No. 11
78.5 x 53.5
part 2
Once I inserted the first set of strips, I opted to rotate the entire piece by 90 degrees. Notice how subtle the effect of the gradation is now with the 1/4" strips sewn into place.
Then I began slicing for the next step, the insertion of the other colorway of tiny strips of warm colored fabrics.
Here is the obvious reason for turning the piece sideways. Once the cuts above have been made, I can now pin the color strips in position, and with gravity, they hang down with a single pin. Also note that my fabric stash did not always have pieces that were long enough for a single strip, so some of these had to be pieced together before inserting.
My hand for scale to show how narrow those little strips are!
Nearly there, approaching the last seams to sew for the background.Next up, I decided to quilt the background before appliqueing the large foreground design. The advantage is that I will not have to do a lot of starts and stops while quilting, and no ensuing threads to tuck. It is an edge to edge quilting design without the applique. The disadvantage is that appliqueing to a quilt top is easier than appliqueing to a quilted quilt because there is less bulk to hold in your hand, and especially true for a large piece. Nonetheless, that was my choice this time.
First, the basting, then the quilting.
Note that I have my quilting guide attached to my machine! Love that little tool.
It is amazing to me how much work is involved in making a piece that will read so simplistically!
It is amazing to me how much work is involved in making a piece that will read so simplistically!
2 comments:
I also struggle with "order of operations" with various construction tasks. It seems there are always pros and cons. I'm so eager to see the reveal.
Nice to know that it is not just me. Reveal is on Sunday. :)
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