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 International Quilting Weekend is Extended Through Monday!

March 17-19 20, 2017

 

All Weekend You Can See Over 220 Free Shows & Win Amazing Prizes

Do you love quilting?

The Quilt Show, with hosts Alex Anderson and Ricky Tims, is a TV Quality online worldwide quilting WebTV show and magazine all in one. There are hundreds of shows, amazing, award-winning guest artists from all over the world, demos and discussions, quilting tutorials, tips and tricks galore, articles, slideshows, patterns and puzzles, all at your fingertips whenever you want to watch them. It's all in chapters so you can watch and then get back to quilting!

 

Introduce yourself to TheQuiltShow.com this weekend. Here's how:

 

Start Watching March 17th

1. Enter to Win! Great prizes (see below). If you have entered, start watching.

2. Start Watching!  (We help you choose)    

                         

The Quilt Show hosted by Alex Anderson and Ricky Tims, will open all of its shows from the first seventeen series-- shows 101-1713 -- for the entire weekend. This means that, for three special days, everyone will have the chance to view over 220 shows, featuring some of the quilting world’s leading artists, for FREE. See your favorite quilters, quilting tips, quilting techniques and quilting tutorials. See the quilts of your favorite quilting teachers.

 

2017 International Quilt Day Sweepstakes Terms & Conditions


You Can Win Great Prizes From Our
Sponsors and Artists!


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A leprechaun told us that it's St. Patrick's Day and has decided to give us a pot of gold with these wonderful quilts celebrating Ireland and St. Patrick's Day. Enjoy a bit of the green from our very own TQS members. All of these quilts can be found in the TQS Quilt Gallery.

If you'd like to learn more about the stories of the individual quilts or their makers, click here for the Quilt Gallery You can then search for quilts by member name, quilt block type, title, etc.

If you are a Star Member you can learn more about the quilts of Denise Labadie, click here for Show 106 - A Touch of Ireland.

Click to play this Smilebox slideshow

 

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Ann writes, Curiosity is a trait we see among many members of the Animal Kingdom……and ducks are no exception. Drawn to the shiny and new, ducks will poke their bills in the darnest places. This lime green, blue and orange duck couldn’t stay put, deciding to poke at the corner of my quilt. Curious Duck indeed!

See more of Ann's work in Show 2006: Engaging the Viewer with Line, Shape, and Gesture.

Original Photo: Mary Kay Davis

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Alex talks with Noriko Endo about two of her confetti quilts at the Houston Quilt Festival.
 

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This month Carolyn Hock helps you with shadowing of your colors. 

 

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International Quilting Weekend has Free shows, quilting gifts contest, and now a big sale in the Shop. You can get 70% Off, 50% Off, 30% Off, or 20% Off.  We are a small store so items are limited to stock on hand. We wanted our viewers to get first shot before the weekend starts.

Click on anything blue and it will take you right to that product in the store:

 

76% Off- TQS DVDs $24.95 are now just $5.99

74% Off- Cotton & Steel Fabric $11.99/yd now just $2.99/yd.

50% Off- Rajah Quilt Kit - This historical quilt kit is now priced below fabric cost. It was $189.99 and now is just $94.99.

50% Off- My Country House Quilt Kit by Lynette Anderson. It was $179.99 and is now $89.99

50% Off- Shiva Artist Paintsticks. Highlight or shade your fabrics for an extra effect. 

50% Off- Wool Roving kits. Get more beauty and texture in your quilt.

50% Off- Dynaflow fabric paint. Amazing results.

30% Off most store products with your 1 year membership. Join or Renew Now.

20% Off most of the store products for everyone through Monday March 20. Use this coupon code at checkout     IQW20% 

(The Code IQW20% does not apply to items with higher % (70%, 50%) Off Sales) 

Already priced right are the Eversewn Sewing Machines. Great to take to class or for the new quilter or sewer.

There are just 10 Block of the Month Kits left. Don't miss out on Sue Garman's amazing quilt.

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I decided to include an Empty Spools Seminar in my 2017 Quilt Workshop Goals and it was nothing but a good time!  

Empty Spools is organized into five different sessions spanning from late Winter to Spring. Each session has 10-12 instructors who are the who's who in the quilting world. When you sign up for a session, what you are signing up for is five days of in depth and personal instruction with one instructor. Also included are programs in the evening. All of this is in the beautiful setting of the historic Asilomar State Park.
 


I chose to take a workshop with Sandra Leichner after watching a video here on The Quilt Show (see below). On the program she was so genuine and her appliqué was amazing!! I knew right then that someday I would be one of her students. She is an artist in the truest sense of the word...when you get a chance to see the appliqué close up you can't believe the amount of detail. Sandra was a delightful instructor, shared numerous tips on appliqué, and was able to support each student in their process.
 
 
 

One of the best parts of taking workshops is the people you meet in class. Our class was filled with quilters who came to Empty Spools from all over the country. I feel like I really lucked out because the table where I sat included students who flew in from Massachusetts and they all belonged to the same appliqué group...very experienced. I learned a lot from them...little tips that are going to help me achieve my dream of making a Baltimore Album quilt :)
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
Botanical Applique was my third adventure to Empty Spools, previously I took classes with Mary Lou Weidman and Slyvia Pippin. I encourage you to step out of your local quilt box and take a workshop at Empty Spools!
 
