Monday, 25 July 2016

Fabric Dyeing Workshop

I spent a lovely day on Saturday at the IPS Eastern Branch workshop with Moira Byrne and Lorna Lafferty. Everybody was nice and helpful and there were tons of interesting information and enticing new possibilities))) Although I had played with some tie-dye before using silk paints that I had at hand, there was a lot to learn and to try out for me on Saturday.

First thing in the morning we got to do some ice dyeing, so that it could melt by the end of the day. Although the ice didn't quite melt by 4 p.m., I rinsed my pieces and was delighted with the result:

ice dyeing

Here they are the way the were in the container, one on top of another, and I can already see them made into an autumn landscape with little or no cutting. Some bits are really amazing, the way the colors flow is like no other method of dyeing.

ice dyeing

I already have two quilt ideas in my head based entirely on ice dyeing))) The best bit is it doesn't require a chemical lab, any hard-to-come-by ingredients, equipment or skills, can literally be done in the kitchen or in the back garden.

Next were various shibori-style tying, folding, scrunching and stitching techniques. Here are some of my samples:

shibori dyeing

Looks almost like a quilt already with white sashing, doesn't it? I didn't get a lot white in the samples, I think I didn't tie and press them hard enough, but I think they are still lovely. 

We also did gradation dyeing, but I somehow didn't take photos of my pieces. I made a gradation of greens, because I know I always need lots of all kinds of greens, and finding just the right one can be tricky.

The last thing we did was space dyeing, which means scrunching a piece of fabric really tightly in a jam jar and pouring various dyes over it to achieve unpredictable results)) I did this with a piece of white cotton I had bought at Guiney's and I'm happy to report that it took the dye quite well. 

space dyeing

I intended them to go together with this hydrangea panel and I think I got it more or less right (which is almost miraculous when I think of myself just pouring some yellow dye from a jar, then mixing it with with some blue and pouring, adding more blue and pouring...)

space dyeing

I haven't yet decided on the quilt design for these fabrics, so while I'm thinking I might as well make myself a piece of purple as soon as I buy the dyes. Thankfully, the process is also really easy.

By the way, the pieces with magenta in them were the hardest to rinse out, it really seemed to come out endlessly)))

In the meantime the magnolias have finally taken shape on my design wall, and they are quite large - about 1 by 1.5 meters. I've cut all the pieces, the only thing that is left is to start and to finish as they say in Russian)))

magnolias quilt


I'll be linking this post up to Main Crush Monday at Cooking Up Quilts
New To Me in 2016 at Celtic Thistle Stitches
and Linky Tuesday at Freemotion by the River




Friday, 22 July 2016

IPS National Exhibition 2016 "Evolution"

Another trip to Limerick in one month, another quilt show at the beautiful gallery space of the Limerick School of Art and Design (read about the first one here). This time my husband went with me on a romantic bus ride as the kids were looked after by their aunt and uncle)).

My quilt "Fallen by the Wayside" was there, so an obligatory "artist with quilt" picture was duly taken:
archaeopteryx quilt

I have written about it and included some close-ups in this post. My birdies were well received and even made it onto the catalogue cover:


I struggled with my camera settings, so not all the photos of the quilts I liked were good quality, but here are at least some of them:

"In the Beginning" by Mary Maguire and "Woods" by Tomomi McElvee

IPS National Exhibition
"Fish Evolution" by Irene MacWilliam

IPS National Exhibition 2016
"Same but Different" by Ruth Bourke

IPS National Exhibition 2016
"Celebrating the Big Bang" by Rita Whelan

IPS National Exhibition 2016
"Kerry Dance" by Marie Hooper

IPS National Exhibition
"Starburst" by Louise Mullane

The gallery also housed an exhibition of mini quilts on the theme "Distance" by artists from Ireland, Austria and Latvia, which we also enjoyed. Unfortunately, there was no catalogue and I didn't include the quilt and artist's names with some of the photos.







We then went to Limerick Quilt Center to do some fabric shopping (did I mention it was my birthday? no present like fabric shopping)))


You can tell I'm getting ready for Halloween.


