I have just finished a new design for my knight quilt (see member blog with picture). I thought it might be fun to tell you how I sometimes fudge my limited ability to draw. I often use coloring books, photographs and other pictures that I can trace pieces from and change them just a bit. It's important to remember if you use this to pay attention to the copyright issues.
-- Dover has wonderful coloring books, and often one's own photos may have a little item in it you can use to trace, and then there are photos from friends and family who wouldn't mind if you use them (remember to ask). For the knight, I used a horse in "Wonderful World of Horses" Dover coloring book and added the armour.
-- Then I did a lot of looking at pictures of knights and their horses to finish up the horse and the knight. I had to draw the knight from scratch, because I didn't find anything copyright free I could use, but I could at least get a good idea of what they should look like by lots of looking.
-- I had to keep improving the knight on the horse through repeated erasing and redrawing. There are still things about it I think don't look quite right, but some of that I can improve as I work out the appliques.
-- Then I drew in the background looking at photographs, but you can actually trace main elements of the photographs. I've done that.
-- Sometimes you can take an element from one coloring book picture and another element from another and put them together.
Now I recently bought a Wacom Intuos4 digital tablet and CorelPainter 11. Together, it is wonderful. It took me a lot of hours to learn how to do this, but I found I could trace pictures just like I had a piece of tracing paper. I could put all the different main elements on different layers and move them around until I got it right, then "drop" the layers together and clean up the places where they overlapped or weren't quite right with erasing and redrawing.
To print it out full sized, I moved it into Excel Spreadsheet, sized the picture the size I wanted, and printed it out. Excel automatically breaks it into pages (I found it helpful to be sure I had the page number on each sheet). Then you can cut off the margins and tape them together.
I wouldn't recommend using Excel for precision piecing, because there are small variations from the printing that don't always quite line up, but for the most part, it works well. I'm kind of excited about this method. I found I can "fix" things I don't like in the original drawing or photograph (like the mermaid, I moved her arm to a more natural look and drew a different tail, or take out the roads and telephone poles in a photograph for the background work).
Now I'm ready to start making the quilt.