The Golden Zebras quilt looks handsome on the back of the couch with the pillows that inspired it. This quilt is the same design as the Parade of Zebras quilt and the similar to the Jealousy quilt. I'll be working on a tutorial for these quilts after the holidays.
This is as much as a beauty shot as I am going to get for now. It certainly is a golden yellow!
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Saturday, November 30, 2019
Friday, November 29, 2019
Black Friday with Dinosaurs
I have a rule never to go shopping on Black Friday - the day after Thanksgiving. Instead I'll sit on the couch today watching whatever's good on TV while I bind the Diamonds & Dinosaurs quilt.
Wednesday, November 27, 2019
More Dinos!
The Dinosaur Diamonds quilt is back from the long arm quilter, and is ready for binding. As you can see the quilting is happy flowers.
It's really pretty (at least I think so.)
For the binding I am using the small dinosaur prints in 20" lengths all around the quilt.
With the long holiday weekend coming up, I'll be able to get the binding sewn down so it will be in the City of Angels for Christmas.
One of my coworkers was giving me a hard time about this quilt. "Well, you've got your marching orders there, Grandma," they teased. They don't get it. I've basically been waiting my whole life to get a request like this.
"Hey, Memere, can you make me a dinosaur diamonds quilt?"
I mean, like, really?
Happy Thanksgiving!
It's really pretty (at least I think so.)
For the binding I am using the small dinosaur prints in 20" lengths all around the quilt.
With the long holiday weekend coming up, I'll be able to get the binding sewn down so it will be in the City of Angels for Christmas.
One of my coworkers was giving me a hard time about this quilt. "Well, you've got your marching orders there, Grandma," they teased. They don't get it. I've basically been waiting my whole life to get a request like this.
"Hey, Memere, can you make me a dinosaur diamonds quilt?"
I mean, like, really?
Happy Thanksgiving!
Monday, November 25, 2019
Fifty-Eight Carats
This is what I'll be sewing together. There are 58 unique fabrics, so I am going to call this quilt Fifty-Eight Carats, because carats is how you measure a gemstone, and a diamond is a gemstone.
For all of you who really want to see differences, here is the first quilt, Magic Carpet, which will be flying to my son and his family later this year.
For all of you who really want to see differences, here is the first quilt, Magic Carpet, which will be flying to my son and his family later this year.
Sunday, November 24, 2019
One of Those Days
You know how you have a day filled with errands and at the end you think you didn't get anything done? So here's what I did on Saturday.
1. Picked up my Mom
2. Drove to the Portsmouth Fabric Company where I bought lots of fabric.
3. Had lunch at the Pink Bamboo right down the street.
4. I drove to Hampton Falls past the barn I love so much.
5. I picked up a couple of quilts from Janet-Lee.
6. Walked around Portsmouth stopping in a couple of shops... The Elephantine Bakery, Corks & Curds (wine and cheese).
7. Stopped in at the Flower Kiosk and bought flowers for my house and a wreath for my Mom's door.
8. Stopped in at the Lindt store in Exeter and bought an assortment of their truffles for the bowl in my living room.
9. Went to Staples and then to the grocery store for a few things I needed.
10. Got home and made dinner.
11. Washed all my fabric.
12. Went into the studio and cut blocks and did some rearranging. This isn't the final final final, but it's damned close. I decided to use the same dark fabric around the colored blocks. It's actually a batik with little gold squares, but I am using the wrong side.
So it was actually a pretty good day.
