I finished up another set of 4 of these flower blocks. I might be watching too much TV but at least I get a little something done. Because I bought these blocks from the Virginia Quilt Museum I refer to the person who made these as "Virginia". I love studying every block to see how Virginia cut them out. Just look at the tips of each petal in this flower and you can see that the gingham check is centered perfectly on each petal. Virginia and I could have been related! Here are the 36 completed blocks. I have 18 more to do. The current plan is plain half blocks for the border so the finished size will be about 70 x 90. Unless I decide to do something on borders and let's hope that I don't do that.
I got the fish fused and I'm mostly thrilled with the results. These are my 2 favorites. These are all acceptable too. Yes, they are lumpy but the grouting process mostly smooths out the edges. These are the only two that I'm declaring as outright rejects. For me, that's a really good success ratio! I have a stack of reject fish from previous firings. I'll break these up and use them in a scrap project so they will not go to waste. The pale one is a reject because the fish will not stand out well against white grout. The dark one doesn't have enough interest although it could work in a pinch. Here are all of the fish stuck to the wall. I "baste" them up with tape until the mastic firms up. If you look on the right and left edges you can see how I used a few of the reject fish. Sometimes the body is OK so I can cut off the tail and have the fish swim in from the edge. In once case only the tail was salvageable and it's a really fine tail. I added some of the background just to see how it's going to look. I did straighten out that one partial tile near the fish nose. It was bugging me in the photo. You aren't really supposed to cut glass tile but this isn't in a shower so it will be OK. I'll have to wait for the fish to set up before I do any more. The blue glass tiles are from my friend's bathroom remodel. I love free materials!
My goal is to have this done by the end of April so that I can grout both areas in May. Fabric of the WeekIn Virginia Spring is here in a big way. The Dogwood by my sewing room window is blooming and my red car is currently lime green with pollen. But inside I'm celebrating with a pretty Spring blue-purple fabric. Larkspur Shades Pack is the fabric of the week and is 20% off through Sunday. Gradients Back in StockIf you need a little Sky to go with your Spring landscape you can't go wrong with Blue Sky, Monterey Bay or Sea and Sky. Monterey Bay and Sea and Sky are back in stock this week. Blue Sky is a bright summer sky blue, Sea and Sky is for a cloudy day and Monterey Bay might be dusk at the beach. New Quilt Back designLast week while dyeing I made a huge math error that left me with a big container of black dye. It was a perfect prompt to try a monochromatic spiral quilt back. It turned out great! I shared the photo ion Instagram and someone asked to purchase it within an hour. So I'm offering this as a custom dyed item. I can do the monochromatic spiral in any color you want. The quilt back is at least 108" square and is $78. Contact me if you need your own custom spiral.
I really look forward to our Country School Quilters sewing weekend. It's really the only time each month that I get any concentrated sewing time. Of course, that's my own fault for having too many other things going on at home. I got all of these rings done for my 4th of July quilt. As a reminder, this is the quilt that I'm making. I have fabrics cut for the 54 x 71 quilt and I have extra foundations if I want to make a queen size version. For now I got all of the short rings done and I started on the 5-pointed starbursts. I'll pick up with those next month. I really enjoy doing foundation piecing and am already looking forward to working on it again next month. We also went to the opening of my friend's quilt exhibit. If you are in the Richmond area you can see the exhibit through May at Randolph Macon College in the Flippo Gallery. If you aren't in the area and want to see some her amazing work, check out this post at the Country School Quilter's blog. We also have our first Bluebird nest of the season!
This week's featured project is Atomic Atoll by Louise Hall. She sent along a great description of the quilt so I'll let her tell the story.
