When a friend of mine was getting married, she described to me a "Sand Unity Ceremony" that would take place at her wedding. Two different colors of sand in two jars are poured into one new vessel. This symbolizes the two becoming one, intertwined, inseparable, eternal. I loved the image, and decided to illustrate that in a wedding quilt for the couple. Her wedding colors were grey and pink, and his favorite colors were turquoise and purple.
Found the fabrics in Anaheim, at my favorite warehouse (!) and a few bits and pieces of other things from the scrap box. I love the two grays i found for the background. I like how this combo of 9-patches and 4-patches came together. They are 4 1/2 inch blocks (but I accidently made the 9 patches 5" blocks (!) so had to arbitrarily trim them down. That makes the grains uneven, more authentic!
I googled "sand unity ceremony" and liked this quote: "Just as the grains of sand can never be separated, may the two of you be intertwined together in love for the rest of your lives."
Friday, October 11, 2013
Fruits and Veggies Convergence
A simple wall quilt, made by cutting 4 pieces of fabric an replacing the strips from one with another. Ricky Timms calls this CONVERGENCE, and I followed his instructions from a book. (https://www.rickytims.com/quiltgallery/harmonic-convergence-quilts)
A super simple quilt, the fabrics are oranges, apples, corn on the cob, and celery. The border is a tossed salad, complete with olives, onions, tomatoes, cucumbers and egg slices!
The fabrics didn't quite contrast as much as I would have liked, they kind of blur together. But there it is, a fun technique!
A super simple quilt, the fabrics are oranges, apples, corn on the cob, and celery. The border is a tossed salad, complete with olives, onions, tomatoes, cucumbers and egg slices!
The fabrics didn't quite contrast as much as I would have liked, they kind of blur together. But there it is, a fun technique!
Coffin Quilt
Back in 2004, I read an article in a book on old quilts about the custom of memorial, or "Coffin Quilts" in the late 1800's. So I decided, along with a collection of reproduction prints of "mourning cloths" of that era, to make my own Coffin Quilt. I chose a block named (of course) Coffin Star, which is a 16 patch square in a square. I used 2 different grays from my stash to set the somber black fabrics, along with a tan from someplace.
The border is a great Anaheim Warehouse find, a black/pink/grey stripe I picked up for $1.98 a yard on one of my fabric binges.
Perhaps my favorite part of the Coffin Quilt is the Epitaph, written by my BFF and quilting partner Sprout. I wrote it on the back, and have asked Pete to display and read it at my funeral (some day MANY hundreds of quilts from now!)
In death
I leave this world I've known,
To reach
A place with streets of gold.
But still,
Remain, thorough quilts I've sewn,
And left,
Upon God's earth to hold.
The border is a great Anaheim Warehouse find, a black/pink/grey stripe I picked up for $1.98 a yard on one of my fabric binges.
Perhaps my favorite part of the Coffin Quilt is the Epitaph, written by my BFF and quilting partner Sprout. I wrote it on the back, and have asked Pete to display and read it at my funeral (some day MANY hundreds of quilts from now!)
In death
I leave this world I've known,
To reach
A place with streets of gold.
But still,
Remain, thorough quilts I've sewn,
And left,
Upon God's earth to hold.
Labels:
Halloween,
Memorial,
Sixteen Patch,
Sprout,
Traditional
Friday, October 4, 2013
Autumn Braids
Bought the fabrics for this orange/browns wall quilt on a foray to my favorite fabric warehouse in Anaheim. had my friend Sharon with me who went CRAZY at one of the fabric selections. Sharon felt it was "spring" not "autumn" and therefore did NOT belong. I loved the color, and the idea of a little bit of Spring peeking forward (or back?) in my fall quilt.
The braids were a bit challenging; the vertical rows got "wavy" and I had to do streching and pulling to make them fit. It all came together when I quilted it by machine. I do not particularly like autumn, since I LOVE summer, but this bright quilt is a consolation prize since I really find it bright and cheerful.
The braids were a bit challenging; the vertical rows got "wavy" and I had to do streching and pulling to make them fit. It all came together when I quilted it by machine. I do not particularly like autumn, since I LOVE summer, but this bright quilt is a consolation prize since I really find it bright and cheerful.
Sold to Kendra
Autumn Wall Quilt
I bought a little kit at a Quilt run several years back. Not my usual colors or style, but it was a promo kit for $5..... Never one to pass up a bargain, I bought it. The idea was each store sold a little kit for a "strip" and you put all the strips together into a quilt. I bought only this one strip, and made it into three rows instead, and into a little wall quilt I put up once the weather begins to turn cool.
The little quilt shop has a sign printed by the Quilt Shop (Fat Quarters) that indeed identifies this quaint little house/shop as "Fat Quarters." The shop indeed is a 2 story old house with fabrics, treasures, patterns and goodies tucked into all sorts of nooks and crannies. The theme of the store is usually the darker, somber "country" colors, of which I am not usually drawn.
The little quilt shop has a sign printed by the Quilt Shop (Fat Quarters) that indeed identifies this quaint little house/shop as "Fat Quarters." The shop indeed is a 2 story old house with fabrics, treasures, patterns and goodies tucked into all sorts of nooks and crannies. The theme of the store is usually the darker, somber "country" colors, of which I am not usually drawn.
An Old Halloween Quilt
I was bringing out the Halloween quilts and noticed I had not photographed some made many years ago. Checked the back of this one; it's from 2002.
I recall getting the fabrics as a fat quarter collection, probably some fabric of the month club. (I still indulge...... yeah, I have a lot of quilts "to be made!"
Simple shoo fly block, used scraps in the thin border. The binding is plain black.
I recall getting the fabrics as a fat quarter collection, probably some fabric of the month club. (I still indulge...... yeah, I have a lot of quilts "to be made!"
Simple shoo fly block, used scraps in the thin border. The binding is plain black.
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Halloween Quilt for a Little Girl!
)There are tricks to making this complicated looking block from 2 1/2 inch strips. So I gathered new and old Halloween fabrics together and started sewing, twisting, cutting. I love the way it looks!
For Carrie, for the baby to wrap up in during October!
https://modafabrics.wordpress.com/2012/10/23/simply-woven-quilt/
For Carrie, for the baby to wrap up in during October!
https://modafabrics.wordpress.com/2012/10/23/simply-woven-quilt/
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