Quiltcon Quilt
103'' x 94''
It takes a long time to finish the binding on a king sized quilt. That was a lot of Top Gear and random Discovery Channel shows sitting on the sofa by my husband. But I'm not complaining one bit because it was totally worth it for this quilt.
Started 2 years ago at the first QuiltCon in an Improv class with Denyse Schmidt, this quilt is a new favourite for me. I know improv, I'm very comfortable with it. Taking cues and following the process of someone else was refreshing. I may not use the brown paper bags Denyse starts with, but that go where you may and trusting your intuition is very similar to my approach a lot of the time. And she totally taught me to embrace the small pieces, the tiny, right alongside the large.
A year after QuiltCon I took out my initial blocks again and made more. Many, many more. Then I spent some time puzzling it together. For me, that part is probably the most fun. It is a challenge, for sure, but so much fun.
(Confused about that puzzling it together part? Check out my new class on CreativeLive all about that!)
A few days of work to get it all together and I was thrilled with the completed top. I was not thrilled with the prospect of quilting another king size quilt on my home machine, however. Especially because I wanted something more than straight lines on this. So I convinced my friend Andrea at Urban Quiltworks to play.
And boy did she do a stellar job!
She embraced the spirit of improv with her quilting as well. We settled on a lovely yellow thread from Wonderfil, then I left her to her own devices. She did some all over work, some line work, some dense parts, left some spaces open. If your eye wasn't already moving constantly with the piecing, the quilting will get it going. There is just so much to see. And so much additional texture created.
To be honest, I feel totally spoiled and honoured to have her work on this quilt. It is absolutely perfect. The right compliment between the piecing and the quilting for sure.
A few people that have seen this quilt have commented on the colour scheme. I must say, that was entirely unintentional. In Denyse's class you start with your chosen feature fabric - the black and white in my case - and her bags of scraps. You also pick a solid. I must admit that my hand was directed a little by my friend Jules as it blindly searched in the paper bag for my solid selection. I never, ever would have picked this weird green/grey/sage colour. But I am happy she led me to it.
At home, when making more blocks I used the initial fabrics found in the classroom blocks as my guide. Just tiny bits of orange, yellow, and that magenta tones. A bit of brown and blue. More grey. Overall it feels cool. There is no bright pink and only snippets of purple. It feels like there is a bit of control, but mostly just randomness.
Actually, it feels like home to me and it is wonderful to have this beauty finished and keeping us warm at night.
Beautiful and colourful quilt!! I also spotted an Inuit soapstone sculpture on your dresser... it reminds me of the one that my sister gave to me as a gift!
ReplyDeleteThis is one beautiful and very fun quilt!! Love how it was quilted and I am glad you have it keeping you warm on the bed now instead of it keeping you warm while it was being bound!! Much better to share the warmth then hog it all to yourself! ;-)
ReplyDeleteWhat a fun quilt! I wish I dared play that much with such a variety of colors!
ReplyDeleteEverything about this quilt is fantastic!!!
ReplyDeleteI understand why its your new favourite! Absolutely awesome!!!
ReplyDeleteeverything is awesome about this quilt - I need to jump out of my comfort zone and make one like this for my bed. :-) Thanks for the opportunity to quilt it, it was fun to do, and so rewarding to see it in pictures!
ReplyDeleteIt is a totally awesome quilt! I wish I would only make quilts like that! But I have too much yardage I feel I should be using, so I don't make scrappy quilts because they don't make a dent in my stash. Is that the poorest excuse ever?
ReplyDeleteBut honestly, this quilt is phenomenal! I totally love it. I want one just like it on my bed!
Your quilt is lovely. I took two days of classes with Denyse in CT and love her approach. My blocks were featured (unattibuted) in her chapter. I'm on the road now (Texas) and can't remember the exact title of the book, drat. I will get to QuiltCon for one-day--yippee).
ReplyDeleteBack to YOUR quilt. Your feature fabric is what pulls it all together; that, and the use of the solids you chose.
It is very striking. Congratulations.
Hi!!!! It is beautiful!!!! Fun,bright and cheerful!!!! Wonderful!!!! Love the quilting too!!!!!
ReplyDeleteI love this quilt so much. It inspired me to sit amongst my scraps last night ans play - now I need to tidy up!
ReplyDeleteCan you tell me the name of that black and white fabric you used, its beautiful.
I have just re-read your blog post about your visit to Gees Bend, we are visiting Alabama in April and Hubby has agreed to a (massive) detour so I can visit with the quilters. I dont know much about the Civil Rights Movement so I'll have to do some research.
Beautiful quilt! I love that there is so much going on there and so much to look at. My favorite kind of quilt. The eyes never stop moving over it.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely gorgeous! The B&W print anchors all the colors and prints beautifully. And, yes, the quilting is indeed amazing! Thanks for yet again, more inspiration!
ReplyDelete