Finished quilt: Sketch

This is Sketch, one of my absolute favourite quilts of all time. It’s a hand-drawn sketch recreated as a quilt, made using freezer-paper piecing with striped fabric.

Sketch is based on a modified version of Sunday sketch #181, which I posted on 15 December 2019. That design, which I drew with a gel pen on a Rhodia dot pad, looked like this:

Geometriquilt: Sunday sketch #181

In the blog post at the time, I wrote:

You can see from the scale of the background dots and my fill lines just how small this design was on the page of my Rhodia dot pad – only a few centimetres across! I love a good triangle, and I just started placing them on the page, following only one rule: each triangle I added had to touch an adjacent triangle, but only at a tip (no back-to-back edges allowed). I stopped when I was happy with the random arrangement.

Those of you who know how much I like symmetry and order can probably see that despite the ‘improv’ nature of this design, it’s still fairly well balanced in terms of positive vs negative space, and the number of shapes in each quadrant. Even when I’m not trying to be ‘ordered’, it happens 🙂

 

I thought that the design would look great as a large quilt, but I didn’t spend much time thinking about how that might be possible – I guess I just assumed I’d piece large shapes in a solid colour. I never got around to doing it, and moved on to other designs.

I’m not sure when it first happened, but my quilty friend Tamara Stunnell – who I met through the Melbourne Modern Quilt Guild – suggested that I make the sketch into a quilt using striped fabric to represent my sketching lines. Ooohhhh. Brilliant idea. Genius. I knew it would be amazing. But also way too hard. I let it slide.

Then she said it again. And probably again. And each time I’d say “Great idea!”, then change the subject, cos I honestly had no idea how I’d do it. I’d need a striped fabric with the same imperfections as my hand-drawn pen lines. I’d need to create paper-piecing templates for every single triangle, and figure out how to add the thin black outline to every shape (in the exact same width as the lines in the fabric, just like in my sketch). I’d need to make sure the striped fabric lined up on every single piece, so that the lines all followed the same direction across the quilt – just like my pen lines do when I’m sketching on a page. I’d have to make sure that a black stripe never ended up in the corner of a shape, right up against the shape’s black outline, or it would make it look too dark and draw the eye unnaturally towards it. I’d need to figure out how to sew all the shapes together, probably using some partial seams. The points of the triangles would have to meet perfectly. And I’d have to do it all with a large white background, which would show up every stray black thread. Are you kidding me?!?! No way. It’ll never happen!

And then we were in our local quilt shop – GJ’s Discount Fabrics – one day, and there it was: the perfect striped fabric. The black stripe from the Dot and Stripe Delights range from Robert Kaufman. Stripes that look hand-drawn. Fairly regular, not perfect. A few flecks that look like ink here and there. And the stripes are around 1/4″, meaning that the outline of each shape could also be 1/4″ wide. “You should make that quilt,” Tamara said. Arrghhh! She was right, of course. I bought yardage.

So, with no deadline in mind, I started planning the quilt. I revised the sketch, making slight changes to avoid some parts I hadn’t loved in the original. But I kept the design mostly the same. Here’s the updated version:

I counted up all the shapes and made freezer paper templates for paper piecing. I marked on each one which direction the stripes should point, to make sure they were all parallel in the finished quilt (just like they are in the sketch). And then I got to work making all the pieces. Some pieces are unique, while others – like the 2:1 half-rectangle triangle – appear a few times.

Once all the triangle units were done, I put them together into the quilt top. Only one partial seam was required for assembly. I was really happy with how it looked, but hardly took any photos cos I was terrified of mucking up a mostly white quilt!

I sent Sketch to Valerie Cooper of Sweet Gum Quilting for longarm quilting. After talking through various quilting options, we settled on a grid design in white thread to represent the graph paper I use for sketching. Valerie offset the grid so that the vertical and horizontal quilting lines (in white thread) avoided the vertical and horizontal outlines of the triangles (in black fabric).

I finished the quilt with a facing, so it was nice and flat like a sheet of paper. Here are the sketch and the quilt side by side. I honestly couldn’t be happier with how this quilt turned out.

 

So this quilt represents a few things for me. First and foremost, the importance of supportive friends who know when to nudge you beyond your comfort zone. Also the joy of making for the sake of it, with no purpose in mind other than to tackle a challenge. And finally, the evolution of my design and quilt-making skills. When I first posted this Sunday sketch in 2019, I wasn’t ready (and possibly not able) to make this quilt. But two years later, my skills had improved to the point where it was possible. I love seeing tangible signs of how my quilt-making has developed over the years.

