I drove out to Janet-Lee's and picked up Blitzen, the Christmas Macnas quilt, and Nonchalant, the white one, which had been quilted. They are quite glorious.What I like about the Blitzen quilt is that it's a Christmas quilt, but it doesn't hit you over the head with the idea of it being Christmas. And for me, Christmas colors are red, green, gold and white, which is why those are the only colors I used in the quilt.
The Patchery Menagerie
Page 1
- Home
- Thoughts on Art, Creativity & Inspiration
- Friends
- Good Stories
- Tutorials
- Free Pieced Houses
- Lynne Tyler Word Quilts ~2009 - 2010
- Lynne Tyler Word Quilts ~ 2011
- Lynne Tyler Quilts ~ 2012
- Lynne Tyler Quilts ~ 2013
- Lynne Tyler Quilts ~ 2014
- Lynne Tyler 2015-2016 Quilts
- Lynne Tyler Quilts - 2017
- Lynne Tyler Quilts 2018
- 2019 Quilts
- 2020 Quilts
- 2021 Finished Quilts
- 2022 Quilts
- 2023 Quilts
- My Studio
- 2024 Quilts
- 2025 Quilts
- Doll Swap Quilts
- Details, Details & More Organization Stuff
- Couch, Bed & Table Quilts
- Scrap Slab Triangle Quilts
- Gizzy Quilts
- Slashed Squares Quilts
- Zebras
- Diamond Quilts
- Table Quilts
- Flight Of Fancy Hints
- Not Yet Finished...
- Quilts & Their Owners
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Quilt PickUp
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
The White Nightingale Begins
After I cut the strips for the White Nightingale quilt, I matched them into pairs and in a session of what my pal Julie calls "power sewing" I sewed all the pairs together, then I pressed the seams open.Then I subcut the strips into smaller chunks.
Thursday, May 7, 2026
Nightingale, Redux
This is the original black quilt, that started me writing the tutorial for what I came to call the Nightingale quilts. You can go read the whole story here. You actually should go read it, then come back. I'll wait.
I'd always known the quilt was different, but I often wondered if others might like to make one. When at the end of 2024 I decided to make another one, my friend Susan jumped right on the bandwagon, and made one of her own. She has some terrific insights here, and you can go read that too, if you want.
What really stuck with me however, was her comment that "you could be blind and make this quilt and it would still be beautiful."
I think she's right, and I kind of want to go back to that thought, because I have another idea. (You knew that was coming, didn't you?)
I think the reason these Nightingale Quilts work is because they are all about color and pattern, and not patchwork. The unifying thing is the black background. It's consistent, and colors really pop when surrounded by black. This is. because the light that hits the quilt reflects the colors back to your eyes, but the light that hits the black doesn't reflect back at you, it is instead absorbed. This allows the brighter colors to really shine and show off.
In this quilt, what you see first is the COLORS, and THEN you see that the quilt is made of many different fabrics, and THEN you realize the thing is PATCHWORK, and there is no obvious pattern. The patchwork is subordinate. The quilt is actually made of squares and rectangles, and it doesn't matter one bit if the corners of each block line up or not. How radical is THAT?
I wrote in the tutorial that I think it is the easiest quilt on the planet to make - all you need to do is use fabrics that have colors on a black background. IN THEORY, you could do this with fabrics with a consistent color as a background, but in REALITY, it is very difficult to find a lot of colored fabrics with (for example) THE SAME blue background. Or red, or yellow, or whatever other color. The effect would be slightly different with a color in the background as colors are affected by the colors that surround them. Black shows them off to great advantage, other colors, not so much.
Susan and I were talking recently and she says that everybody who sees her Nightingale quilt "goes nuts, they love it so much," and she can't understand why the tutorial is not flying out of my Etsy shop, the way Lynne's Liberated Birds does.
Well, I was thinking along the same lines. The original black nightingale quilt (above) lives on my bed, and I've been sleeping under it for over 20 years. The quilt is made the way my grandmother made them, with no batting. It is tied, not quilted. On my bed it lives on top of the top sheet and under the wool blanket, so nobody ever sees it but me. One day recently as I was making the bed I noticed some of the edges were wearing. Maybe I should make another one?
But you know me, I like to push ideas around.
What if I made a white one? It isn't as easy as it looks. Sometimes you can get away with a slightly off white background, and sometimes a fabric looks like one thing online and then in real life it's different.Monday, May 4, 2026
Rainbow Crush is a Flimsy!
I sewed the last of the Rainbow Crush blocks together yesterday, as I watched the coverage of the Kentucky Derby. In the end, it took me only 7-1/2 minutes to take apart a block.On Sunday I assembled all the blocks into the flimsy.
Friday, May 1, 2026
Silver and Pink
When I get an idea that sticks in my head, I have to do something about it. So the other day, after getting the idea of using pink and gray together, I decided to gather up some pink and gray fabrics.I have more grays than this, but these are part of a box of grays that Julie sent me. Those were okay but I never just stop there. I went rummaging around in my stash and I found this:
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Exciting Times (?)
I'm moving along at rebuilding the Spring Fling quilt, which one reader suggested I rename to Rainbow Crush, because I didn't want to rename this happy quilt something like "Kill, Crush, Destroy." I like that idea.I think I'm a bit faster at taking the blocks apart. Here are last three blocks for the fourth row of the quilt. It's not exciting work, but I've got it down so it's pretty mechanical to do.
Sunday, April 26, 2026
Re-Making
Saturday, April 25, 2026
More Right Facing Birds
I love seeing what students do with my birds.
This is from my pal Susan, in California. I showed two of her sister's birds a couple of days ago.Friday, April 24, 2026
Kill! Crush! Destroy!
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Coulda Shoulda Woulda
OK, It's a flimsy.
It's enormous.
Did I mention it's ENORMOUS!
E-N-O-R-M-O-U-S
E-N-O-R-M-O-U-S
It's gigantic.
It's WAY TOO FREAKING BIG.
I spread it over the bed and it hung down two feet over the end of the bed. I knew I'd never get it quilted because there would never be any place to put it.
And I knew I wasn't going to take it apart because I just don't have that kind of patience or motivation. I thought, I should have sewn it together to make it 60 x 72 inches. The blocks would have been 3 x 3, but I like the LOOK of the 4 x 4 blocks.
Well when something aggravates me that much, I know enough to know I have to put it away and do something else. I finished sewing it together after swim class, but I hadn't taken a shower yet, so I figured that's what I would do. Take a shower.
And somehow, taking my clothes off and getting ready to get into the shower, I figured out what I could do.
I laughed.
It's EVIL! It's DEVIOUS! It's DANGEROUS and DESTRUCTIVE.
It's INSANE.
It's perfect.
I haven't done it yet, but I can't wait to get started.
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Right Facing Birds
I received some right facing birds from Janet and Liz,
This is from Liz, who made this bird in a class I taught way back in 2018.















































