At present, I have various works in progress and finished objects that I could write about today. But January is the month that Quilting Gail and her co-horts begin work on the annual Stay at Home Round Robin quilt. So I am pivoting.
During the past three years I have participated with joy. I’d really like to continue round robin-ing this year. But I am in a quandary about my center block. Thinking about SAHHR in December, I had the idea to use paper pieced squares in this year’s center block. I but never got around to making them. Now, feeling pressed for time, I’m reluctant to work on a deadline in a technique in which I have little experience.
This morning, I decided the answer may lie in the objects I made during my first year of practicing fiber arts. It was a time when I was bursting with ideas but short on skills. As I rummaged through my portfolio from 2019 to early 2020, I found six fiber objects with potential to become a center block of a small quilt.
Shall we audition them together?
Candidate 1:

This was an early experiment with fabric paint. I took two different paintings, cut them into strips and wove them together, using satin stitch to close up the cut edges.
Candidate 2:

This is a rejected block from my oakleaf hydrangea wall-hanging. The background is covered in snippets of hand embroidery with irregular blanket stitch on the edges.
Candidate 3:

I was discovering what fabric markers can do. This painting is done on lightweight muslin and would need to be mounted on sturdier fabric.
Candidate 4:

A mini art quilt, this was inspired by what I saw in my head with eyes closed during a yoga class. I was practicing curved edge piecing.
Candidate 5:

Inspired by one of Bill’s photographs, this block was a practice piece for a larger work I never completed. The technique is confetti applique. While I would consider putting this one in an SAHHR quilt, I’ve yet to give up on my original concept.
Candidate 6:

A very early experiment in fabric painting, I “saw” a scene of a mountain area recovering from a forest fire. The initial paint application was enhanced with brown stamps of bare and broken trees. The middle ground is meant to represent fireweed which moves in quickly after a fire ends.
This last block is the one I am leaning toward the most. I have some ideas for expanding on the theme of environmental devastation and recovery.
What do you think about my options? Even if you are not a quilter, I am interested in learning the block that attracts your eye the most. Which one has the highest potential from the aspects of design, color and originality?

🩵
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I like #1, but I can see #6 working too. With a less traditional center I’d go with less traditional “rounds”.
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Thanks for commenting. I hope to make this quilt fresh and modern.
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Candidate 4 appeals to me, but I know very little about quilting. I’m sure any of the choices will be wonderful!
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Thanks, Alissa.
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I love blocks #3 and #6… The painting on fabric is just so surprising (and different!) in each one! Block #4 also draws my eye… it is beautiful! But perhaps that just needs a binding to be complete!
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Thank you for weighing in.
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Of all of them, I like the waterbird flapping along – where is he going? It leads into something you could perhaps incorporate into a quilt painting, rather like an impressionistic style picture quilt? One big scene with smaller squares each of a color theme, but inherent into a larger image?
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It’s a ring-necked duck. Lovely and thoughtful suggestions! In my original image, there was a group of ring-necks. I believe the posture is a display the bird performs – perhaps to ward off other ring-necks. So this guy would not be alone IRL.
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I love them all. I am particularly fond of the oakleaf hydrangea the lake, The forest fire square will make a dramatic center block.
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Yes, I agree. Thank you for your comments.
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Interesting project. I like candidate 5, which could lend itself nicely to the environmental themes you are considering.
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Thank you for your comment.
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Each one is beautiful and has potential! I am drawn to the one you did after yoga. I like the colors and shapes. 😃 And I like the last one too with the mountains probably because I love nature and the mountains.
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Thanks, Jill.
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Glad it’s not my decision. I can see possibilities in them all.
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Thanks for your comment. The good thing is that each option can be worked into something fun. And the unchosen can be worked another day.
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I am drawn to #5 and #6 with 5 being more favorite. 🙂
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Thanks for commenting.
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Lovely options! I think I like 3 best, in terms of how many directions you could go with surrounding blocks.
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I can’t decide between 5 and 6, although they’re all beautiful and interesting in different ways
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Thanks for your comment.
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