1. Picked up my Mom
2. Drove to the Portsmouth Fabric Company where I bought lots of fabric.
3. Had lunch at the Pink Bamboo right down the street.
4. I drove to Hampton Falls past the barn I love so much.
5. I picked up a couple of quilts from Janet-Lee.
6. Walked around Portsmouth stopping in a couple of shops... The Elephantine Bakery, Corks & Curds (wine and cheese).
7. Stopped in at the Flower Kiosk and bought flowers for my house and a wreath for my Mom's door.
8. Stopped in at the Lindt store in Exeter and bought an assortment of their truffles for the bowl in my living room.
9. Went to Staples and then to the grocery store for a few things I needed.
10. Got home and made dinner.
11. Washed all my fabric.
12. Went into the studio and cut blocks and did some rearranging. This isn't the final final final, but it's damned close. I decided to use the same dark fabric around the colored blocks. It's actually a batik with little gold squares, but I am using the wrong side.
So it was actually a pretty good day.
Saturday, November 23, 2019
Getting Closer...
(Remember that line from the very first "Star Wars"? If you saw it in a movie theater, like I did, after waiting in the longest line for a movie you ever saw, in the first two weeks after it came out... yeah.)
This is getting a lot closer. Ignore the diamonds that rest on the floor, they are merely placeholders for some dark fabric to be added later. I have been working on the lower corners, getting them to blend better and show off the rings. The upper left area of pinkish tones is still muddy and mushy. Hopefully my shopping excursion will yield good results.
I left these pictures VERY LARGE so you can click on them and see all the details of the fabrics.
Here is a cropped version so you can see that the finished quilt may look like.
This is getting a lot closer. Ignore the diamonds that rest on the floor, they are merely placeholders for some dark fabric to be added later. I have been working on the lower corners, getting them to blend better and show off the rings. The upper left area of pinkish tones is still muddy and mushy. Hopefully my shopping excursion will yield good results.
I left these pictures VERY LARGE so you can click on them and see all the details of the fabrics.
Here is a cropped version so you can see that the finished quilt may look like.
Friday, November 22, 2019
Diamond Merry Go Round
You're probably looking at this and thinking I am crazy, that I didn't do anything. BUT I DID! I moved some of the stuff from the lower left to the lower right, and I moved stuff from the lower right to the upper right.
I felt all those areas were too dark and I wanted to make more color variation at the bottom and upper right. It may not be a hit-you-over-the-head difference, but it's there. I think some of the diagonal rows created by the diamonds are more visible and you can see them overlapping (sorta) and going around each other.
I may have to go shopping. This is getting to be too good to just "settle."
Jano Mom, see this post about what I use to cut the diamonds.
I felt all those areas were too dark and I wanted to make more color variation at the bottom and upper right. It may not be a hit-you-over-the-head difference, but it's there. I think some of the diagonal rows created by the diamonds are more visible and you can see them overlapping (sorta) and going around each other.
I may have to go shopping. This is getting to be too good to just "settle."
Jano Mom, see this post about what I use to cut the diamonds.
Thursday, November 21, 2019
Diamonds Dancing Like Demons!
I'm going to vent in a bit, so bear with me. I really do love being an artist and making quilts and making weird stuff, and pushing the edge of every design envelope I can find, but the going is rarely smooth.
I designed this, the first diamond quilt in one day. I was feeling pretty proud of myself. Well, we all know where THAT leads. I knew there were some things that were not working in yesterday's version, and I thought it would be an easy fix.
After dinner last night I went into the studio and started "tinkering."
At some point I figured out I was NOT making a colorwash quilt with giant prints. I was making a quilt of diamonds, that were part of bigger, overlapping diamonds, that blended in and out of each other, and to make that happen, I had to make you see their edges, so I did NOT want them to blend. So I had to move them. After a couple of hours I had this, and I thought it was pretty much IT.
Then I looked again. SH*T, I had that bright pink at the top left edge that stuck out. Had to fix that.
Rummage through stash. Curse.
OK! Ta-da! GOT IT! Then I looked at the picture above and I saw IT! The fly in the ointment. The block that JUST WOULD NOT sit back and relax. You can find it. It's the pretty one in the lower left, with the pink flowers. CRAP! I tried moving it to a couple of places, but it just would not play nicely with me.
