Well, I guess it can hardly be called "vacation" since it runs all year long every year, but you get the drift. Shortly after I finished Wendy's red bird quilt I got a call from another lady in my guild, Joanne, asking if I had time to quilt a lap quilt for her. I got it from her around mid-July. It was about 60" square and such lovely colours! I love blue and yellow together, and red and yellow together, so this was a knockout in blue, red and yellow. It was a really quick job, lots of straight lines and quilting in the ditch, plus she had taken out all of the excess fabric behind her appliqué so it wasn't overly thick to quilt through the layers.
I quilted straight lines radiating out from the centre and meeting up along the edge of each section of the big yellow star. All of the vines, leaves and flowers were quilted in the ditch.
When she dropped the quilt off for me we had talked about what to do in the blue setting squares and triangles. She was thinking maybe something round like a feathered wreath or something to offset the sharp pointyness of the star. When I got to that part, though, I didn't think a wreath would look very good, particularly in the triangle pieces, so instead I drew some feathers freehand, sprouting from each corner and curving outward. It turned out great and she was quite pleased.
Straight lines in the 2 outer borders finished it off. Here's a picture of the back of the quilt. She had pieced a couple of different yellows for it so it looks quite nifty. A lot of people have trouble piecing an 8 pointed star and getting it to lay flat without a bubble in the middle. She did a great job. The border had a bit of a ripple in it but that was easily disguised when I quilted that part, you can't tell at all where I fixed it. I haven't seen it since she put the binding on, I'm not sure what she was going to use for it but I'm sure it looks great. I think I would just use the same print that's in the outer border. I think she's putting it in our guild's quilt show this fall so I'll see it then.
Now that I'm finished all the work quilts I had for now I've been back to quilting my own stuff. First I made this dotty one, in various combinations of lights on lights and then a couple of strips of blues on lights. All of the blues are different. I quilted it with variegated blue thread. It's about 20" x 32" and named "Dot ... dot ... dot ...".
Then there's this one. I had been thinking about this pattern for a little while, deciding whether to strip piece the background or the front or both, what colors to use, etc. Finally I decided to strip piece the background in random widths. I had one particular light fabric that I had found in the remnant bin at the fabric store, it was really cheap because it had been mis-dyed. There were random blotches of green all over it. Perfect! I love pieces like that! So I put a few strips of that in the background too and that decided for me that I would use a dark green for the appliqué. I used off-white thread to quilt in the ditch around the & and randomly spaced vertical lines throughout the background. It's 20" x 26", named "And ...".
For the past few years I've been volunteering a few times a week at the Canuck Place Childrens' Hospice here in Vancouver. We have so many amazing people there ... volunteers, staff, nurses, families. We've had a fair bit of staff turnaround this year. I had been contemplating to, at some point, make a Canuck Place quilt, but as yet had never gotten around to doing it or even figuring out where to start. Finally I did and made 2 for a couple of staff members.
This is the first one I did. The picture I worked from is above the quilt. I put fusible interfacing behind the blue siding on the 2nd floor so it would be 3-D when I layered it. The trees are done the same way, so they look more realistic. I embroidered all of the fancy doodads on the fence and gate.
I did the next one from another perspective, using the same basic methods as
I did for the first one. I did both of them from actual photographs
that I took of the house, then used a process I've been developing called "Repliqué" to make the pattern to work from. I first created this process when I made the logos for my NHL quilt a few years ago, and have been fine-tuning it ever since on various types of quilts. Until now I'd only used it on diagrams or cartoons, logos and such. This is the first time I've used a picture of an actual real-life thing to recreate on a quilt. It's been a definite learning process, working out what looks right, what doesn't, what is feasible or doesn't even need to be there, prioritizing what should be pieced, appliquéd, embroidered, or drawn. To be honest, I'm not eager to make another one anytime soon, but I definitely will make another, and no doubt each time will turn out better than the last.
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