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Barbara Black has 10 great tips for working on Month 3 of the Halo Medallion Quilt, including tips for paper piecing, fabric selection, trimming, and pressing. Even if you aren't making the quilt, you might want to check out these great tips.
 
Barbara is also monitoring the TQS BOM 2017 Forum, so if you have any questions regarding the quilt, that's the place to go.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(Photo: Barbara Black)

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Take a look at Ann Horton's award-winning quilts. An assortment of textiles, subject matter, and free-motion embroidery, as well as an abundant use of color, are the trademarks of her design.
 
Star Members can watch Ann make a free-form embroidered butterfly in Show 2005: Free-Form Collage and Embroidery.
 
Click to play this Smilebox slideshow

 

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Our good friends at Accuquilt are celebrating with TheQuiltShow.com. They have a wonderful prize for one of the winners of the International Quilting Weekend Contest March 17-19, 2017. BUT TQS will open the contest to our viewers before that to make sure you can get your entry in.

 

Please keep following the newsletter for more IQW information.

 

Prize name: AccuQuilt GO!® Just Add Fabric-9" Starter Set

o    Retail value: $524.96

o    Included in set: GO! Fabric Cutter, GO! Qube™ 9” Mix & Match Block Die Set (includes 8 dies), GO! Value die, GO! Strip Cutter-2 ½” die, 2 cutting mats, die pick, GO! Sampler Pattern Book by Eleanor Burns, and GO! Quilting Ruler-12" x 12" 

o     http://www.accuquilt.com/shop/go-just-add-fabric-9-inch-starter-set.html

 

 

 

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It's time for Month 2 of Ricky's The Legacy Quilt Club (see more info below).
 

Exciting News! This year is the 150th birthday of Laura Ingalls Wilder and Ricky is tying the Laura Ingalls Wilder celebrations to the Legacy Quilt. Each block will feature quotes or stories relating to her life and Little House on the Prairie. (With gratitude to Laura Ingalls Wilder historian, Connie Ryle Newman for her assistance with this project.)

This month's block is the Tree of Life. Click here to download the pattern.

"A wee dark blob between [the Twin Lakes] was the Lone Tree. Pa said it was a big cottonwood, the only tree to be seen between the Big Sioux River and the Jim." - Laura Ingalls Wilder, By The Shores of Silver Lake Ch. 7 "West Begins"

Toward the end of the book, Pa plants little saplings from the Lone Tree near their homestead shanty, one for each of the four girls and Ma. Those cottonwoods are still growing today near De Smet, SD, on the Ingalls' homestead land. The photo shows "Pa's Trees" as they are today.

The trees are a favorite stop by those taking the Little House Trail.

 

 

More Exciting News! Due to the popularity and excitement that is building, Ricky has created an online meeting parlor in the Community Tab. Here you can interact and share photos of your blocks. Anyone can participate if you have a TQS membership -- both FREE Basic members or Star Members are welcome.

Click here to go to the Legacy Quilt Club Parlor.

 

 

The Legacy Quilt Club:

Okay, the word “club" is being used loosely — there’s nothing to actually join. Still, Ricky is gathering a virtual group of quilters for a fun, “take-your-time” project and it’s totally free! The Legacy Quilt Club is the name Ricky is giving to anyone wanting to play along. Ricky will be offering free downloads of the block patterns for the Legacy Quilt on his personal website (www.rickytims.com). He will be presenting one pattern per month for the next 20 months!
 
Click here to learn more and to download patterns.
 
In 2015, Ricky designed the blocks for a local production of The Quilters. Most of the blocks in this quilt are used to intertwine the stories of pioneer women. The play reveals their hardships, their celebrations, and their tragedies. Ricky’s local theater company performed the show in 2015. The blocks are used to help tell the stories of the pioneer women. Due to the small theater in La Veta, Colorado, Ricky’s Legacy Quilt had to be designed horizontally. You can make yours vertically.
 
The Legacy Quilt is filled with timeless classic quilt blocks. Each block is fifteen inches.
 
