Sunday, March 26, 2017

AQS On Point March Survey

The AQS OnPoint - Your Ultimate Quilting Resource recent survey asked quilters about how they learned to quilt. The survey gave the results in the expected fashion; so many percent did it this way and so many percent did it that way, until the final question: What was the most valuable tip or lesson you learned quilting?

They published all 809 answers as written.

I read them all.  

One point that some agreed on was "There are no rules in quilting." The other 99%  gave a rule, or rules, they had learned.

It is true that quilting is a means of creative expression. It is also true that creative expression can be called art. Yet another great truth is that "You will never be an artist as long as you see through the eyes of other men." Is the logical conclusion: there are no rules (imposed by others)?

Perhaps, but everything worthwhile, even art, has a methodology.

A painter of oils knows to not thin his paint with water.

I love to learn, and have all my life, going back to the days on the desert ranch when the only source, outside the classroom, was the mailman's delivery of magazines and books. Therefore, I buy books. Recently I was able to get a book from 30 years ago that I had given away, not realizing, at the time, the significance of that particular book. Getting this book gave me the opportunity to compare it with all the other books on quilting I had acquired in the past 10 years. Each segment of the old book covered almost the entirety of any new book. The only other book that made the old book complete was a very small booklet by Billie Lauder aka Stephanie Kleinman that gave "new" tips and tricks to make the job easier. 

The thought occurred to me that back in 1988, the date the old book was published, the focus was on gathering, sharing and teaching. It seems that in 2017 the focus is on "selling."
( And yes, I paid money for the book.)

Harriet has a thread available only through her; Jan has a ruler only she can provide; and if you want to make this quilt...you know what I mean. I fell in love with the quilts of Willyne Hammerstein, and spent around $150 before ever cutting into a piece of fabric. That quilt, while quite an adventure, is still unfinished. Is the temptation to do things "the easy way" so strong that we lose the whole point of creativity? Do we really need a template to cut a 3" square, and another for a 2" square? Paula Nadelstern does not sell her quilts. When asked how long a quilt takes her, the reply is "All my life." Her classes are costly. That is because her time is exceedingly valuable. She has explained that endless duplication of her art would somehow destroy the value of it. How does someone so mortal become so wise?

As long as we persist in looking outside ourselves for our own unique beauty, we will see only shadows and vague reflections of what might have been. The sorrow of death is not the loss of what we have had, but that which, with death, will never be.

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Sedona Through the Trees

Sedona Through the Trees

Blooms and Baskets, Gems of Summer





Today, I received my book from Amazon Used Books. I first saw this book when I checked it out of a quilt guild library, in 2003. It was published by the American Quilter's Society in 1998. Inside the back cover are fold-out patterns for the quilt center medallion and corner treatment. Anna Kephart of Prairie Village, Kansas received an Honorable Mention for her medallion setting in 1997. It was Anna's quilt that captivated me.

I copied the medallion and corner patterns, put them in my pattern file and forgot about them. In March, 2017, while looking for something else, I found them. However, my drawings included only one basket pattern. Which takes us to now. Senuta uses the freezer paper foundation on the right side of the fabric, and offers many helpful special techniques.

In 2007, I had to give away a load of my book collection - it literally filled the back of an SUV. Among the books I gave to the Aurora Library in Colorado was one of the Great American Quilt Series books containing a wall quilt - with the word "Sedona" in the title. I am not sure which book it was in but have ordered the book for 1988, in the hope that my pattern will be in it. I will have to check back here tomorrow after the mail delivery to share the answer. I have the quilt (Sedona Through the Trees?) nearly complete. I want to see the pattern again to know how to finish it. I also have many parallelograms cut and stitched, but doubt there are the number needed for a border. It's possible I can use them for a modification of the border.

Monday, March 20, 2017

Fun With Stabilizers for Diamond Hill

Stabilizing the Background fabric for machine applique:
I tried various methods and products designed as "tear-away." This is what I decided works best for me...Spray starch (NOT sizing) and press the wrong side of the background square. Do not move it. Place Floriani Fuse and Wash on the square and fuse only the outermost edges. Hold the iron at a 45 degree angle if necessary so only the edge fuses the square. After stitching the applique, tear away the Floriani. Fibers will remain in the stitching, but it is the softest stabilizer, and washing removes any remaining sizing that was infused in the product by the manufacturer.

Jenny Henry Quilts

I found Jenny through Esther's pages. If you like inspiring applique, go to Jenny's page. She did a magnificent Love Entwined quilt that'll blow your socks off.

Sunday, March 5, 2017

Applique tools from the art studio





The brush on the left holds starch/water in the barrel; the palette knife works superbly to turn the edges while the dull kitchen knife comes in handy as well. I use every surface and edge of the palette knife when turning my raw edges to the back of the piece. Excellent control.