Tag: applique

Dimensional Technique

Dimensional Technique

Quilt shows now abound at any time of the year and all across the country, small towns and cities. Before leaving our winter home I attended one last show in  south Texas. I always hope to see something unusual and/or creative that I haven’t seen 

Dresden Next

Dresden Next

Work is now started on a version of Dresden Plate using home dec fabrics with a formal feel.  Silks, satins, linens, cotton damask and more are used to make the blades of the plate.  They will be combined with my hand dyed linens in some 

Rose of Sharon

Rose of Sharon

I have wanted to make a quilt with the Rose of Sharon applique pattern for many years. Hand applique has always been the reason I have not accomplished that aspiration. The time seems right. Using a design program I have drafted a pattern based on a quilt made by an Arkansas pioneer woman (Sarah Lucinda Coxsey Seitz) in the late 1800’s whose birthday happens to be the same as mine. It seemed a sign. She made her quilt sometime within a six year period from her marriage, giving birth to five children and her untimely death. I am motivated to get this done!

To test the pattern I have made this small wall hanging. I cheated just a bit and did machine applique so I could get the process down in preparation for organizing a kit to be taken on our summer travel in 2016. It might still need to be tweaked to look more like her version. The background of the sample is one of my hand dyed vintage linens in a golden brown paired with batik and textural fabrics to make a non-traditional coloring of this pattern. The setting is also non-traditional with a 20 inch block set into a rectangular shape resulting from wide side borders and narrower but elongated top and bottom borders. I believe this shape is more interesting than simply centering a single block with multiple borders.

 

My aspiration for the pattern is to use non-traditional coloring but to hand applique the bed size quilt. Sarah made hers with only a top and bottom plain border with nine twenty inch squares. I plan to have a top and bottom border that resembles a swag with the Rose of Sharon motif.

 

I am counting on 2016 travel time to be perfect for taking on a totally hand applique project.

 

first try at EQ7 draw
first try at EQ7 draw

eq7 b and w ros EQ7 colorrose of sharon vintage

Texas Quilt Museum

Texas Quilt Museum

I was so fortunate to be going through La Grange Texas on a Thursday when the Texas Quilt Museum is open. I couldn’t have asked for a better choice of displays to be available! Oh, and there was a quilt shop right next to it 

How Did You Do That?

How Did You Do That?

    How did you make those branches? On a wall hanging that I posted recently there was a question about how the branches were made dimensional. It is a very simple technique. I cut brown toned batik into bias strips. Length really doesn’t matter