 
Want to learn more about Sandra Leicher? Star Members can watch her, along with Lynn Kough, in Show 1701: The Appliqué Doctor is in.

 

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This spring, the Texas Quilt Museum debuts two incredible new exhibits: one that celebrates the still-unfolding career of a quilting icon, and one that’s a little “spicy.” Caryl Bryer Fallert-Gentry: 40 Years of Light, Color, and Motion and Along the Spice Route will be on display from March 30-June 25, 2017.

Fallert-Gentry will give a free lecture on April 1 at 3 p.m. Museum admission will be free beginning at 2 p.m.

Caryl Bryer Fallert-Gentry is one of contemporary quilting’s true superstars. As an artist, teacher, author, and designer, her distinctive visual style and innovative quilts have enthralled quilt lovers since 1976. She is known internationally for her unique artwork, which has won top prizes in major competitions.

Her teaching has taken her to 11 countries on five continents. Other honors include having a piece named one of “The 20th Century’s 100 Best American Quilts” (Corona #2: Solar Eclipse), and receiving the International Quilt Festival’s lifetime achievement Silver Star Award.

Fallert-Gentry’s geometric color studies and curved-seam abstracts are inspired by visual impressions she has collected in her travels, everyday life, and her very inventive imagination. This exhibit gathers many quilts from over the decades. “I first saw Caryl’s work in the 1990s, and each decade has renewed my amazement in her accomplishments,” notes Museum Curator Dr. Sandra Sider. “And her works have such a joyful energy.” The exhibit is partially sponsored by Gene Reynolds & Associates.

Along the Spice Route, which is curated by Ann Reardon and Paula Golden, features art quilts on the theme of spices, celebrating the marvelous flavors that make our food interesting and appetizing. As visitors to the Museum will learn, many of these spices have also been used for other purposes—including “curing” baldness, reducing indigestion, acting as antibacterial agents, and to ward off evil spirits.

In addition to depicting the spices themselves as both seeds and flowers, quilts in Along the Spice Route offer a glimpse into spice markets, shipping routes, and caravan trails. Accompanied by a map of the Spice Route, this exhibition is a journey of the mind to distant lands and into the past.

“From the Taj Mahal to a desert caravan, this exhibit showcases the exotic colors and flavors of the East, from the Holy Land to China, in a fascinating variety of materials and techniques,” Dr. Sider offers.

The Texas Quilt Museum is located at 140 W. Colorado St., La Grange, TX 78945. It is open Thurs.-Sat. from 10 a.m.-4 p.m., and on Sun. from Noon-4 p.m.

Star Members can learn about Caryl in Show 1308: Techniques, Tips...and a Very Special Tour for Quilters.

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Learn how Jen from Shabby Fabrics creates this darling Easter Bunny Pillow using her fusible appliqué method!
 
 
 

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Illustration by Amy Gibson, Canyon Crest Elementary

 

Big House Black and White    

A shape is a closed two dimensional flat line, meaning that it has length & width. Let's use the example of a simple house drawn on paper. You can tell that the drawing on the left is a house, but you are not able to determine how large it is, or look around it, because it is on a flat piece of paper. While the house on the right gives you a sense of its size, shape, and form (which we will focus on next week). Shape falls into two categories; geometric and organic.

Geometric vs. Organic

LeMoyne Star Variation by Deb Tucker

As quilters, we are very familiar with blocks and patterns using two dimensional shapes such as a square, rectangle, triangle, or hexagon. These shapes are created using mathematical formulas. You might want to think of them as something that is man-made.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Twisted Hornet by Sheila Frampton Cooper

Organic shapes are free-flowing, irregular and less defined. These shapes are often found in nature, such as plants and animals. The line that encloses the organic shape can be curved, angular, or a a blend of both. Twisted Hornet by Sheila Frampton Cooper (Show 1306) is an example using Organic shapes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Positive vs. Negative Shape

Attic Window Block  Block #95 Attic Shadows by Jinny Beyer

Shapes can also be categorized as Positive or Negative as in the Attic Window block. Positive shapes are the solid forms which make up the window. Negative shape is the space between the shapes (inside the window). The Attic Window block is a perfect example of using both positive and negative space to give the illusion of a three dimensional window.
    
Negative shape is the area around/between the shape such as in the illustrations of scissors. 

 

 

In Jenny Bowker's (Show 1804) quilt Arabesque, the doorway is the positive space, while the opening is considered the negative space.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Combining Elements of Shape

Rainbow Waterfall 1 by Cara Gulati  Kimberley Mystique by Gloria Loughman

In the case of Rainbow Waterfall 1 by Cara Gulati (Show 1105) the organic shape that occupies the negative and positive space is more fluid and varies. While Gloria Loughman's (Show 612) Kimberley Mystique combines both geometric (background sky) and organic shapes (trees and foreground).

 

There is no homework this week.

Click here for more topics related to the Design to Quilt program.