A bit more swearing and fabric shuffling and I have this. YES, I know I have to fill that triangular space at the bottom, but that's not all that hard to do, and it can wait. The corner is now darker than I would like it to be, but I really am running out of unique big prints. Rather I should say I have run out. I don't really want to go shopping, because I can't take my design wall with me, and you never really know what will fit until you try it.
Now I can hear some of you already. "Um, Lynne. There's more dark space on the right. Your quilt looks a little off balanced."
Um, no. That vertical row of diamonds at the far right are the edge pieces. Those will be cut in half. Here's a "camera crop" to show you. And yes, I know the two pinkish ones at the upper left don't necessarily read as "diamond" shapes, but hey, there are at least 74 unique fabrics in this thing, and though I have a really good stash, it does have it's limits and I've pretty much pushed it to the limit.
So here are 74 Diamonds Dancing Like Demons.
Here's another funny thought. This quilt is made from scraps (really) and is made from one shape. So it fits the definition of a "Charm Quilt."
ROFLMAO!!!
I designed this, the first diamond quilt in one day. I was feeling pretty proud of myself. Well, we all know where THAT leads. I knew there were some things that were not working in yesterday's version, and I thought it would be an easy fix.
After dinner last night I went into the studio and started "tinkering."
At some point I figured out I was NOT making a colorwash quilt with giant prints. I was making a quilt of diamonds, that were part of bigger, overlapping diamonds, that blended in and out of each other, and to make that happen, I had to make you see their edges, so I did NOT want them to blend. So I had to move them. After a couple of hours I had this, and I thought it was pretty much IT.
Then I looked again. SH*T, I had that bright pink at the top left edge that stuck out. Had to fix that.
Rummage through stash. Curse.
OK! Ta-da! GOT IT! Then I looked at the picture above and I saw IT! The fly in the ointment. The block that JUST WOULD NOT sit back and relax. You can find it. It's the pretty one in the lower left, with the pink flowers. CRAP! I tried moving it to a couple of places, but it just would not play nicely with me.
A bit more swearing and fabric shuffling and I have this. YES, I know I have to fill that triangular space at the bottom, but that's not all that hard to do, and it can wait. The corner is now darker than I would like it to be, but I really am running out of unique big prints. Rather I should say I have run out. I don't really want to go shopping, because I can't take my design wall with me, and you never really know what will fit until you try it.
Now I can hear some of you already. "Um, Lynne. There's more dark space on the right. Your quilt looks a little off balanced."
Um, no. That vertical row of diamonds at the far right are the edge pieces. Those will be cut in half. Here's a "camera crop" to show you. And yes, I know the two pinkish ones at the upper left don't necessarily read as "diamond" shapes, but hey, there are at least 74 unique fabrics in this thing, and though I have a really good stash, it does have it's limits and I've pretty much pushed it to the limit.
So here are 74 Diamonds Dancing Like Demons.
Here's another funny thought. This quilt is made from scraps (really) and is made from one shape. So it fits the definition of a "Charm Quilt."
ROFLMAO!!!
Wednesday, November 20, 2019
Dancing Diamonds
While I was at work yesterday I thought about this quilt, and how the first one reminded everybody of overlapping diamonds. Well, I wondered, I hadn't done that on purpose, but how could I do it to THIS one? Idly I wondered if making kind of concentric rings of color might do it. I was pretty sure I didn't have enough different prints to make that happen, and I don't plan to go shopping for more fabric, but I figured I'd try. I had nothing to lose, since I had a good photo of the previous layout.
So I started in the middle. Or more or less the middle, and tried to work outward. I did not move four or five diamonds, or the triangles across the top or most of the ones at the very bottom (those will be triangles, not diamonds), but I moved all the others. Many times.
I kept moving things around, and around, and around. I rummaged through my stash to find prints that were BIG so I could try them in the quilt. In this design, a fabric that is NOT A BIG BUSY PRINT just becomes a wallflower and doesn't do the design any favors. So I kept plugging.