Sketch was juried into QuiltCon 2022, and will hang at the show in Phoenix, Arizona. If you happen to spot it there, send me a pic or tag me on Instagram! I’d love to see it.

 

 

Finished quilt: Cherries

I don’t always post about finished quilts, but I’m particularly proud of this one: Cherries. It’s also going to be hanging at QuiltCon 2022 in Phoenix, USA, so I thought it would be good to document its creation for anyone who sees it there and wants to know more.

On Instagram, I follow a UK-based multidisciplinary artist and printmaker named Frea Buckler. In July 2021, Frea posted an image (no longer on Instagram) of a series of screenprints, one of which featured large overlapping hexagons.

I fell in love with the artwork at top right. The colours (that yellow!), the shapes – everything about it just makes me happy.

Coincidentally, the Modern Quilt Guild had just announced the 2022 Hexagon Quilting Challenge for QuiltCon: “Eligible quilts must use a hexagon shape as a primary element in the design.” I knew Frea’s artwork would work really well as a quilt, and I wanted to make it and submit it to the Hexagon challenge. Can you see the four hexagons in her design? Two standing side by side, and two more larger ones created by their outside edges?

I contacted Frea and asked for her permission to recreate her artwork (which she had provisionally called ‘Cherries’) as a quilt, and she graciously agreed. I also bought the print 🙂

I’ve never adapted someone else’s design to make a quilt before; I’ve got enough of my own designs to work with. But I loved the idea of scaling up a small (20 cm square) artwork to quilt size, sourcing just the right solids to match the original paint colours, and creating an entire quilt with only 9 colours and 14 seams.

When the print arrived, I used my Kona Cotton Solids and Devonstone Collection solids colour cards to match – as closely as I could – the colours in the original artwork. Then I had to wait for all the fabric to be delivered (this was during lockdown, when I couldn’t shop in-person, and post was delayed!). Some were perfect matches; others, not so much. But I finally settled on a palette that I was happy with.

I procrastinated a long time making this quilt. I wasn’t entirely sure how to approach it, and I didn’t know if I’d encounter problems with sewing together large pieces with long bias edges. In the end, I just started measuring and cutting and sewing and re-sewing where necessary. It wasn’t as difficult as I was expecting, and it didn’t take me nearly as long (which is good, since I’d left it til the last minute!). The final quilt measures around 49″ square.

Cherries was quilted by Valerie Cooper of Sweet Gum Quilting. Because I’d left it so late, we settled on vertical straight lines with yellow thread. I think the quilt could’ve also looked great with more geometric quilting within each colour block, but I didn’t leave Valerie nearly enough time for that. She quilted it quickly, and I did a facing and took photos with what felt like only minutes to spare before the QuiltCon submission deadline.

I received confirmation in December that Cherries had been juried into QuiltCon. I’ve seen lots of amazing hexagon quilts on Instagram that are destined for the show, so I’m excited that Cherries will hang with them. If you’re in Phoenix and you see this quilt, feel free to send me a pic! I’d love to see it.

I’m very grateful to Frea for allowing me to recreate her artwork and for inspiring me to break out of my quilty comfort zone. I’ll definitely be less hesitant to try something new next time.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday sketch #294

A fun little sketch ahead of Valentine’s Day tomorrow.

This week’s designs are inspired by the felt garlands from Erica Bea that I keep seeing on my Instagram feed. They’re so cute! If you haven’t checked out @hello.erikabea, go now – her feed is the best combination of crafty goodness, gorgeous design, pies (!) and all-round, excellent-human activity. (As it turns out, today is Erika’s birthday, so send her some love if you can. You could even buy a garland or two to celebrate – win win!)

So anyway, I wanted the letters to look like they’re hanging from the garland too. I’m not sure if it worked, really… but I still like it enough to post it, haha! These colours remind me of those chalky heart-shaped candies with the messages on them.

Here’s a version with just hearts and no letters. It’s cute too!

And one with a few hearts taken out, so you can see more of the garland. If I was going to make this one, I’d probably rearrange the hearts a little, just to balance them out a bit more and to avoid that column of hearts down the left and the long diagonal string of hearts in the bottom left. This was my first attempt!

These designs are pretty simple, as I’m sure you can tell – they’re just big and small squares, set on point. Easy peasy!