Kathy & Cathy -- The class was at Houston Quilt Festival, and was called Liberation from the Ditch, taught by Helen Godden.
She is a multiple award winner at Houston, and is the Ambassador from Australie for the sit-down HQ Sweet 16, which is what we used in class. She was hilarious and talented and had us breezing along in no time!
We started with stipples -- draw an S. Repeat. turn it any which way you need to, but it is still basically an S.
Then we did wavy lines she calls zebra flames (they look like zebra stripes), which were by far the easiest for me. Then assorted teardrop shapes, loops, write our name, things like that. She did a fun thing with the zebra stripe pattern, if you space them well, they look like pairs of legs, and if you connect/move from one to the next with a straight line up at the top, you get a row of legs that have arms connected. If you cross back over with a straight line, but with a loop/circle above each pair of legs -- little men! Very cool. I managed to do that a few times, which was fun.
Then she taught varying spirals (regular, flattened, leaves, hearts, etc.), and then some other doodles I can't remember, and then we had a drawing of a zebra to trace onto Golden Threads paper and sew that onto our practice sandwich. So we sewed the outline of the zebra, then removed the paper and then did whatever fill-in we wanted -- so the grass around his feet, the stripes, the little twig in his mouth, and the tree shading him, those are what I did on my own.
Then the fish was the final "challenge" (no winner, no prize, just to practice), and we drew our own, sewed it, filled in. Oh, one of the things was "build a bridge" which was sort of a half circle thing where you go in a curve from point A to point be, then a straight line up, then back down the curve, etc.
We got a multi-page handout with all the things we did, and she of course had DVDs for sale, etc. I bought a just-released coloring/doodle book of hers and then a DVD on 50 quilting ideas (she goes through how to do them).
the demo from class were the things she showed in the last 10 to 15 mins, we were done, it wasn't 5 yet, so anyone who wanted to stay, she let us look at her quilts (she had brought several for show & tell) and ask her to demo whatever we wanted. So she demoed the puzzle pieces, and some daisies, and some other stuff. Gears....a sort of cathedral window thing...stuff like that. Spider webs...
She (and others) were surprised I have done quarter-spider webs and cathedral windows quilting with my walking foot. (on small enough projects).
But it was very fun, and truly the highlight of the whole weekend for me. I could ramble a bunch on this (ha! like I haven't already!), as it was just amazing. I have tried FMQing a tiny bit on my own, but having the whole day to just really get the feel of how fast to have the needle, how slow or fast to have my hands moving the quilt, just to get the rhythm sorted out....that was fantastic and just what I needed. It was a class from 9 to 5, with a 2 hr break for lunch. I didn't worry too much about getting it "right", just about getting the feel of the rhythm.
Other than the zebra and the fish outlines, nothing else was marked or traced at all, it was just completely free (she did once or twice have us draw a sort of border to stay within, and keep the design in that space, to practice that aspect). I went all.over. my practice sandwiches, with no regard to going "properly" along, because I just wanted to practice as many things as possible. That's why the first 2 are so full/busy. Then I was running out of space faster than running out of time, so purposely kept the last one orderly to make sure I had enough space left.