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Showing posts from May, 2018

More thread painting

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on the red maple leaf quilt.  At present I'm working on quilting down the dark portions of the background.  I started with black thread (Omni by Superior) in the darkest areas.  I started with tiny pebbles but branched out into a near scribble quilting. After using the black I turned to a very dark forest green.  This was the first time I tried using #12 perle cotton (Valdani)  in my HQ Sweet Sixteen.  It worked very well with Omni in the bobbin.    Since some of the areas were graded from very dark to just dark, I overlapped the quilting in black and dark green.  The overlap allowed a smooth gradation in the quilting. In the photo below you can see the difference in weight between the Omni 40 wt thread and the #12 perle. (Perle above, Omni below) After working with the dark green perle, I switched to a slightly lighter green in Metler silk finished cotton 40 wt.  Again I overlapped some of the ...

Life Intervenes

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It has been way too long since I posted to this blog.  Amazing how life interferes with your best intentions.  Whether work gets in the way, or a sick pet, or a family emergency or just all the little things that take up your time day to day, we need to make the time to do the things we love. So today was great for me because I got back to quilting the red maple leaves panel that I had Spoonflower print from one of my photos. Stage one was to layer the sandwich.  I used backing (muslin), a flat batting (warm and white) and a wool batting (Hobbs wool) for my sandwich.  I actually pieced the wool as there will be lots and lots of quilting (stitching) on top and this is unlikely to get washed often. This is the sandwich pin basted and the red thread I decided to use for stage two.  Stage two was to stabilize the sandwich by outlining the red leaves and stitching the veins. Right away the stitching gives more definition to the piece.  Here is a c...

Calling all crazy quilters

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Do you love satins, silks, velvets, ribbons and laces.  Then you are probably a crazy quilter, even if you don't know it. Crazy quilts were popular in late Victorian Times.  Said to be inspired by the Japanese pavilion of the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial Exposition.  The idea of  a crazy quilt is to piece each section in an improvisational manner and then decorate the seam lines with fancy embroidery stitches.  (Originally these stitches may have actually attached the pieces to each other or to a foundation.)  Often little embroidered motifs like flowers, leaves and butterflies were also added to the pieces.  One tradition held that embroidering a spider on its web on the quilt would bring luck.  Buttons and beads can also be used in the decorations. (crazy quilt block and "helper") These quilts were usually for decorative purposes and were not laundered often.  Typically they would decorate the back of a settee or chair or would be...