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Archive for the ‘Quilt Design’ Category

Bloghop-Giveaway Grand Finale!

Saturday, October 5th, 2013

To cap a wonderful bloghop, I would first and foremost like to thank the amazing artists and bloggers who made this possible:  Jamie Fingal, Deborah Boschert, Vicki Welsh, Leslie Tucker Jenison, Terry Grant, Gloria Hansen and Diane Perin Hock.  To all of you who left comments, THANK YOU!  And to Quilting Arts/Interweave, Mistyfuse and Havel’s Scissors, thank you for your generous donations that make this grand prize possible!  Here is one more chance to win, and read to the bottom for a bit more news!  Please note, this giveaway is for those residing in the United States only due to postage costs.  However, if you live outside the US and win and are willing to share postage costs, you can enter also. Leave comments before 8 a.m. Eastern Time, October 10th.  I’ll do the drawing that morning and post/contact the winner.DRUM ROLL please:  the Winner is number 42, Gail Myrhodosky!  I’ve emailed you, Gail, to get your snail mail address.  This giveaway is now over, but I’ll do one more in mid November–come back on November 10th—well, come back before then please, but for more on the Holiday giveaway, visit here on November 10th.

There is now a video clip available on YouTube which you can watch here or over on YouTube, here.

The grand prize is grand indeed:

Huge thanks to Quilting Arts/Interweave, Mistyfuse and Havel's for their generous donations to this bloghop!

Huge thanks to Quilting Arts/Interweave, Mistyfuse and Havel’s for their generous donations to this bloghop!

  • A copy of the DVD!
  • A selection of products from MistyFuse! I show you how I use these products in the Video workshop.
  • A huge donation from Havel’s Scissors including a generous giftbag that includes long scissors, short scissors, snips, seam ripper, AND the non-stick scissors too!
  • And a copy of Quilting Arts Gifts magazine from this year, with a project by me!

Here’s a photo of the stencilled ornaments project I did; I will also be demonstrating this project at the Christmas Delights Sampler (Class 765, and it still has openings…sign up at Festival!) from 2 to 5 Saturday afternoon at International Quilt Festival!

My project in the Quilting Arts Gifts 2013-14 issue is Stenciled Ornaments.

My project in the Quilting Arts Gifts 2013-14 issue is Stenciled Ornaments.

If you’d like to win this GRAND PRIZE, please leave me a comment and tell me something you learned these past two weeks from one of the blogs you visited on the bloghop!    And if you can’t wait, or don’t win, do remember you can order my DVD from me here or the download (or DVD) from Interweave, here.  Leave comments before 8 a.m. Eastern Time, October 10th.  I’ll do the drawing that morning and post/contact the winner.

NOTE:  this giveaway is for those residing in the United States due to postage costs.  However, if you live outside the US and win and are willing to share postage costs, you can enter also.

And….. just when you thought the bloghop was over, NOPE!  I’m doing a SECOND bloghop in early-to-mid-November to kick off the holiday season.  So on November 10th, make sure you come back (well, come back and read my blogposts before then, but you know what I mean) to join the second and final round of fun!

 

Welsh and English Quilts, Part 2 of 3

Monday, January 30th, 2012

OK…so I amended the title a little!   The next two books are one that I have had a long time and one which I sought for a long time and focus entirely or mostly on English quilting!  Let’s start with the latter:  Traditional British Quilts by Dorothy Osler.  Most of the time over the years  I looked for this book, the price listed was well over $100!  Too steep for my wallet.  Finally, I found it at Amazon at a tolerable price for Used, anywhere currently from $18 to $32 (US dollars).

A definitive reference book

This book is cited as a reference in just about any subsequent book you find on British and Welsh quilting, and I can see why.   At 168 pages, with black and white photography (it was printed in 1987–what a long way publishing quality and images have come in just a couple decades!), it is very well researched with ample footnotes and citations.  If you are looking for a hands-on how-to book using today’s methods with lots of projects, this is NOT the book for you.  If, however, you enjoy the history of quilts with lots of photos of how things used to be done, with very crisp black and white photos that show remarkable detail, then you’ll be quite happy with this book.

Detail photos of quilting in North Country Strippy quilts

The major sections include  (remember, this is about traditional quilts, not using rotary cutters and templates!)

Part One:  Making Traditional Quilts:

  • Materials and Equipment
  • Traditional Quilt Design
  • Traditional Quilt Patterns
  • Making a Quilt

Part Two:  Traditional Quilts:  A social and Cultural History

  • Historical Background  (going back to before 1200 AD)
  • Social and Regional Influences
  • English Quilts (North Country, West Country and Rest of England)
  • Welsh Quilts
  • Scottish Quilts

And the usual resources, index, and footnotes.

Saving the best for last, is Amy Emms’ Story of Durham Quilting, by Emy Emms MBE, Edited by Pam Dawson.

Amy Emms' Story of Durham Quilting

For those not familiar with British honors, MBE stands for Member of the British Empire, and is a very special honor.  This photo shows Amy Emms after receiving her medal,

Amy Emms receives her MBE

and the reverse side of this page shows the certificate signed by her Majesty Queen Elizabeth  in which she confers upon Amy Emms (getting goosebumps here) “The Dignity of an Ordinary Member of Our said Order”  and “Given at the Court of Saint James under Our Sign Manual and the Seal of Our said Order this Thirty-first day of December 1983 in the Thirty-second year of Our reign.”   Here’s a link to Wikipedia’s article on the MBE.  It is just astonishing to me and so wonderful that a woman was given this honor for being a quilter!

This photo shows the stunning quilting, North Country/Durham quilting, for which Ms. Emms is known, along with an utterly charming photograph of her having tea.

As you can see, her use of satin for her quilt (on right) and tea cozy (on left) shows off the incredible traditional hand quilting.

Amy Emms was a teacher, here in a photo from the early 50s.

As with Dorothy Osler’s book, I love that this book tells the story of quilting, the history of it, and documents that history with pictures–after all, we are quilters and LOVE the pictures!

Amy Emms (on floor in photo on right) made her daughter's satin quilted wedding dress entirely by hand. The whole thing is quilted, and the bride looks so happy! Can't you see the family resemblance? I just love seeing the faces of parents in their children (including mine!).

This book is about Amy Emms’ story, first and foremost, though there are some projects.  At the end of its 96 pages it does include some patterns of typical Durham quilting, and in the middle there is “Start with a Cushion” (a pillow in the US–it’s that divided by a common language thing again), with photos of how Amy works on a pillow cover, her traditional peg-stretcher-bar frame, with detailed instructions on how to make this pillow.  For me, what I love is the history and the photos (both historical and contemporaneous)… including the caption next to a man in a red satin quilted robe (as he holds a beverage) “This warm wrapover dressing gown is suitable for a man or a woman, but you can also shorten it to make a smoking jacket for a man.”  Anyone know of any significant others that want a smoking jacket?  Times have changed, and I love that it is documented.

I promise you…one of these days, there is a really traditional quilt coming out of my studio….

and a PS:  for any of you in the UK, if you can add some context about the MBE, please do leave comments!

 

Quilt Inspiration, June 2011, a doorknob

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011

Folks often ask me where I get my ideas, and I invariably reply “everywhere.”  Design ideas are all around us…it is just a matter of learning to SEE them!  Here’s a good example.  I was walking in downtown Camden, and spotted this door:

And doorknob:

WOW…what incredible design work!  Take a motif like that and enlarge, revise, adapt…. that’s how you start!