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TOPIC: How and what do you choose to do?

04 Aug 2009 17:17 #37270

:oops: Uh, Duh... I always go in for "posts since my last visit" and totally forget about categories :oops:

another good book is by Lee Cleland, "Quilting Makes the Quilt" where she had 5 (or 6?) identical quilts made of about 10 or so patterns, and they were each quilted differently. It totally shows how the quilting can change the entire look of a quilt!

Florence
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04 Aug 2009 17:13 #37269

  • suehenyon
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Good books:
Feathers that Fly by Lee Cleland

Quilting Makes the Quilt by Lee Cleland

Machine Quilting Solutions by Christine Maraccini

Quilt It! by Barbara Chainey

I'm facing the same quandary as Amanda. I have learned that if the fabric is busy, the quilting doesn't show much so not to stress, and that this is supposed to be fun and I probably won't enter a show for years to come, if ever :D
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04 Aug 2009 14:07 #37254

You might like to check out Barbara Chainey's book "Quilt It". Lots of ideas in there, and most of them simple to do.

From Dorset, England
Last Edit: by Mandella.
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04 Aug 2009 13:05 #37252

Loved looking through your collection Florence, wonderful!

It's for machine quilting (that's why I posted in machine quilting :wink: ) and I must say that I really, really, love your idea of ignoring the front and quilting a pattern on the back. Would work wonders on a 'busy' quilt and yours do prove that, especially the fish!!!

Most things I have done have been stippled, ditched or shadowed and I want to go a bit further without too many mistakes further down the line! (IYKWIM!) I also need to make some brain space, it's hot in there and not a lot is working at the moment. :roll:

Lots, in fact most, books, have directions for the piecing and then just fob you off with 'quilt as desired'. Well, if they are a book trying to teach, that isn't really good enough. How about a hint on what would look good for that block, or, here are some ideas take it where you will, or, we quilted by...?

I'm sure I'll figure something out when it comes down to it, I was just wondering how everyone else come to the end result. :D
Amo

Ye olde Dorsetshire
England

viewfromourhill.blogspot.com/
Last Edit: by Amoret.
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04 Aug 2009 11:50 #37250

Are you a hand- or machine-quilter? That might factor in. The quilt has to speak to you. I'm often considering the recipient of the quilt and might incorporate something meaningful to that person. An easy & fun thing to do is quilt "back-to-front", following a design or element from a bold backing fabric. I did that with a Children's Delight pattern (# 10 on my profile), so it's got FISH quilting, quite fun given the fabrics used. You can see the backing fabric in my personal photos, also #10 (that's totally not planned!)

-- OMG, I looked at my profile to make sure that quilt was there, and I realized I've got nearly 12 different approaches on the 12 quilts. Not trying to make ya'll look at all my quilts, but if you want, here's a list. Goes to show there's no one way!!

In order:
NY Beauty - loose squiggles within each point and other pieces, I actually made one continuous line thru the whole quilt
Snail's Trail - followed the "trail" out of the centers, which resulted in a very geometric pattern in the solid areas
Crazy-style - allover loopy lines and 5-pointed stars. (I did that one from the back, so the piecing on the front wouldn't distract me)
Crane quilt, outlined cranes, continuous japanese fans in the borders.
Scrappy squares - parallel diagonal lines, which occasionally turn corners. The back of this quilt is one BIG cornerstone log cabin, so again, working from the back, I used some of those lines as guides.
Cathedral Windows (enough said)
9-patch, individual motifs in the solid areas, trapunto!
Rainbow valence - diagonal parallel lines and followed the design in the rainbow & clouds
Scrappy triangles - Quilt as you go, stitch & flip
Children's Delight - above
Irish Chain - central motifs and straight lines criss-cross w/in the chains
Yellow Brick Road - all over stippled.

That's all in the top 12. In the personal photos, #6 has a funky all-over triple parallel lines connecting the blocks & criss-crossing the circles.
T-shirt & jeans quilts are tied
And one of these days I'll get some real pics of the Bella Bella quilts up, but just as they have different piecing all over, they have different quilting in each section, but mostly adding curves to offset the straight lines.

Florence
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How and what do you choose to do? 04 Aug 2009 08:26 #37235

There are plenty of ways you can quilt on the plain parts of a block as it then becomes a show piece in its own right but what do you choose to quilt over a pieced block that my already be busy with pattern or the quilt needs to be seen as a whole and spending time on something complicated would just not be worth it?

I know the in the ditch is quite common and to scallop a square and even shadowing the seam but what if you wanted a little more? What processes do your thoughts go through? Do you choose the same for all the blocks? What is balanced, over the top or simply not enough?

I've been looking for a good book with some simpler ideas but, of course, every time I put in quilting it comes up with blocks!! To me blocks are patchwork, quilting is the stitching to hold the sandwich and the quilt is the finished product but it all seems to have become a little muddled now. And I've scribbled and doodled so much my head is just mud brown!

Tell me what clarifies your thoughts and sets you on the road to threading up that needle!
Amo

Ye olde Dorsetshire
England

viewfromourhill.blogspot.com/
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