Posted in quilting

Finished by Friday: SAHRR Border 2

The challenge we received from Anja this week was ideal for my project. She had a very simple directive: Choose two colors for this week’s border. Sew them together in any way that you like.

The plan I made for this project included color assignments for each round. When pulling fabrics, I made a bag of scraps for each color. I quickly pulled out my green and my blue fabrics and spread them out. How will I sew them together this week?

To get me thinking about shapes and lines, I browsed for photographs that illustrated subjects in my theme. For the green border, I wanted to depict the re-planting of a forest after a fire has destroyed it. For the blue border, the subject was to be melting polar icecaps.

Here are my two inspiration photographs:

I started with the green image of young trees planted in orderly rows. To be honest, I don’t think large forests are re-planted in exactly the same manner. I chose the photo for the graphical quality. This representation made it easy for me to see a quilt block pattern “hidden in the trees.” Getting out my sketchbook, I drew a grid and placed the trees within it.

Voila – a nine-patch block made of half-square triangles.

It wasn’t so fast for me to put the squares together. I have very little experience in making most basic quilt blocks. But eventually I had them sewn up into rows.

Here is the green border sewn together and attached to the quilt.

While my back was turned, a few butterflies flitted into view and perched on the border. They are not green, but I hope they will stay.

The blue border is next. In my inspiration photo, the shapes of ice and open water are not regular in the least. But I knew what to do. I will make this border with improvisational piecing, using a “slash and sew” technique.

I topped the ice and water piecing with a sky cut from hand-painted fabric.

And here is my quilt with my blue and green borders.

Now that you’ve seen my challenge completed, have a look around at the other quilters who are playing. You can find their quilts at the Linky party.

Click HERE.

Posted in quilting

SAHRR 2024 Border One: Grateful

I’m grateful to Pieceful Wendy for choosing the signature block for the 1st round of this year’s Stay at Home Round Robin. I’m also grateful to myself for pre-planning this project instead of winging it each week. You see above some of the fabrics I have painted (along with a nice purple solid.)

Here’s a few more that I painted. Most are commercially printed fabrics. I just added a few layers of color using Jacquard Dye-Na-Flo fabric paint.

These will soon appear in my SAHRR quilt rounds.

Okay – fabrics are at the ready, time to sew.

In reviewing my project map, I see that the colors purple and red are to dominate the first round, which will be attached to my center panel’s right and bottom sides. The right side will extend the trees of the panel into the border. The bottom will represent the forest fire. 

I started with the trees. They will go in the center strip of the signature blocks. I cut fabrics that looked tree-like and some smokey purple fabric and made a strip set. Then I cut some purple squares to use in the corners.

That’s the right side done. For the bottom, I got out some flame-like fabric that used to be part of a dress that no longer fit. It was cut up a few years ago and saved for just this moment. How fortunate for me.

Do you feel the heat yet?

After making a corner block that integrated the two sides, I sewed the blocks together.

Jan 29: After viewing a photograph of my work, I swapped out one of the fabrics in the corner block. Then I joined up the first round to the center panel. 

I also decided to use white fabric with a marble print as sashing around each group of blocks. SAHHR Round one is made of 4 inch finished blocks. My quilt is now 16″ and ready for the next round.

Be sure to check out all the SAHRR 2024 participants’ projects posted at the Linky party. You can find that HERE.

Posted in quilting, recycling

SAHRR 2024 begins this week

Last week I posted a number of choices for my center block in the annual Stay At Home Round Robin quilting challenge. Readers of this blog will not be terribly surprised to hear that I chose the mountain painting on fabric.

Now I am forced to consider the short-comings of my choice. First of all, it wasn’t square, having a slightly portrait layout. I sliced off the top and bottom to the limit that I was willing to sacrifice the image. It was still out of square.

My solution was to applique it to a 12 1/2 background. By choosing to applique instead of piece, I avoided seam allowance, retaining more of the painting. With a center block finishing at 12 in., I have lots of options for sizes of the rounds to come.

The second shortcoming became clear when I observed that the painting was mostly one value – it’s medium value nearly throughout. There are some darks, but no real lights. I’ll have to find a way to bring in some light, perhaps with embroidery.

Now I am confronted with a number of design decisions. I have resolved to make the entire thing out of scraps, if I can manage it. Coming up with the palette was easy. It will be an analogous one, featuring a range of colors that exist in the painting. Purple, blue, teal and cool greens will predominate, with a generous dash of reds as accent. Here are the eligible scraps, organized by color and value.

With any luck, I can avoid buying more fabric, outside of the backing.

The final design decisions that I can make prior to getting the first clue concern size and layout. I spent hours thumbing through books and looking online before I made my choices. Ultimately, I settled on a square, with an expected size of 45 inches, more or less. My plan is to add the rounds in log cabin fashion, keeping each round within a strict color range. To see how it would work I made a mock-up using colored pencil on graph paper.

I’m old school. No computerized design program assistance in my studio.

To see all the challenge participants’ center blocks, click Here.