"If you want to hear the sound of God's laughter, just tell Him your plans."
Quilting
Truthfully FOMMWQ {fear of making a mistake while quilting} hit hard. Every idea became much too complicated. Despite my trepidation, the stems were easy - just some FMQ loops... until running out of green thread. And you know how hard it is to purchase more. Hahaha.
Still, quilting the roses became an ever-larger nightmare. McTavishing seemed like it would make petal-like curves. Great idea but heavy stitching might make the quilt stiff or make it pull oddly if everything else wasn't quilted equally closely. So I warted and worried it to death then gave it a quick burial in the closet. Guilt arose each time it was opened.
Chinese Coins with Roses quilt |
This past week it occurred to me that the roses could be an improv challenge. Remember Kaja's flower post? Ok, there are several flowery ideas running through my mind but at the rate I'm going it may be next year before there's time to work on them. So...
After watching YouTube videos by Karen herself and Leah Day, I found Amy Johnson whose curlicues spoke to me. About the same time I realized the quilting could be spaced further apart. {Too soon old and too late smart.} A few hours practicing the technique with dry erase marker on my vinyl overlay gave me the confidence to begin again.
Photos of these overlays on top of the quilt didn't show well so here they are against the design wall. This is a practice rose.
Larger scale spirals and McTavishing with a marker |
The result of facing fear is often the discovery that it's not that difficult. Nike is right. Just Do It!
Detail of quilting the roses |
Two sections down; only the background left to fill. Julie's combination of fans and flowers would make a garden of flowers for the roses to emerge from... and they could use more flowers in their garden. ;-)
In the first attempt petals curved and hopped. Unfortunately, I'm a hopper. My curves get out of control quite easily.
Mixing flowers, spirals, and fans in FMQ |
After several iterations, my flower petals are much shorter, more like scallops. And most of my fans turned into spirals. Fans or spirals. Both seems okay. My main takeaway from all the practice is that the flower petals should not overlap. A few peeking through the arcs seems better.
More flowers, spirals, and fans in FMQ |
The light blue thread was very hard to see but slowing my speed kept me from crossing quilting lines. It only took two days to complete the quilting. After a quick wash and dry the quilt crinkled beautifully. {This is why I love Mountain Mist batts. The shrink just enough. Like Goldilocks and the Three Bears.}
There was just enough blue gingham print (not yarn dyed) for the binding. Well, one skinny strip went into the scrap bag.
Gingham binding on Chinese Coins with Roses quilt |
Previous posts:
- Attempting to Applique the Roses
- Adding Pieced Roses
- Strewing Roses
- Adding Stems and Leaves
- Top Done
Back of Chinese Coins with Roses quilt |
Quilt Specifics
Size: 59" x 52"
Design: Chinese Coins with improv pieced roses
Batting: Mountain Mist Cream Rose 100% cotton
Thread: green, red and blue Gutermann 50 wt cotton
Quilting: FMQ loops, spirals, fans, and flowers
Size: 59" x 52"
Design: Chinese Coins with improv pieced roses
Batting: Mountain Mist Cream Rose 100% cotton
Thread: green, red and blue Gutermann 50 wt cotton
Quilting: FMQ loops, spirals, fans, and flowers
Approximate Yardage: 8.5 yd
(guesstimate because mainly scraps)
(guesstimate because mainly scraps)
Off the Bookshelf
At the library this week I found two, count 'em TWO, new quilt books and snagged both to read. Quilts in the Cotswalds by Kaffe Fassett and Organic Appliqué by Kathy Doughty are thoughtful reads with my morning coffee. I want to return to large scale prints and these both encourage that. Reading about creative methods sparks new ideas of our own {or you can follow their designs.} These books even have coordinating covers.
Enjoy the day, Ann