We strolled a bit around the city center, saw a sewing and knitting supplies shop with my name on it, had some coffee with very nice cakes and went back home.

Limerick


Limerick

Limerick

Limerick


Linking up to Fabric Frenzy Friday at Fort Worth Fabric Studio and Can I Get a Whip Whoop? at Confessions of a Fabric Addict

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Thursday, 21 July 2016

Rainbow Rose QAL - Finish

This week is the final link-up for the finished Rainbow Rose quilts at Modern Quilters Ireland.  I finished mine yesterday and took it out for a quick little shoot today, as it's been drizzling off and on.

rainbow rose

I know it's supposed to be a Rainbow Rose, but for me it's more of a Colorwheel Star))

After a lot of deliberation I decided to quilt it in echo shapes in the variegated thread I have left from my Bubbles quilt. The thread is not a full rainbow, it doesn't have blue and yellow in it, but it's still very fun and bright (incidentally, the binding fabric has no blue either)))

rainbow rose qal

rainbow rose QAL

rainbow rose QAL

I rather like how it fills the (still dreaded) negative space.

I marked the quilting lines this time, so they are more or less straight and I think I can consider my July monthly goal of walking foot quilting achieved with this and the rehearsal on the Candy quilt. I still have a couple of quilt tops which can also be walking-foot quilted till the end of the month.

I was deliberating the binding for a long time as well and finally decided on that not quite rainbow but definitely multicolored stripe I've had for several years (brought it from a trip to Moscow). I think it plays rather well with the quilting thread. To add some interest I cut the bias stripes in different directions to echo the star rays.

I couldn't find any appropriately rainbow fabric for the back, so I used the light grey piece which I was considering as an alternative to the white background in this quilt. So from the back it looks like a super minimalist whole cloth quilt ))).

rainbow rose QAL

Note how the binding has a different look from the back, with the stripes converging, not diverging as in front. Anyway, I suppose it will be more of a wall quilt, so the back won't get seen a lot, instead it will get a hanging sleeve.

If I ever have a sewing room, I think this would be a good thing to have on the wall there, for reference as a color wheel))

rainbow rose QAL

Linking up to Rainbow Rose QAL at Modern Quilters Ireland
Fabric, Thread and Yarn at France Nadeau
Off the Wall Friday at Creations by Nina-Marie 


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Saturday, 9 July 2016

Who Took the Candy?

If you remember I wrote some time ago about the lovely fat quarter bundle from Love Fabric shop that I won in the Rainbow Rose QAL link-up. It was very nice but different in style from most fabric in my stash, so I challenged myself to make something using just that bundle. Well, between this and that, I did it:


The fabrics are by Dashwood Studio and the collection is called "Cotton Candy", which prompted the direction of my thinking))) The geometric patterns in the fabrics called for simple shapes. I quickly sketched two basic candy shapes, but then had to spend a lot of time doing and redoing the maths to make sure I had enough fabric. Initially, the candies were spaced out more, but that called for more background fabrics. In the bundle I had three "accent color" FQs, three "background" FQs and one "binding" FQ, so that's what I had to play with. Finally, the maths worked out and I had enough fabric and very few scraps left.


It's called "Who Took the Candy?" and it looks suspiciously like a baby quilt. As I can't see any babies coming on the horizon it's been folded up and put away for the time being)))

I think the pattern and the idea would be clearer on a solid background, but this busy one has some kind of charm to me. kids + candies = mess)))

I mentioned in an earlier post that I was tired of FMQ and decided to try out walking foot quilting (which is my July OMG). So, after long deliberation I decided to quilt it in a spiral centered on the "missing" candy. I only marked the beginning, so it gets wonky as it unwinds, but I really didn't care much - I just wanted to relax and stitch on)) The thread is light turquoise, the softest of my accent colors.


The quilting lines are 1'' apart, so it's very soft and cuddly with 80/20 cotton/poly batting. I did all the quilting in one sitting, which is something unheard of for me)) And generally, this came together so fast, compared to my recent art projects! Can I be officially called a modern quilter now? ...please?)))