At the end of the night I had this, and I was so brain dead I just couldn't see whether it was an improvement over yesterday or not. I think it might be.
What I found very interesting though, was looking at the thumbnail images of all the pictures of the process I had uploaded to my computer. I could see how the colors and values had moved around, and in the latest version, they actually seem more closely packed.
But even the pictures don't help. The edges get lost because you don't know where the quilt will really end, so I did a camera crop, and this is a lot closer to what the finished quilt will be.
OK, now that I see it this way, I think I'm good. There are a couple of things I want to tinker with (I mean, like, duh!), but you get the drift.
So I started in the middle. Or more or less the middle, and tried to work outward. I did not move four or five diamonds, or the triangles across the top or most of the ones at the very bottom (those will be triangles, not diamonds), but I moved all the others. Many times.
I kept moving things around, and around, and around. I rummaged through my stash to find prints that were BIG so I could try them in the quilt. In this design, a fabric that is NOT A BIG BUSY PRINT just becomes a wallflower and doesn't do the design any favors. So I kept plugging.
At the end of the night I had this, and I was so brain dead I just couldn't see whether it was an improvement over yesterday or not. I think it might be.
What I found very interesting though, was looking at the thumbnail images of all the pictures of the process I had uploaded to my computer. I could see how the colors and values had moved around, and in the latest version, they actually seem more closely packed.
But even the pictures don't help. The edges get lost because you don't know where the quilt will really end, so I did a camera crop, and this is a lot closer to what the finished quilt will be.
OK, now that I see it this way, I think I'm good. There are a couple of things I want to tinker with (I mean, like, duh!), but you get the drift.
Tuesday, November 19, 2019
Better, but Worse
It's funny, but in the world of "Art" it isn't the most perfectly executed stuff that gets all the attention. Actually it isn't "funny" at all. You have all heard me say more than once that I prefer my quilts to have some "verve" and a touch of real life in them. The "perfect" quilts that win awards shows generally have me groaning in boredom. Just because it's more complex doesn't mean it's better. Google Rodin's drawings to see what I mean. An effortless looking line drawing can be very spectacular, and let me tell you, it takes real work to make it look "effortless."
The more I worked on getting these blocks to flow into one another, the less I liked it. I kept looking at the first one and wondered if I had lost my mind. It just looked mushy.
After watching the last "Poldark" (gosh, can you remember when I gushed in anticipation about watching the first one?) I had been texting Julie and one of the things we both liked about the first quilt was that it looked like it was made from big overlapping diamond shapes. Part of what gave you that feeling was seeing the points of the diamonds at the top and bottom. I went into the studio and tinkered. What is in the photo above is the result, and I liked it better already.
Yesterday I got home from work and before I made dinner I went into the studio to take a look at what I had on the wall. I moved one piece, then another, and another. Two hours later (!!!) I think I had moved all but four or five pieces (and some that don't look like they moved went on extended tours around the quilt and ended up where they started). I like this better. I decided not to worry about using a print more than once.
It's also kind of funny because although I thought I knew where I was going when I started this, I really didn't, but I do now. It will probably change a lot before I am finished, but so what!!!
For Hubblebird, who asked, I use the Hex'N'More template to cut my big diamonds. I cut around one end, the flip the template over, align my edges, and finish cutting the diamond. And yes, I fussy cut the hell out of each and every one, then handle them very carefully to avoid stretching them out of shape.
I visited my dad in the hospital yesterday. I sat with him while he had dinner. "So what do you want for Christmas," he asked me as I kissed him goodbye. "Dinner with you," I replied. "And not here!" He grinned. Still no answers. He'll have more tests today.
The more I worked on getting these blocks to flow into one another, the less I liked it. I kept looking at the first one and wondered if I had lost my mind. It just looked mushy.
