Made quilt for my sister-in-law who is battling lung cancer--she is doing well. Her granddaughters loved the quilt and wanted to take home for a while so I may have to make a few more. I added the four multi sized Dresden plates in the four corners to use up extra fabric. Also made a bag to hold the quilt from scraps, but forgot to take a pictures altho she wants me to make more to sell in her craft store, but no time right now.
Made this modern type quilt based on quilts I've seen in modern quilting magazines. Used white and lots of my scraps. the quilting really made the quilt, don't know if you can see in picture. Eunice is battling colon cancer and is 82 years young now living with daughter. She uses for a lap quilt.
Contains Christmas 2015 attendee pictures--small gathering that year so all had a much better chance of winning! My daughter-in-law saw it before raffle and fell in love with it and she was lucky enough to win----my sister who won last year did the drawing in front of everyone! Different pattern and did the pictures inset and loved how it turned out. And this year I made a larger bag to hold quilt from quilt scraps.
Quilt made with pictures of attendees from 2014 Christmas gather for my side of the family. There was a drawing for a winner at Christmas 2015 gathering. Same pattern as previous year.
Made with pictures from Christmas 2013 and given away the following
Christmas in a drawing. Has become an annual event until everyone gets a quilt. Only the attendees are eligible and each family needs to get a quilt before a family can multiple quilts---est. at least 8 more years!
These are gift, shopping, whatever bags made with scraps from my quilts--fast, easy and great gifts.
A 10th wedding anniversary quilt for my son and his wife, finished in 2015, and which has 480 three and a half inch appliqued blocks, each different, 60 appliqued side triangles, and 56 appliqued border blocks. The cornerstones are half inch and the inner border is made from 3/4 inch squares. The quilt took about 9 1/2 months from start to finish, working almost every day. It's 100X110 inches and fits their queen size bed just great. It weighed 11 pounds when it was done. :)
The patterns came from many many sources ( ever try to find more than 500 applique patterns that can be sewn in 3 1/2 inch blocks?!) but I did use many from the book "Dutch Treat" by Judy Garden. The 'house' border was adapted from a pattern by Bunny Hill Designs' "YoYoville" quilt pattern. Their border pattern only used three different house designs...and since I didn't want any block repeated I came up with the rest from other sources, or drew them myself, Their pattern used yoyos but I made just plain fabric circles and was pleased with the result.
The quilt is machine appliqued, with each applique being satin stitched, and home machine quilted. Hidden throughout in the quilting are words and names, etc, that have meaning to the anniversary couple. They will be finding them for years to come!
quilt made from Ricky Tims e-book Kool Kaleidoscopes received as a free book when renewing membership. I just used fabric from my stash to try out the technique. A design wall is essential for this technique. This was made on a Janome 8200 machine and some of the quilting was ruler on a domestic machine.
The 2017 TQS BOM designed by Sue Garman, pieced by Carolyn Hock and quilted by Angela Walters.
My mother-in-law gave me this bed cover that had been in a bag in her basement for decades. I brought it home, washed it and laid it over my longarm to dry. What a mistake that was! The linen and the crochet lace dried differently and there was a terrible amount of fullness. This changed my wholecloth design drastically.
I used a light floral backing, Hobbs 80/20 batting, a light grey liner and the linen on top of all that. You can see in one of the pics I uploaded how horrible the bottom border was stretched out of shape. In the next photo you can see how I tamed it.
I decided to frame in the middle and run various channels to look like a Victorian corset. Feathers and lacy fillers finished it off.
This quilt won viewer's choice at the Oakland County Quilt Guild in April 2016.
This quilt is for sale - serious inquiries only please.
www.burmannstudios.wordpress.com
"Saxony Farmhouse" was inspired by the Arts and Crafts movement. The outer border is a nod to William Morris while the Dresden Blades throughout the quilt bring a traditional flavor to this quilt. The blocks are set on point and have applique sashes and posts. (Yup - those sashes were appliqued, not pieced!)
This is a great design to use up all those small florals and prints from other projects!
you can view my website at www.burmannstudios.wordpress.co
This was a great New Year's Day/day after New Year's Day project! I bought the yellow/orange batik fabric for the background, but all the other fabrics that are and will be used in this quilt will be from my stash.
This quilt is make from a package of Baby Einstein charm squares purchased several years ago. I quilted it on my Bernina using a straight stitch alternating with a decorative stitch and King Tut variegated thread. The border has ric rac, ribbon, prairie points, and yoyo's. Fun to make! The back is flannel with trucks, cars, and trains.
Portrait: Acrylic, Chalk, Pencil, Quilting.
"Reflection Upon 2016" is a portrait, utilizing acrylic paint, chalk, pencil, free motion quilting; silks and cottons.
Alphabet quilt. based on Baby Bunting by Quilt Routes, on Craftsy. Made in lots of different coloured and sizes of polka dots, with complementary plains for the fused appliquéd letters and numbers. Quilted in the ditch, and free motion quilting on a domestic machine. Made for my grandson.
Started with a Dr. Seuss Alphabet Panel, that was quilted using a mix of ruler quilting and free motion quilting (on a domestic machine). Then I removed the binding, and added a section with Emily's name, using fusible applique, and joined both sections using 'quilt as you go' technique.
Every year my family draws names for gift giving. The only rule is that the gift must be handmade. It has become the highlight of our Christmas. This year I drew my niece's name, so I decided to do a pet portrait after seeing Barbara Bates Beasley's episode.
Medallion quilts are, for me, the perfect medium to expand on an idea throughout the process of designing and making the quilt. I could have stopped at many points in this quilt and decided that is what I want to make. This quilt started with a Hoffman digital print fabric I found and loved during my areas "Shop Hop" 2016 that inspired me. I had just finished a Lone Star medallion quilt and was inspired by the many possibilities of Lone Star variations. When I was done piecing it, it reminded me of a peacock in full plumage. That was then the inspiration for the quilting I did on it. It's my "Y-seam quilt", lots and lots of Y-seams went into making this.