Tagged: flying geese

Sunday sketch #384

If you’ve followed my Sunday sketches for awhile, you’ll know that I love playing with colour palette and placement to make multiple versions of the same block. This week’s design uses two blocks, but that just creates more opportunities!

In the first version I’m showing you, which is the last iteration of the underlying design, I’ve just used colour to hide parts of the block (by blending them into the background). This particular colour placement suggests that the blocks have two layers, each of which can be peeled back to reveal the other one on its own. (This is my attempt at ‘modernising’ what’s otherwise a relatively traditional design.)

The designs that led to that first one are a bit different, though. I started by alternating two block types in a standard layout (even though the diagonal lines in the next few versions might suggest an on-point layout). Even with two relatively simple block designs, there are loads of ways to use colour placement to achieve a different look. Sometimes that means colouring some shapes the same as the background, effectively removing them from the design.

After playing with those versions for awhile, I switched to an on-point layout, which changes all those diagonals to vertical or horizontal lines. The same two block types are in there, but it almost looks like a design you could achieve using just one block type and some creative sashing.

I often like to colour only some of the outer blocks to create interesting edges to my designs. (I really like the movement in the first design below, which I think might be easier to see when there’s no red to distract the eye.)

Of course, I kept iterating these designs and adding or subtracting new shapes (which were always there, just not always coloured in). This next version, the penultimate one, is the first version where I coloured in those smaller red squares (which are actually the four corners of that particular block; the other block doesn’t have any red in it).

This colour placement suggests two discrete layers: a lacework of red squares overlaying the black ones. I liked the idea of paring back both layers in different areas, to reveal each one on its own (at least for a few blocks). That’s a concept I’d like to explore more in future.

Anyway, so the first and last sketches in this week’s post feel a bit different from the rest of the designs – I probably could’ve stretched them out to fill two blog posts! – but at least you can see how they’re all connected.

This week’s designs could be made into quilts using squares, square-within-a-square units, flying geese, rectangles and half-square triangles.

Sunday sketch #342

This week’s sketch is a direct progression of Sunday sketch #341. Instead of half-circles, I’ve used flying geese, and instead of larger circles in the inside of those black squares, I’ve introduced more squares. The colouring’s much the same, and there’s still a ton of movement, with lots of secondary shapes created by all those horizontal, vertical and diagonal lines.

The good thing about introducing flying geese is that their angles match those already in use in the design – so the sides of the geese are parallel to other lines in the design. Same with the central white squares. That helps to keep the whole design feeling coherent and less cluttered.

Here it is in a standard layout (with the blocks not on point).

I also tried replacing the flying geese with another shape – a triangle-in-a-square unit – but… nah. I don’t think it works well at all.

I’m not entirely sure why I don’t love these variations very much… they just feel a bit too busy and chaotic for me. The triangle-in-a-square units just add too many new angles that aren’t repeated elsewhere in the design, and it all feels very pointy and sharp. No thanks. But hey, I’m happy to share them anyway, because that’s what the Sunday sketches are all about: exploring design ideas, playing with shapes, and inspiring you to do the same.

These designs could be made using squares, half-square triangles, flying geese and rectangles. The standard layout above is an 8 x 8 grid, so 64 blocks total. Although you wouldn’t have to construct blocks before constructing the whole quilt – you could just make all the individual units and then piece them together in rows or columns. All the colouring is the same in all blocks, so you could chain-piece your way through them in no time.

Sunday sketch #337

I don’t have too many designs up my sleeve at the moment, and when I sat down recently to draw something new, I ended up rehashing an old sketch.

This week’s design is a reworking of Sunday sketch #318, which I posted in July. I introduced some curves, which actually make the whole design simpler to construct as a quilt.

The shapes kinda remind me of Christmas crackers too: long rectangles (or cyclinders) capped by triangles at both ends.

Like the original sketch, this one illustrates the Bezold effect – an optical illusion where a colour (in this case, orange) looks slightly different depending on which colours are next to it. I didn’t know there was a name for this until Carolina Oneto mentioned it in a comment on my Instagram post for Sunday sketch #324 (obviously it’s an effect I use a fair bit!).

Anyway, this sketch could be made into a quilt using flying geese, half circles (or quarter-circles or drunkard’s paths units) and squares. I think it’d be much easier to make than the original sketch on which it’s based!