Category: Sunday sketch
Sunday sketch #32
Back when I was playing with parallelograms, I tried expanding on the design by making wedges.

I don’t think I’m done exploring this idea; it’s not quite there yet. (This sketch just reminds me of that 1990s self-help book, Who Moved My Cheese?)
Sunday sketch #31
Back to my Moleskine notebook this week, and a regular repeating pattern.

I don’t use my Moleskine squared notebook much anymore for quilt sketching; I prefer the smoother, whiter paper of the Rhodia dot pad. Still, I started this sketch on the Moleskin ages ago, so I decided to finish it there too.
I like the idea of making this with blues that cascade from light to dark down the quilt, almost like a rolling ocean wave. Despite the regularity in the design, there’s a lot of movement there.
Making this quilt design as shown could be a nightmare of partial seams (unless you like that sort of thing!). Instead, you could make each half-rectangle triangle from two smaller rectangles and two smaller half-rectangle triangles (divide each 2×4 unit horizontally and vertically to get four 1×2 units, and you’ll see what I mean). If the quilt were made in solids (and these days, it’s how I picture most of my quilts), you’d never really notice the extra seams.
Sunday sketch #29
More on the theme of overlapping octagons.

The colour combinations with designs like these are almost endless, and provide the perfect opportunity for creating transparency effects.

Even the simpler, more regular patterns create lots of interesting little secondary shapes. Squares within squares within squares.

As with my previous octagon-based designs, these ones could be made using mostly squares, half-square triangles and quarter-square triangles. Setting on-point might be easier, as it would require mostly squares, quarter-square triangles and rectangles.