After watching the last "Poldark" (gosh, can you remember when I gushed in anticipation about watching the first one?) I had been texting Julie and one of the things we both liked about the first quilt was that it looked like it was made from big overlapping diamond shapes. Part of what gave you that feeling was seeing the points of the diamonds at the top and bottom. I went into the studio and tinkered. What is in the photo above is the result, and I liked it better already.
Yesterday I got home from work and before I made dinner I went into the studio to take a look at what I had on the wall. I moved one piece, then another, and another. Two hours later (!!!) I think I had moved all but four or five pieces (and some that don't look like they moved went on extended tours around the quilt and ended up where they started). I like this better. I decided not to worry about using a print more than once.
It's also kind of funny because although I thought I knew where I was going when I started this, I really didn't, but I do now. It will probably change a lot before I am finished, but so what!!!
For Hubblebird, who asked, I use the Hex'N'More template to cut my big diamonds. I cut around one end, the flip the template over, align my edges, and finish cutting the diamond. And yes, I fussy cut the hell out of each and every one, then handle them very carefully to avoid stretching them out of shape.
I visited my dad in the hospital yesterday. I sat with him while he had dinner. "So what do you want for Christmas," he asked me as I kissed him goodbye. "Dinner with you," I replied. "And not here!" He grinned. Still no answers. He'll have more tests today.
Labels:
58 carats,
diamond colorwash,
Diamonds,
Fifty-Eight Carats
Monday, November 18, 2019
The Bigs
I cut a LOT of my giant prints into big diamonds. Since they take up so much space on the design wall, I've stacked them by color. This is really not a great idea, since you need to be able to see them all to work out the design, but space is finite.
In the original quilt, the colors weren't really arranged in any particular way that made sense. Here I thought I would attempt to divide them cool on one side and warm on the other. I knew it wouldn't really work because I have more warmish fabrics than cool ones, but hey, you gotta start somewhere.
If there is one thing I have learned from taking the Colorwash 360 class with Wanda it's when you get everything up on the wall the first time, it is JUST A START. But as I was placing the blocks I could see quite clearly what my class with Wanda had taught me. I think you can see it too.
So this is the first pass and we'll see what develops. Like the first quilt, this is made from fabrics that are in my stash.
In the original quilt, the colors weren't really arranged in any particular way that made sense. Here I thought I would attempt to divide them cool on one side and warm on the other. I knew it wouldn't really work because I have more warmish fabrics than cool ones, but hey, you gotta start somewhere.
If there is one thing I have learned from taking the Colorwash 360 class with Wanda it's when you get everything up on the wall the first time, it is JUST A START. But as I was placing the blocks I could see quite clearly what my class with Wanda had taught me. I think you can see it too.
So this is the first pass and we'll see what develops. Like the first quilt, this is made from fabrics that are in my stash.
Saturday, November 16, 2019
News
I promised this quilt to my son, but it's still in my house because I love it so much.
Then I remembered I have lots of giant diamonds left over and lots of giant prints in my stash so I figured I would make myself another one!!!
To make a quilt like this you need lot of blocks, so I spent the afternoon cutting diamonds out of my large prints.
I threw them up on the wall so I could see them.
Of course I couldn't stop from playing with them.
You get the idea. And here is where you can tell I took Wanda's Colorwash 360 class. I have more fabrics to cut, and then I'll be rearranging them.
As for the news, my Dad had a heart attack yesterday. He's anemic, losing blood and they don't know why. There is something else going on, and to treat one thing means possibly making the other worse. So we are all taking it day by day and keeping our fingers crossed. Remember he's 87.
Then I remembered I have lots of giant diamonds left over and lots of giant prints in my stash so I figured I would make myself another one!!!
To make a quilt like this you need lot of blocks, so I spent the afternoon cutting diamonds out of my large prints.
I threw them up on the wall so I could see them.
Of course I couldn't stop from playing with them.
