The Dancing Jewels quilt is now a flimsy. I am really happy with it. It's 65" x 83."
Now that the flimsy is all sewn, all the blocks fit on the design wall and you can see how the blocks play together. I really like that interplay.
I've started ro assemble the blocks for the Dancing Jewels quilt. As you can see I'm pressing the seams open.
I've sewn the blocks together into half rows, because I think the longer full rows get unwieldy to work with.
As I was placing the rows on the design wall I noticed I had two edge blocks with the same fabric. Can't have that, so I removed the duplicate block.Sometimes you (well, I) make a quilt and I put blocks up on the wall and I can already tell that no matter how I arrange the blocks the quilt is going to look good. I do tinker because if I put the blocks up in an orderly fashion, then sometimes I have blocks made with the same fabrics together in one area of the quilt and I really want them distributed throughout.
So after not a lot of tinkering I had this, above, and while I liked the arrangement of the colors and fabrics, I really wanted to make the shapes "dance," so I went back and rotated many blocks.
Here is the result, and I have decided I will sew this together.I love the way the shapes transform into oddly shaped diamonds. I love the way they get fatter, and then skinnier and shift from one side to the other.
Here are some details so you can see how the various fabrics play together.
Life is full of coincidences. These are my water bottles. The purple one is the one I use when I go to the gym, and the orange one is the one I use for my carbonated water that I keep in my fridge. They are rarely on the counter at the same time so the connection to the Porange quilt didn't really occur to me until I saw them together.
OK, this penchant for creating a name for a couple that combines their names is kind of silly. Ben-ifer (for Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez) or Polin (Penelope and Colin on Bridgerton). Yeah, I get it, but until I get a better idea for a name for the new Purple and Orange quilt, I'm just gonna call it Porange. Better suggestions welcomed.
This is the outer rows, or border as it were. Normally this quilt would have 12 row of 10 6" blocks, so that would make it 60" x 72". Works for me, I'm less than 60" tall, but my nephew is six feet tall, or 72", so this had to grow a tiny bit. I suppose I could add an additional row (not really a bad idea and I have enough fabric...) Anyway the blocks shown above are going to be 6" x 8" so now the quilt will be 64" x 76". If I add another row it will be 64" x 82". The blocks in the corner are 8" square. The blocks in the middle will be 6" square. This is based on a quilt from Sujata Shah's book Cultural Fusion Quilts, which is still in print. You want more details, you'll have to get Sujata's book. It's worth every cent.![]() |
| Fourth of July Quilt |
The Yellow Macnas quilt is now a flimsy. I have turned my attention to the new purple and orange quilt for my nephew. These are the fabrics I cut into squares for his quilt.The design will be very similar to the Orange quilt I made last year, Carnelian. It is modified hourglass blocks made with curves, from Sujata Shah's book Cultural Fusion Quilts.
The Yellow Macnas quilt is in two chunks. I ironed the bottom half yesterday morning (and figured out an easier way to do it than the way I was doing it. I was listening to some acrobatic team skiing event at the Olympics.
We had MORE SNOW last night.
This is what it looked like outside my front window when I got up Saturday morning.The top half of the yellow quilt is gone. Where did it go?It's here. I decided to web the quilt top together. Because this is stressful for my shoulders, I do half the quilt at a time.
It started in 2017 when I wrote the story of the Colorado Quilt to give to my brother and his wife when I sent them the quilt. I knew I could tell the story, but there was no way to be able to tell all of it and expect them to remember any of it. So I created a document in Power Point, exported it to a PDF file, had it printed at Staples and sent it with the quilt.
I did it again when I gave the Goose Rocks Beach quilt to my boss. He loved the quilt, but couldn't stop looking at the story.
In 2021 I began to write the stories for EVERY quilt I gifted, and had them printed and bound at Staples, and gave printed copies along with the quilts I gifted.
I wrote each story specifically for the recipient. If they didn't know much about quilt making, I explained some details.