 
        (photo: Connie Ryle Newman)
 
Choose your own fabrics, or choose one of these beautiful Blendables colorways from Ricky below, or create your own Blendables colorway.
 
 

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Sometimes I just have to pinch myself...how blessed am I to live in a place that is home to so many wonderful quilt artists.  

One of our local instructors is Tonye Belinda Phillips. Her folk art quilts bring a smile to your face. She has also collaborated with Kathy Deggendorfer and Sue Spargo in creating one-of-a-kind art pieces.  When the Stitchin' Post in Sisters decided to host a Block of the Month using one of Tonye's designs, I was in line!!!  This program can be done by either attending support classes at the shop or by mail and since I am in and out of town on Quilt Roadie trips, it is going to be an "On The Road" project. Just like cotton quilts, using wool as a medium in quilt creations can range from the Primitive to the Modern. The difference is the lanolin in wool will make your hands soft while you stitch...another reason to start stitching wool!

I'll be heading off to Empty Spools later this week, so stay tuned for news from Pacific Grove :)  In the meantime, check out a few photos from our class with Tonye!  Have a wonderful week!
 
Click to play this Smilebox collage

 

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Laura Fogg is known for her free-form collage work. Here she is sharing some of her amazing quilts which range in subject from vegatables to ocean views.

Star Members can learn how Laura makes her quilts in Show 2005: Free-Form Collage and Embroidery.

Click to play this Smilebox slideshow

 

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Sarah Bond talks about how her modern quilt links to a traditional past. This video is part of the Go Tell It at The Quilt Show program created by the Quilt Alliance. One quilt, one person, one video camera, three minutes = another quilt story saved!

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Urban Desires by Michele Sanandajian-detail

When it comes to holding the viewer's attention, texture can take a quilt from good to great. As quilters we are taught that the more variety, when it comes to fabric selection, the more interesting a piece can be. But don't just let the fabric do all of the work, include other forms of interest in your work to make a much bigger impact. Take the example of Urban Desires by Michele Sanandajian. As your eye moves around the piece, notice how all of the different elements, smooth (leather), shiny (metal ring), rough (threadwork), soft (yarn bits) and lumpy (textured leather), work to tell a story while at the same time playing well together as a whole.
 
Imagining India by Pat Holly
Pat Holly's Imagining India is another example of creating real visual interest with her masterful use of silk fabric, decorative ribbon trim, machine applique, and decorative background stitches.
 
Imagining India by Pat Holly Detail
 

                                                                    (Images, Jane Sassaman blog)

This week, Mary Elizabeth Kinch (Show 1502) shares how, with even small pieces of fabric, one can create maximum visual interest and movement in quilts.

Texture
by Mary Elizabeth Kinch

Texture is the physical quality of a surface or a substance that we experience through our sense of touch. A strong element of design, texture adds depth and visual variety. It draws the viewer in, engaging them with the work and creating an emotional response.  Everything has texture!  

There are two types of texture in design: tactile and visual or implied.

Tactile Texture is the actual real physical quality of the surface that can be felt and appreciated, like the smoothness of satin or the roughness of sandpaper.  Tactile texture is created with materials, processes and techniques, and how these are used together. 

John Singer Sargent, 1894-1895, Ada Rehan.  Collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Accession Number: 40.146

Visual or Implied Textureis a realistic illusion that is representative of, or imitates, texture. It is the perception of texture and is as powerful sensorily as tactile texture.  Even though we cannot touch it, we experience a mental response as if we could feel what we see. Sargent expertly creates visual texture through the use of value, clearly depicting not only the luscious folds of the gown but the smoothness and weight of the silk satin used in the dress.

Creating visual textureand a sense of depth and contour, is achieved through a combination of different elements such as value, line and the principle of repetition.

Ian Kinch, Bow Bridge, Central Park, 2016  https://www.instagram.com/i.w.kinch/

 

This photo is a great example of perceived visual texture through the use of value, line and repetition. The rhythmic texture of the railings on the bridge is created through repetition and line. Value (and a bit of repetition) creates the soft texture of the leaves.  And line and value do the work of creating spiky texture of the pine needles in the upper foreground.