Oh, and note the funny flamingo fabric that I found for the back! Didn't take a separate picture of it, but you can get the idea))


Linking up to Show off Saturday at Sew Can She, Main Crush Monday at Cooking up Quilts and Linky Tuesday at Freemotion by the River



Friday, 8 July 2016

Flashback Friday - Violets

I missed the Throwback Thursday at Quarter Inch from the Edge yesterday, so let's make it Flashback Friday and still join the link up to share another pre-blogging time quilt ;))

violets quilt


This is my third quilt, I think and the first art one (my first quilt design, too if you think of it). I certainly wasn't planning on making an art quilt at that stage, I was still taking my patchwork course and finishing my first sampler (the one I wrote about last month). The craft school where I was taking the course occupies a small room with a large window facing south - which is nice in winter, but not so much in summer)) And of course our teacher couldn't bear the thought of store-bought curtains or blinds)) so she called on students past and present to make 15 cm blocks out of a bag of polyester fabric scraps. The response was great and the curtain was soon finished:

patchwork curtain

See the pink flower in the middle? That's mine)) (Actually, I made nine blocks for it all in all). The flower was the "African violet" block that i saw on the Internet somewhere without any instructions  or description. I just "reverse engineered" it and tried it out with some green and purple scraps I had.

violets quilt

Originally, I intended to make those two blocks into potholders to be given as an 8th of March present  to somebody, but then I decided to make more of them. As I didn't have any of the same fabrics left, I used other shades of green and purple - everything I could find at the moment. The violets formed a nice frame, but I still had no idea what to put inside the frame.

violets quilt

The idea of a vintage flower girl appeared slowly, at first I thought it too ambitious for my skill level - but it just wouldn't go away! So I looked through tons of vintage cards on Pinterest to find a simple enough picture, and all of them were "not quite what I want", so I made the drawing myself. The hand appliqué wasn't as hard as I feared, painting the face was more scary, but I had made fabric dolls with painted faces before, so it was more or less familiar.

violets quilt


I also decided to make the violets in the basket with ribbon embroidery, because it seemed the easiest way for this scale. I have never used ribbon embroidery in quilts since, I think I should try it again)).

Finally, I decided to try my newly acquired skill of FMQ on this quilt - you can see how wobbly the quilting is, but I was still proud!

violets quilt

I finished it in time for the mini exhibition that was held in our craft school to celebrate the Easter 2014

easter quilt show

Linking up to:

Throwback Thursday at Quarter Inch from the Edge
Fabric Frenzy Friday at Fort Worth Fabric Studio

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Thursday, 7 July 2016

The Beach Party's On!

Well, it's finally finished - the quilting, the binding, the sleeve - the label to go and then it's ready to be packed and sent to Birmingham. I called it "Beach Extravaganza". We have some sun for a change today, so I took the quilt out for a photo shoot. Actually, perhaps there was a bit too much sun)))

Beach Extravaganza


I rather like how it turned out, although, as usual, I have some doubts. At least the trapunto effect has worked as I intended it to, the appliqué shapes really seem to be on top of the background pebbles (not sure it is visible in the photos, though).

"Beach Extravaganza" wall quilt

"Beach Extravaganza" wall quilt

And the quilting made the background somewhat darker as well.

"Beach Extravaganza" wall quilt

"Beach Extravaganza" wall quilt

"Beach Extravaganza" wall quilt
A discerning critic (guess what she has tied around her head)

I had never quilted so much of pebbles before and it was really demanding, so I think I'll take a break from FMQ for a bit. As I have a few other quilt tops to finish, I decided to try some walking foot quilting on them.

Two of them look appropriately modern for some straight line quilting. One is the Rainbow Rose QAL and the other is a little quilt I made out of my prize fat quarter bundle - very different from what I usually do, but I love it for that)) Will tell the whole story soon.

Candy quilt top

 I have never done walking foot quilting (apart from quilting in the ditch), so it's a challenge and I want to set it as my One Monthly Goal for July.

I'm also linking up to Fabric, Thread and Yarn, Off the Wall Friday and Free Motion Mavericks.

This poor creature with damaged shell was brought to my attention as I was taking pictures.


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