Category: Sunday sketch

Sunday sketch #93

I mentioned awhile ago that I was going to try and create more block-based designs. EQ8 has proven a handy tool for that, as I can tile, flip and rotate blocks very quickly and easily (although I’m starting to think that it’s hampering my design process in some ways, but that’s a story for another day).

This week, a design that flows seamlessly between blocks:

Geometriquilt: Sunday sketch #93

The tonal gradation works well here, and also means that I didn’t have to think of a colour palette 🙂

 

 

Sunday sketch #92

My hand-drawn sketches are usually limited to one or two colours, and my EQ8 sketches aren’t so different… I can manage maybe three or four colours at most (as long as one of those is white*). I think this is due to a combination of things: I’m not confident enough yet to play with different colours; I find that too many colours distracts me from the design itself; and multiple colours just overload my senses.

But it’s surprising what you can achieve with only a few colours. This week’s sketch uses a whopping four (or three*) and takes advantage of a single element on repeat:

Geometriquilt: Sunday sketch #92

This is the sort of quilt design that’s MUCH easier to do in EQ8 than by hand. I had to recolour it a few times to ensure that none of the adjacent background squares were coloured the same way and that there was a fairly even distribution of each colour.

I love the idea of a quilt design based on a single motif, with the variation coming from colour rather than design. I’m going to try and design more of these.

In the meantime, this design could be made into a quilt using rectangles, half-square triangles and squares. Because it’s block-based, it’d be fairly easy to put together.

 

* yes, I know white isn’t a colour 🙂

Sunday sketch #91

More playing around with EQ8 this week. Can you tell I haven’t managed to develop many good colour palettes yet?

 

Geometriquilt: Sunday sketch #91

This is a block-based pattern: follow the horizontal and vertical lines until they lead to a black square, and that’s where four adjacent blocks meet.

I made a bigger design, then cut it down to this size (slicing some blocks in the process). It’s a pretty busy design (even in only three colours), so I thought it was better to have fewer blocks.

There are a few different ways you could make this – as is, or on point; and with squares, rectangles and triangles.