These are the fabrics I bought last week. They arrived, surprisingly enough, on Sunday. After taking this picture, I ran them through the washing machine.My friend Buffy asked if I took my fabric out of the dryer slightly damp and ironed it right away to get rid of the wrinkles. As if. I get it out of the dryer, and then drape it on a table, like this, or over the back of a chair to minimize wrinkling. If I leave in in the laundry basket and Millie naps in it, I have to run it through the washer all over again.Buffy asked about how I bought fabrics. "I was so surprised to read that you rarely buy more than half a yard." That's partly because I can buy more fabric that way, and it's also part of my experience. Unless I am making a quilt with eight major fabrics, I can get away with buying a lot less.
I thought in addition to seeing what I bought in the top photo, that you might be interested in hearing WHY I chose the fabrics I bought, and I thought you'd like to see them "up close and personal." This dark blue black print looks pretty obvious when you see it with the light shining right on it, like in the photo above,
But this is what it really looks like, and once I get it up on the design wall, all you are going to see is almost all black. This is what I mean when Julie and my son say "your quilts look great in pictures, but in real life they are SO MUCH BETTER. It's like they are completely different." As you can see, I bought a full yard of this. I felt this was going to be the "backbone" of the quilt, and I didn't want to run out.
This blue is a bit too green, but otherwise this fabric most closely resembles the color story I saw on the road last week. When I buy fabric, I care not one whit about which manufacturer or which "line" I buy from.
This is another fabric I bought a full yard of. For me it has POTENTIAL written all over it. I knew my quilt would have other colors than dark blue and blue and white, so to me, this was fine. I don't think "Oh that could be like star in the night sky...." I don't get that fussy. Generally I scream through the fabric options pretty quickly, stuffing everything I like in my shopping cart. When I've gone through everything, I'll open up the design board and put all the fabrics in it to see if they play nicely together. It's pretty obvious when stuff doesn't fit, so I delete it from the cart. I'll make decisions about how much to buy of each when I've narrowed down my choices.
If you want specific color combinations, you don't always have a wide selection from which to choose. If you say "Dark blue with black and white" 90% of people will think "Night Sky." This isn't exactly a wildly creative rendition of these colors, but it fits the profile of what I needed, so in the cart it went. Now look, we all know it is so dark I can't put it right next to the very first fabric I showed you (because that would make a BLOB of Too Much Dark), but I know that before I get started. So that's another reason I didn't buy a yard of this. Plus I think this print is a lot less interesting to look at than that first one. (Oh, and if you look up at the sky at night, you will not see blue patches like this.)
This is a gamble (for this quilt anyway.) It is Big. It is BRIGHT, it can steal the show. But all quilts need a little bit of the unexpected, a kick-ass fabric that grabs your attention and MAKES YOU LOOK. This could be it. Besides, as you will see from my other choices this fabric holds all of the other colors (literally) and will tie with all the other fabrics that have those colors in the quilt. AND ANOTHER THING. I have learned that the PRINT carries your eye, but also CONNECTS the colors throughout the quilt. This will have to be used very judiciously, so it doesn't take over. And if it does, it will be because I decided to let it.
I have no reservations whatsoever about this one. It will work just fine.
This will probably work. If the blocks are big enough this will be fine. But it wouldn't work for smallish blocks, because the light dragonfly bodies could bump up against other fabrics and "leak" into them. I don't like that. I generally like to see my fabrics and blocks clearly delineated.
There is ONE fabric designer I know and love dearly. This is Philip Jacobs. Why it is here should be no surprise to anyone who is familiar with my work. Clearly since I am planning to make "long rectangles" I will use this fabric in the direction for which it was intended, and because of the scale I bought a full yard. (Besides, it's Philip Jacobs!!!)
I don't think I fully realized the scale of this print when I threw it in my shopping cart, because it is pretty clear that while it is TERRIFIC, I should have bought more. This is a half yard cut, and I will have to use it very judiciously to get all the bang for the buck this fabric offers.
This is an interesting pair. They are from the same fabric line, and although when you look at them like this you can see they are clearly different, they share so much similarity, that in the quilt you may think they are the same print. So clearly I only needed a half yard of each.
These two are blenders. The one on the left, I have no doubt will work fine, the one on the right... I don't know. It's almost too pink. We'll have to see what happens on the design wall. Sometimes you don't know these things until the fabric is in your hands. If it doesn't fit in this quilt, no worries, it will land somewhere else.Violet lives on one side of blue (blue + red = violet), and green lives on the other (blue + yellow = green). Teal is really blue-green. In the real world, according to our light spectrum, as things get darker they get more violet (not black, black is just the absence of all color because there is no light). So even though I am tinkering more on the blue violet side of the spectrum, as this moves to the light, there can also be green, and since so many of the other fabrics had some green in them, it is appropriate that these fabrics are in the mix.(OK, so I didn't do that whole logical thing above when I was picking these fabrics. I just thought, Oh, these will go, so they went... right into my shopping cart.)
That's it for the "darks and mediums." Now for some lights.
If I want the one on the left to read as LIGHT I'm going to have to be careful about how I cut it. The one on the right is iffy, but again, no risk = no reward.
BY THE WAY... and totally off topic, go watch this: Seven Minutes of Terror. (It isn't what you think.)
Yes, you have seen this print before. This is a different colorway.These are the fabrics I had in my stash when I got started. CLEARLY this are too much the same, and needed help. I put my hand down so you could see the scale.
Here are more from my stash. Some of these might work, some won't, but hey, better to have a BIG selection from which to choose.
Many of these PROBABLY won't work, but hey, quilts change direction midstream sometimes, and you gotta go where it leads. What the quilt wants, the quilt should get.
If you haven't heard me say it before, let me say it now: The success or failure of a quilt depends ENTIRELY on fabric selection.
Well that's it for now. I hope you have enjoyed this trip through my head and why I bought each fabric in this group.
12 comments:
I love every one, and nearly all are with some of my favourite colours, and after you explain the whys and whats, I can see why some are full metres and some the halves.Or yards if you buy them that way.
Thanks for the link to 7 minutes......so interesting! Enjoyed the fabric commentary....definitely should have a yard of that beautiful undulating tripped piece. Can’t wait to see it make its way into your work.
Where did you buy these fabrics? They are gorgeous! I see a few I would like to get.
Thanks for explaining and showing. It is always enlightening to see how thoughts morph into quilts.
Oh beautiful fabrics....and I can’t wait to follow this new quilt adventure!!! I enjoyed reading your thoughts on fabric selection!!
Love, love, LOVE your fabric choices. The blues, the bits with brighter colors. Can't wait to see what gets created.
Ah, yes - Philip Jacobs (one of my very favorites, too). Great post explaining the how and why behind some of what you do so effortlessly.
This was great to hear how you selected each piece. And I didn't know there was a way to see them all together so you can tell if they go together or not!! That would be so helpful, I have been afraid in the past to order onlline since a couple times the color wasn't what I expected. So I'd also like to know where you ordered these.
A beautiful collection of fabrics. Is the design wall part of the online store? I haven't noticed one before but now I'll pay more attention.
Fabulous selections and thanks for the commentary. I will watch with great interest to see how these are used. I've become aware that while I have a lot of fabric, it often all looks the same. Nothing distinguishes one piece from another. This will be fun to follow.
In some of those fabrics you have lightening, or waterfalls, seaweed, or DNA strings... what fun!
The link to 7 Minutes was great. I just heard about the rover landing today on GMA, so it was interesting to see what they are trying to do. Love the fabric tutorial, it is very helpfull to see your fabric selection process. Can't wait to see the quilt you are going to make with these.
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