Monday, August 12, 2013

Sunflower Loving Bride

A friend dropped off a top & back for her daughter's wedding.  Sunflowers and lavendar are her colors and the mom zipped together this Rail Fence top.  Wowzers, everyone sees color usage differently and I am happy for Camille and Chelsea to embrace their color love so boldly.

I thought I would show a bit of the steps in deciding how and what I will FMQ on a top with bold colors and simple block pattern.

I measured each block = 7" square.  Then I drew 25 square (5 blocks x5 blocks) and laid Press N Seal over the center 9 blocks.  With a sharpie I began experimenting.  --- once the grandkiddoes drive back home for the start of the school year, I will hook up the scanner and post those pics ----

The client wanted a fresh yellow thread and So Fine # 496 was perfect!

Linda Taylor's Arch Guide --- one of my oft used FMQ tools.
 I started by using Linda Taylor's Arch Guide
to go corner to corner in both directions
to establish the framework.

Then I filled in the corners with 3-1-3 petals.

I wanted to make the FMQing create false negative space,
ie another layer to an otherwise predictable block pattern.
So
 I added echo arcs
that created center diamond shapes
 which I filled with simple lines.



Nothing fancy but a good reminder that your FMQing does not have to parrot the block.
The inner petals have harmony with the fabrics and wedding theme.  BTW, I love Press N Seal because I can experiment on design ideas without thread ripping...!



4 comments:

Scrapatches said...

Pretty quilt with pretty quilting. Press'n'seal? For the quilting motifs? I have never heard of this before. Does it remove easily afterward without disrupting the stitches? I am going to have to experiment with this. I will be using scraps for my experimenting, though, before I get brave enough to ever approach a finished quilt top with a sharpie even if there is a plastic shield over it ... :) Pat

Karee said...

Oh, no --- I use Press N Seal on my to scale DRAWINGS of the quilt blocks. It is a most excellent way to experiment your FMQ designs on the "blocks."

Though I have peeled it off the paper drafts and stitched right through it onto the quilt top. It comes right off the quilt and I have never had the sharpie transfer via needle or needle holes onto the fabric.

Working up the stitching design is something I love to develop, modify, and modify again before the needle ever pierces the quilt top.

Sheri said...

Beautiful colors and quilting!

Karee said...

It is fun to quilt customers' colorful quilts that I would not be bold enough to use myself. It stretches me and I gain new appreciation for boldness.