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Showing posts with label quilting ideas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quilting ideas. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

LAQ87 Floating Rectangles Quilt – A Modern Quilting Design

When my friend, Susan, asked me to quilt this, I was excited because I’d been reading Angela Walter’s book, "In the Studio With Angela Walters", on quilting modern quilts (quiltingismytherapy.com)]; and had some ideas I wanted to try.


Planning the Quilting
I took an excellent online class from Carla Barrett at featheredfibers.wordpress.com called Tablet Design Class for Quilters and we used a Bamboo tablet to create a quilting line drawing on top of a quilt photo in Photoshop. By the way, I highly recommend her classes.

Since getting my snazzy cell phone, I’ve recently incorporated Carla’s method for sketching the quilting in the Sketchbook Mobile app on my phone. I can then e-mail the plan(s) to my client so we can agree on the quilting design up front.

Here's where I doodled different ideas:
quilting design ideas

Then I settled on 2 different plans; a fancy allover (a lot of modern quilts have allover straight or curvy lines) or a semi custom (different designs in separate areas of the quilt).
allover quilting design
allover

semi-custom quilting design
semi custom

This way Susan could see the difference and decide which she liked the best. It’s easier to spend the extra money for custom quilting when you can compare the two results up front.

We went with the semi-custom, and I’m really glad because it enhances the modern feel of the quilt. I quilted random-sized pebbles in the background:



an oval meander in the rectangles and a straight line just outside the skinny strips to separate and bring them forward:

Details
·         Size - 58x59
·         Thread - Omni black walnut and Omni mahogany; So Fine buffalo in the bobbin
·         Batting- Hobbs black 80/20
·         Backing - same as the background fabric

Strategy
·         Used Omni thread which is thicker than So Fine so the quilting showed a little more.
·         Used So Fine in the bobbin – waaaayy less bobbin changes and the color worked with both top threads.
·         Loaded the quilt so the rectangles ran parallel to the Longarm table. Then I could quilt across the background, change the      thread and quilt inside a row of rectangles, change thread and quilt more background, roll the quilt and repeat.

Thanks to Susan for letting me quilt her cool modern quilt top. ;)  I love this quilt!

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Longarm Quilt #80 Purple Aurora – how to "fancy quilt" with no stops


I did some fancy quilting on this quilt for my friend.















Because there were big areas of solid fabrics, I wanted to do something fancy; and since it was so big, I wanted a design where I could work my way across the quilt without any stops and starts. When you have lots of stops and starts in your designs, it takes longer to quilt and you have to be careful about taking tiny stitches at the beginning and end of each design so the threads don't come loose. (Or you have to bury your thread tails - shudder)

Time to break out the quilting books for ideas and my big piece of acrylic and the dry erase markers. I came up with several designs, then laid the acrylic on top of the quilt to see if I could travel from one design to the next easily.

Close up so you can see how I traveled across the quilt.
I knew I could use the patchwork section as a guideline for quilting, so I did a loopy circle in each patch and then quilted big leaf shapes with veins for traveling in the black sashing.

I had recently seen the Dwirling design on the Pajama Quilter's DVD and thought that would add some cool texture to the big areas. It reminds me of a topo map.

Isn't this fabric gorgeous!
One corner of the quilt
I used Superior Omni thread in Jewel and So Fine in Amethyst in the bobbin and black 80/20 batting. I'm pretty happy with how this turned out.




Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Longarm Quilt #62 - When variegated thread is perfect!

This is a really fun 1-piece (I guess that qualifies as a wholecloth) top that made up quickly into a super cute baby quilt. Just popped the 42x52 piece of fabric on the longarm with batting and backing and started quilting.


I used King Tut variegated in Cleopatra on top. See, isn't it perfect? It has all the bright colors of the quilt!:

I used So Fine Ferrari in the bobbin. Ferrari is this bright neon green that I seem to use a lot! I freehand quilted it with a design I call palm frondish - it kinda reminds me of palm branches and is sort of jungley (I'm sure that's a word) like the African animals. I get a lot of quilting ideas from books and this one is from Dawn Ramirez, Pajama Quilter. She has such a friendly, relaxed way of teaching that it just helps a nervous, new longarmer feel more confident. thanks Dawn!

Sometimes it's hard to tell where the quilting lines go, so here's a sketch on top of the photo to give you an idea:

It's such a great allover design cause it's so easy to meander around, fill in all the tiny places and change direction easily. In this pic, you can see how the thread color changes look on the quilt:


I tried to angle the light so you can see the texture of the quilting:
Of course, I had to use more brightness on the back - a blue with crazy green dots.
That's a lot of pictures, but it's such a fun, happy quilt; maybe it will bring a smile to your day.