Monday, October 29, 2007

Dimensional Pall



Another dimensional quilt. I'm looking forward to the 2008 New Jersey Quilt Fest. I want to get the PA Quilt Fest photos posted. Will the dimensional trend continue?

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Quilts from Japan





One of my favorite features of the PA Quilt Extravaganza is the international quilts, especially the ones from Japan. This on had lots of surface texture; many of the elements were designed raised off of the flat plane of the quilt. It is hard to tell from the photo but the images arranged around center design of the quilt are on the insides of fabric-sculpted shells.

Monday, October 08, 2007

Loose, Limber and Abstract

This is on a fairly loosely-woven background fabric that might be linen. The purple dots are also linen-like. The prints are batiks and the quilt is really very simple. A panel of white, a panel of ombre, multi-sized dots and bubbles framed by funky tumbling squares all roped in with really loosely-twisted wool.


Organic and Fan Shapes

I like the fan shapes and the silhouette feel that the white leaf-shapes create against the darker background. The color palette is interesting. It is nearly neutral with greys and taupes, browns and dull greens. The dark golds and deep purpley blues snake their way up the quilt ending in an explosion of purple dots at the top right corner. Over all its organic and dynamic without
being really colorful. Within the borders are details that may be embossed velvet or velveteen, or even brocade. Triangular pieces wrapped through a covered ring, they look like tie-d0wns, made to be attached to something?

This is quilted by hand by the way, in a wonderful combination of detail-creating stitches, outline and background grid/cross-hatching.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Traditional and Not

Traditional block designs used in new ways. Is it a Carolina Lily living inside of a tumbling block patch? The lily blocks rise up like tall flowers in a garden border. Floating above them is an open, embroidered image of lilies.

This quilt is also using light effects and transparency. The artist choose to start with darker fabrics in the lower right corner moving the light lily "stems" across and up the quilt until they reach the open center where the blue sky takes over the composition. She uses the backs of her fabrics several times to enhance the feeling of light beaming out from amongst the flowers.


African Spikes, Curves and Bars



This quilt has great interesting elements:
  • African fabric, mixed with what are probably non-African-produced animal prints,checks and possibly some patterned batiks

  • A simple, basic arrangement of gently curved pieces lined up in regular, horizontal bars.

  • The bars are interrupted a few dramatic times with curved pieces put together with spikey, Orange Peel-type piecing

  • The surface is embellished with varigated ribbon yarn and what looks like some cord.
  • Metallic Quilting that loosely echos the shape of the vertical piecing.

Otago Gold: Chinese Coins



Another World Quilt Competition. The circles have been appliqued onto diagonally pieced squares. The diagonals cleverly form strips of color that shoot around the quilt. They are strong lines but the circles and the neat center rectangle win the design tug-of-war here.

Some of the circles look like they may have had foil applied to them? Foiling quilting may be a just-now-arriving trend. I always love quilts with a circle theme. This one is embellished with Chinese coins.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

World Quilt Competition First Prize Winner (I think)


What an amazing quilt. I didn't get a good enough photo of the information or the ribbon to know for sure but I believe this was a first prize winner in the World Quilt Competition!
Since I can't read that I can't read the technique information either. I do know that the black line detail on the Grecian images is stitching. The double gold rings around the medallians are a gold lame fabric and I would say images are appliqued with very narrow machine satin stitch. It is machine quilted.





More Quilts, More Quilts!

A folded bow tie quilt made from Asian prints. The pattern came from a book by Rebecca Wat The bow tie is one my favorite traditional patterns. Again, this quilt is showing the dimensional element that is gaining momentum.
The black blocks are not flat filler-type blocks. They are folded like the printed ones
World Quilt Competition Honoarable Mention winner. Judith Briant, New Zealand

Saturday, September 08, 2007

#1003




The quilt maker did not use any paint to create the face in this portrait quilt. A particularly interesting element here is her use of the back of the fabric to create the shading in the shirt. Nor did she use a pair of jeans to create the denim look in the quilt either. The jeans are appliqued shades of blue. Again, an amazing piece, hanging next to the Guatemalan ladies, difficult to get near bacause everyone wanted a closer look!

Blue Ladies of Guatemala


More trends: dimensional elements and ethnic fabrics In this case textiles that the women are holding and many of their headdresses are folded and/or stuffed. The handwoven Guatemalan fabrics gorgeous and once again, an ingenuous use of fabric I've always admired but never knew what I would do with.

This quilt was stunning and surrounded by people as I was trying to take this picture. The photo doesn't really do it's color or texture justice.

Pennsylvania Quilt Extravaganza 2007 is Here


Ok, here we go! It was a great show. Maybe part of the reason the show moved to the Farm Show Complex in Harrisburg was so that it could grow bigger? I don't know, but it was too big this year for me to get through in one day. The drive is longer but I must go! First my images of the prize winners.

This was a huge quilt with an irregular shape. Though I have no hard and fast evidence for it I believe that non-square/rectangular shaped quilts are becoming more and more popular. I haven't seen many irregular shapes win prizes.

The quilt combines painted folk images and paper pieced blocks. There are, as the artist points out in her statement, lions quilted in the upper corners. There are also african fabrics, or prints combined to evoke natively produced african prints. The use of ethnic prints, especially ones other than Japanese, is another trend I see more and more of and I do love it. I have quite a collection and these great examples provide ideas.

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Pennsylvania National Quilt Extravaganza 2007...

...is coming up beginning on the September 6 and going through the 9th. I'm looking forward to it! Although I really must limit my fabric buying until I use some more of what I have.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Needle Felted Project Details




Details of the front, top and bottom. It still has a bit of an unfinished feel to me but I'm not sure what I would do to finish it.

Another "My Project:" Needle Felting


Here is another project in progress! This started as a vintage wool pullover and in my first and only needle felting class I started, and nearly finished, turning it into an embellished cardigan. The printed fabric that was added is printed cotton bonded to the sweater with wool roving in colors that echo the print.

August Days



It has been a week and a half of vacation and that time has been nearly computer free. I have, as I promised myself, worked on my New York Beauty flower quilt. Pictures here and I get to add the "My Projects" tag to this entry!

I've got about 5 fairly complete rounds and bits and pieces of another, some of which I intend to be single fill-in edge patches. I had originally intended to make this quilt "full-sized," that is about 80 by 80, that would be 10 rounds. I am now considering making it smaller, 5 or six rounds, to fit in the space between the windows in my sewing room, since I really don't have any place to hang a really large quilt and I don't know that is will ever actually be a bed cover. We'll see how long I want to keep paper piecing!

Sunday, August 05, 2007

More Butterflies




The arrangement of the bays and the plastic bands that kept viewers back from the art made it impossible to take a full photo but this was a lovely butterfly applique.

Barbara Barrick Mckie



There was a little bit of a butterfly theme at a spot in the show. Here's one by my one of my favorite quilters: Barbara Barrick Mckie. Her work is amazing.

Group Quilt Detail


IMG_0120

Detail of the quilt below that shows the parts, each worked on by a different quilter.