“Atomic Atoll” was created for the SAQA Regional Shifting Tides: Convergence in Cloth juried exhibition. Juror: Ann Johnston. The exhibition will tour the west coast from 2019 - 2021. The dome, or The Tomb as the locals call it, is located on Runit Island which is part of the Enewetak Atoll in the Pacific Ocean. The US conducted 43 nuclear tests there from 1946-1958. In the late 70's, US servicemen buried the nuclear waste under an 18" think concrete dome. It was supposed to be a temporary fix, but a permanent decontamination plan never came to fruition. The contents of the dome, as well the surrounding sediments, are dangerously radioactive. Fabrics chosen are my attempt to reflect the tortured nature of the atoll. The dome is mirrored by its twin underwater bomb crater. The stitched overlaid radiation symbol was deliberately created in an understated way to symbolize the unseen danger that will eventually spread contamination to a far wider area. Louise used Barrier Island, Sugar Maple and Red Sunset Gradients. You can see more of Louise's work on her website. For sharing, Louise received a 20% coupon for the shop that's good for 3 months! If you have made anything with my hand dyed fabric I hope you will consider sharing it in the Customer Gallery. The only rule is that projects have to be complete. It doesn't have to be made totally from hand dyed fabric, just include a recognizable amount. I showed you my fish bases the other day. Slowly I am working on building my fish. I can only do this for about an hour at a time because the fumes from the glue (just plain Elmers gel) starts to bother me. So I can get about 3 done in a session. They are all built from scrap bits with some frit and stringers. As they melt in the kiln the surface will smooth out. The colors are all based on whatever glass bits that I have and some of these are striker glass so I'm bound to get some big surprises in the end. Some will turn out great and some will be rejects sent back to the scrap pile but I'm really hopeful for this one. I don't need this many but I'm going to make enough to fill the kiln and hope for the best! There's so much glue in here that I'll have to vent the kiln and the basement really well. Hopefully I can get these fired this weekend and have some cute fishes to show you next week.
This weekend is sewing days with Country School and I'll get to go both days this time. I'm looking forward to working on the 4th of July quilt again. Fabric of the WeekThis gradient was inspired by the sunset over the Blue Ridge Mountains near our home. It's the fabric of the week this week and is on sale 20% off through Sunday! New StarsStars are one yard cuts and are great when you need just one color. These are the fabrics that I have fun with mixing unique dye colors. I've added 10 new ones and you can see them all here.
I can't put down the Wild Gears! In fact I ordered 3 more sets this week. There's an Enormous set and Ovals and I got both of those plus one other set that I didn't already have. I want the Enormous and Ovals for my floor cloths and I'm still playing around with large designs for them. But I've also been thinking about drawing on fabric so that I might make a quilt. I had a stack of yellow scraps on the table so I've been experimenting with them. Over the past week or so I've been drawing designs all over the fabric and yesterday cut them up into postcards. I had not intended to make anything with the practice pieces but as I was looking at them I figured that adding a few crystals might make them fancy enough to be acceptable for postcards. On this card you can see that I was also experimenting with doing designs in layers. I did a big design first in a light ink for some background lines and then added the smaller motifs in red and brown ink. In a couple of hours I had 9 more postcards! Between birthdays, get well greetings and Airbnb guests I go through these really quickly.
In two sessions since Thursday I was able to get the wall finished. I really am getting too old to sit cross-legged on a concrete floor for hours at a time. But it's done! Of course, it's not DONE done, but the messy stuff is done and I was able to clean up around the longarm. I could put this back on the frame now that all the pottery bits are off the floor. Before I grout the wall I'm going to get the backsplash finished so I can grout both in a weekend. It's going to look like this. Both the wall and the backsplash are sponsored by my best friend's house remodel! The background tile from both came from her bathroom remodel project. I need to make more fish first and that meant most of Sunday spent clearing off the glass workbench. I haven't done any glass for about a year. I hurt my shoulder in May and then got caught up in dyeing 100 yards of fabric every week. The glass bench turned into a dumping ground covered in 17 layers of dust. Yes, this is cleaned up. The boxes of scrap glass are my materials for making new fish. Last night I got a bunch of fish bases cut out and glued together. They are ready for decorating now. Hopefully I'll get these in the kiln later this week.
It was a really good weekend! Today's featured project is The Mystical Ravel by Patricia Caldwell. She used the Blue Morpho Gradient as her background.The raven is made with thread painting, the branch with layering fabric bits and couching and the feather is stamped with a stamp her brother made. This piece sold the same day that Patricia and I met last month.
For sharing, Patricia received a 20% coupon for the shop that's good for 3 months! If you have made anything with my hand dyed fabric I hope you will consider sharing it in the Customer Gallery. The only rule is that projects have to be complete. It doesn't have to be made totally from hand dyed fabric, just include a recognizable amount. |
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I'm Vicki Welsh and I've been making things as long as I can remember. I used to be a garment maker but transitioned to quilts about 20 years ago. Currently I'm into fabric dyeing, quilting, Zentangle, fabric postcards, fused glass and mosaic. I document my adventures here. Categories
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