You get the idea. And here is where you can tell I took Wanda's Colorwash 360 class. I have more fabrics to cut, and then I'll be rearranging them.
As for the news, my Dad had a heart attack yesterday. He's anemic, losing blood and they don't know why. There is something else going on, and to treat one thing means possibly making the other worse. So we are all taking it day by day and keeping our fingers crossed. Remember he's 87.
Labels:
58 carats,
colorwash,
diamond colorwash,
Diamonds,
Fifty-Eight Carats
Thursday, November 14, 2019
You Know It's Cold When...
You know it's really cold when the leaves on your Rhododendron curl up tight like pencils. This happens when the temperatures get into the teens. The warmer the plant is, the flatter its leaves will be, so this is an easy way to figure out how cold it is without looking at a thermometer.
After finishing my book, I sat down to watch TV and start sewing down the binding of the Golden Zebras quilt.
This is Mary Lou, who took my bird class at MQX in 2018. She made this quilt for a friend who works with birds of prey. It was the first time she entered a quilt to be judged. You can see the results!
If you want to make your own free pieced birds, you can get my tutorial here, at my Etsy shop. It's an instant download so you can get started right away.
After finishing my book, I sat down to watch TV and start sewing down the binding of the Golden Zebras quilt.
This is Mary Lou, who took my bird class at MQX in 2018. She made this quilt for a friend who works with birds of prey. It was the first time she entered a quilt to be judged. You can see the results!
If you want to make your own free pieced birds, you can get my tutorial here, at my Etsy shop. It's an instant download so you can get started right away.
Labels:
birds,
cold,
golden zebras,
Lynne's Liberated Birds Tutorial
Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Baby, It's Cold Outside
It was 14.5F when I got up this morning. We've got that cold that is covering the East Coast and will stay with us for a while.
This is my friend MJ, who wouldn't let me take a picture of her face. "Oh MJ, I said, what a pretty color combination you are wearing. Can I take a picture?" This photo was taken over two years ago.
I thought about it last night when I was talking to Julie. We were talking on the phone and I had mentioned an article in the NY Times about one of their former photographers, Sam Falk. "He has a reporter's knack for being in the right place at the right time and an artist's ability to capitalize on the moment," one reviewer wrote about him.
The photo of MJ above, is like that. As soon as I saw her that day I loved the color combination, and I knew enough to take a picture so I could keep that memory. I didn't know what I would do with it at the time, but last night, as I talked to Julie I mused out loud, "Wouldn't that make a pretty quilt.... light sky blue, a nice medium brown and white... Maybe some red violet thrown in for a little punch."
After we hung up, I went into the bedroom and got ready for bed, but the idea kept bugging me, so I ran into the studio and started pulling fabrics out of my stash. This is a sampling. I like the idea. I don't know what I am going to do with them yet, but it will be fun to see what happens.
This is my friend MJ, who wouldn't let me take a picture of her face. "Oh MJ, I said, what a pretty color combination you are wearing. Can I take a picture?" This photo was taken over two years ago.
I thought about it last night when I was talking to Julie. We were talking on the phone and I had mentioned an article in the NY Times about one of their former photographers, Sam Falk. "He has a reporter's knack for being in the right place at the right time and an artist's ability to capitalize on the moment," one reviewer wrote about him.
The photo of MJ above, is like that. As soon as I saw her that day I loved the color combination, and I knew enough to take a picture so I could keep that memory. I didn't know what I would do with it at the time, but last night, as I talked to Julie I mused out loud, "Wouldn't that make a pretty quilt.... light sky blue, a nice medium brown and white... Maybe some red violet thrown in for a little punch."
After we hung up, I went into the bedroom and got ready for bed, but the idea kept bugging me, so I ran into the studio and started pulling fabrics out of my stash. This is a sampling. I like the idea. I don't know what I am going to do with them yet, but it will be fun to see what happens.
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