 

 

 

 

 

(Ian Kinch, Bow Bridge, Central Park, 2016  https://www.instagram.com/i.w.kinch/)

Jules-Edmond-Charles Lachaise and Eugnene-Pierre Gourdet, Design for a ceiling with trompe l’oeil balustrade, second half 19th century.  Collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Accession Number 67.827.499

Trompe L’oeil, a form of visual texture, is a design technique that is all about tricking our eye into seeing a 2D object as 3D. Here Mr. Lachaise and Mr. Gourdet have created a lovely example of trompe l’oeil.  My eye is definitely tricked!

Quilts are naturally tactile through the use of various materials and techniques such as the quilting stitch, trapunto, decorative stitches or embellishments. Quilts made with many small pieces, are immensely tactile because of the sheer number of tiny morsels of fabric and the seams that join them.

 

 

 

 

Mary Elizabeth Kinch, Leap of Faith, 2007

 

In quilts visual texture is created using the same concepts of value, line and repetition. Leap of Faith employs all three to generate visual texture.

Thoughtful value placement and careful positioning of color create the trompe l’oeil effect, in the centre of the quilt creating the impression of a 3D form.  The contrast of light and dark, the dark points of the HSTs facing towards the centre, and the four darker inner rounds create dynamic visual texture and the illusion of depth. The next “frame” of dark squares on point on a medium background anchor the sense of movement and depth of the inner composition. Further out, the combination of values used in the round of “Broken Dishes” and two rows of HSTs contrast with the values used in the rest of the quilt, creating another “frame” and reinforcing the illusion of depth in the centre of the quilt.

 

 

 

 

 

Here is the quilt in black and white.  Removing the element of colour sometimes the effect of value is more obvious. More texture is created with the lines in the block construction and by repeating the same block in each round. The outer rounds of “Flying Geese” purposefully having the geese “flying” in opposite directions adds some positive tension to the texture through movement.  

This quilt’s small scale piecing created an opportunity for generous combinations of printed fabric designs to create visual texture. Printed fabrics offer great diversity when we think of them not just for their colour but also look at them in terms of scale of the print, style of the printed pattern and the density of the print.

Mary Elizabeth Kinch, Leap of Faith, 2007

This quilt’s small scale piecing created an opportunity for generous combinations of printed fabric designs to create visual texture. Printed fabrics offer great diversity when we think of them not just for their colour but also look at them in terms of scale of the print, style of the printed pattern and the density of the print.

Mary Elizabeth Kinch, Leap of Faith, 2007 Detail

 

In this close-up you can see how a variety of prints helps create visual texture.  Consider print characteristics like large and small scale florals, stripes (both straight lined and patterned), dots, plaids, bold graphic motifs and subtle low volume prints.  The possibilities are endless!

Using line, value and repetition together you too can create exciting visual texture in your quilts.

 

 

 
 
 
 
Practice Exercise: Finding Texture in a Quilt

Easy exercise 1:
Find how many ways texture has been used in this charming small TQS Classroom Project quilt by Lauren Vlcek (Show 1206). 
Hint, not all of the fabrics are cotton. 

 

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

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The amazing QuiltCon 2017 Best in Show quilt came all the way from Tasmania. The large paper-pieced quilt is truly a "gem." Click on See the Quilts to see more winners.

 

Click here to watch a quick interview with Katherine Jones, the creator of the Best in Show quilt, bling. See her quilt below.

 

bling
Pieced and quilted by Katherine Jones
Chigwell, Tasmania, Australia
Tasmanian Modern Quilt Guild
@twocatsquilts
98 x 98 inches
Piecing

"Foundation paper pieced from solid fabrics the inspiration for this quilt was a princess cut diamond."

(QuiltCon 2017)

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Ricky talks to Alaskan quilter Maria Shell about vintage fabric, making quilts, and why she calls herself a "bitmaker."