No. 3, the quilting
I meant to show these photos in the blog post from last week, but I couldn't find them. Meanwhile, above is the little quilt hanging in our front sitting room. (See, the cat is sitting there!). No, I did not make this to match the wallpaper. I am inextricably drawn to this aqua blue color. I used it to cover the chair seat (one of six). I used it to paint the dots on the chair. This room used to be white wallpaper, but I painted over it to make this lovely blue. Yes, a darker version was used to stain the concrete floor....
Meanwhile, back to the quilting. I wanted concentric half circles for the yellow parts, and I wanted them reasonable evenly spaced. I didn't think I had the skill to free motion that design. So, I opted to draw some circles on freezer paper, and iron it to the quilt.
Once I stitched the edge of the paper, I pulled the freezer paper off, and cut the outer most ring along the pencil line. Then I pressed it back on the quilt surface and stitched the next line. Slowly, but surely, I made it to the innermost tiny circle. Since my paper template was limited by the size of my compass, I then used 1/2" masking tape for the outermost circles. The tape does a good job on curves, but when the curves get small, it gets increasingly difficult to tape a smooth circle, hence the freezer paper first.
The straight lines were very easy to stitch. But each one had a discreet stopping point for the beginning and the end, which leaves a LOT of thread tails to tuck in. It is not difficult, but it is more work. They are stitched every 1/4".
Many, many quilters would solve this problem by stitching a continuous line that goes back and forth. I like the way the discreet lines look better, so I am creating my own problem here, and I know it. But, I really, really like the effect.Thanks for popping by. Next week I will have a post about No.4, which became a two-sided quilt with the top for No. 2.
Individual lines was the right choice for the straight lines. Sometimes those tedious tasks like burying threads can be kind of meditative. There's a gal at the Dallas Modern Guild who often quilts a giant spiral on her quilts starting in the middle with a walking foot and just using the edge of the foot to keep the lines evenly spaced. It's a great look, but different than actual concentric circles.
ReplyDeleteYep, I do despise it though when the right choice means more work. And I guess if I hated tedious, I would NOT be a quilter, ha ha! I also LOVE the giant spirals. It depends on what the quilt is asking for. This one wanted concentric circles....
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