Friday, April 26, 2013

And then there were TWO

We are having something of a baby boom at work, and there are 3 group quilts in various stages of completion. One of the new ones is called "And then there were TWO", because this is a second child. In 2011, we made a depression era inspired bunny quilt for the first one. Bunnies were from Darcy Ashton's Grandma's Bunnies designs and were so cute.

Here is the original:
Grandmother's Favorite Bunny
The second quilt has a slightly more -- dare I use the word??? -- "modern" flavor and was mocked-up in EQ7 to work out the layout, cutting, etc. The bunny shape in the EQ7 image was used just to get a feel for the look. In the real quilt, the bunnies are cut from one piece of fabric and fused to the background. I had a lot of left-over 2" purple and yellow 4-patches that were intended to be corner-stones in the original quilt. Somehow they didn't quite work, so have been saved in the scrap drawer until now. I only had to made 48 more, and fortunately still had enough jelly-roll strips to do it.
EQ7 Mockup

Blocks laid out on the design wall, ready to sew together
 The bunnies are all made from a charm-pack of 30's repro fabric. Blocks are 7 1/2 " unfinished. Yellow background fabrics were cut slightly oversize, to give a little flexibility, in case the bunny artists didn't get things centered perfectly, and after free motion stitching around the raw edges, which sometimes causes things to draw up, the blocks were cut down to size, and the purple corners were added.

Close up of a bunny block showing free motion stitching on raw edge fused applique
Originally, I thought to use a blanket stitch, which was also used on the first quilt, but I did one block that way (my bunny block) and didn't like it and ended up ripping it all out. Besides, stitching around 26 bunnies was going to take a REALLY long time, and was going to be incredibly boring. Each bunny pair was made by a different person in the group, so experimenting and possibly ruining someone's contribution was not an option. I made one small mock-up and tried free motion stitching around the edges (using a tear-away stabilizer underneath). I went around twice and I quite like the way it looks -- a bit sketchy and informal, but definitely secure.

One of things that I love about this quilt and making it with my friends, is that despite the fact that we all used exactly the same bunny shape and it is just silhouette -- no eyes, nose, no facial expression, etc -- the positioning and spacing, with some facing the same direction, some nestled really close, some farther apart, some facing in opposite directions, etc gives these bunny siblings an absolutely amazing breadth of personality and interaction.This is not something that I would  have or could have done on my own, and every time I see how the 'odd' choices of the other contributors make the whole so much better -- I am awed.

This will get sewn together this weekend (with help from the group), and then will go off to the long-armer.

Susan



Saturday, April 6, 2013

My Son, The Sun

Last year I learned about and joined SAQA. So far I have not been able to participate in any local events, but some of the art quilts being produced are quite amazing. For example, at the 2012 Houston Quilt Festival (an other venues), there was a SAQA exhibit entitled Seasonal Palette. This group of more than 30 quilts is now (April, 2013) in Cincinnati, Ohio and then moves on to other venues. They are fabulous.

Each year the organization auctions small (12"x12") donated quilts to raise money for their programs, exhibitions, etc. Last year I bought a couple of really cool pieces and this year I thought I would try my hand at making a quilt to donate.

Inspiration: I've got kind of a thing for Mariner's Compasses, especially after taking a class from Judy Mathieson. My idea was to make to make a small elongated compass and a second baby compass that would be like a mother and child. I wanted to show the mother Sun beaming down at her son Sun and enveloping him in the glow. This is also a play on classic words -- Meet my son the doctor, Meet my son the Lawyer, Meet my son the Sun... The child could have been a daughter, and maybe I'll try that next time, but it didn't slip off the tongue quite the same way, and I like catchy titles. 

Execution: I had a beautiful batik collection of 2 1/2" strips that I thought would make great sunny 'suns' and provide nice complementary contrasting backgrounds. The challenge to myself was to get the entire top and binding out of the strips.

Fabrics used
I designed the general layout and sized the compasses using EQ7, so that I could use EQ7 to print out foundations for paper-piecing the compasses. 

EQ7 Mockup used "custom set"
Foundations for the Mother Sun
"Son" Sun assembly diagram

The foundation pieces for the elongated Sun are all different sizes and thus are not interchangeable. They must be sewed back together in exactly the right place (i.e. 8 has to sew to 1; 2 sews to 3; etc and then 8-1 sews to 2-3, etc, see Son assembly diagram). The centers were machine appliqued. The edges were turned under using the freezer paper template and starch technique, and then the pieces were attached with a very narrow zigzag using a coordinating color of InvisiFil(r).



The compasses are not pieced into a background circle because that would have made too sharp a line, and my background fabric was already cut up into 2 1/2" strips and thus not big enough. 

Instead, the background was added around the compasses in an improvisational string piecing or log-cabin manner. I purposely used oversize pieces for the outer edges when I made the compasses, so that I could add 'strings' in straight lines without cutting off the points. The background was all made from the 1st and 4th fabrics in the package (total of 4 strips). Both fabrics have areas of blue or green background printed with lighter leaves and flowers. "Background" compass segments, shown in white in the foundation figure, were 'fussy-cut' to place the lighter green on the edges where the compasses meet, and to place darker blues and purples on the outer edges. One of the hardest parts was visualizing things in reverse, since the paper piecing results in a mirror image. The improvisational string piecing was done to shade the background correspondingly. 

The two Suns and their backgrounds were made separately and then joined together by "taking a page" out of Ruth B. McDowell's book. I made an exact freezer paper drawing of the desired finished layout on the shiny side and drew the polygonal seam that would place the baby Sun into the bigger background. Then I re-drew and added tick-marks across the seam line, marked corners, etc on the paper side, and finally cut the freezer paper into two pieces on the seam line. I ironed each piece onto the wrong side of the corresponding pieced Sun, carefully marked the seam-line and tick-marks and then cut to leave a 1/4" seam allowance. That part was pretty scary, after so much work. The final assembly was then a matter of matching the seam lines and tick-marks for the first leg, sewing a straight seam, clipping, pivoting, matching and sewing etc. 

Back of Meet my Son, the Sun
The quilting is relatively simple since the background is so busy. It shows a bit better on the back. I stitched in the ditch around each Sun's rays, did a loopy motif in the middle of each ray, and then free-motion quilted flames in the background, using two different variegated threads -- greenish for the greener areas and blue-purplish for the bluer areas. I've just started to experiment with embroidery embellishment, so added a perl cotton stem-stitched grid on the 'face' of the mother Sun. Next time I'll do that BEFORE layering and quilting. The binding was made with the few remaining scraps of the background fabrics by piecing things to place flower motifs to blend with the background in some places (see Front bottom edge), and not to blend in others. 

Out into the World: SAQA requires a label and a sleeve -- always a good thing. I got it done and sent in by the first deadline of April 1, 2013 and it is actually online (WooHoo!!). Hopefully, this little quilt will find a new home and raise a little money for a good cause.

Thanks for reading...