Layout Image
  • Home
  • About
  • Finished Projects
    • 2013 Finishes
    • 2012 Finishes
    • 2011 Finishes
    • 2010 Finishes
    • 2009 Finishes

Archive for angela walters

Our Benevolent Internet Overlords

By Liz · Comments (41) · November 9th, 2012

Settle in, friends. Grab a snack, perhaps. I’ve got a lot to say about this quilt.

Google quilt - front detail

I am typically pretty happy with how my quilts turn out. Not a single one is perfect, but I nearly always like them. This one? This one I am shamelessly proud of. It started out as this super-geeky idea between my husband and me, a sort of homage to his job at Google, and turned into what feels like a real creative and technical accomplishment. I am psyched. Also, a note, the solid colors were really hard to photograph well, so know that it doesn’t look so blown-out in real life.

This was, far and away, the most planned quilt I’ve ever made. Sure, I always start with an idea or a design. But somewhere in the process, there is at least a little randomness. Not here. My notes (and yes, I have notes) span at least eight pages of gridded paper. I started by enlarging the image on my computer, and then tracing the outlines onto the first piece of graph paper. I then went over it and sort of pixellated the curves in one-square (one-inch) increments. After that, I divided the whole thing into 10-inch blocks and drew out each block, listing what size pieces I’d need of each color to make each block. Seriously, pages and pages. That took me a few hours, but at least it made the piecing relatively straightforward. And the whole top came together exactly the way it was supposed to.

Google quilt

After the fiasco of the first back, which had also been rather elaborately graphed and pieced ahead of time, I went with a similar-in-concept-but-simpler-in-execution design the second time around. I knew I wanted big blocks of the colors from the front, and I knew I was going to use multiple colors of thread, and didn’t want yellow thread on green fabric or vice versa. But since I already had those dimensions nice and clear on another sheet of paper, it was really quite easy to put together.

Google quilt - back

The quilting, oh, the quilting. Since this whole quilt is “just” giant swaths of solid fabric, I knew the quilting had to be something special. It was going to stand out more than your average quilt, and I really thought it was important that it really add something to the project. It couldn’t just be functional and look nice-enough, it had to be very much on purpose. Which meant, naturally, that I was terrified of it. I knew I wanted to use different colored thread in each section, and I knew that I wanted a different quilting design in each section. But picking them? Oh, did I procrastinate.

After seeing Angela Walters at our Boston Modern Quilt Guild meeting, and reading her book, I really and truly look at quilting in a different way. It makes me want to try all kinds of new things. For this quilt, I eventually just started flipping through the book and writing down designs that I thought would work. I finally narrowed it down to five.

Google quilt - front quilting detail

The white part of the quilt, the “g”, got pebble quilting. It was the first part that I quilted, and I really enjoyed intentionally doing pebbles of varying sizes. In addition to looking cool, it takes some of the pressure off when you aren’t worried about being super consistent.

Google quilt - back quilting detail

The yellow was little flowers, similar to the ones I did on Ellie’s quilt, but much more closely spaced. The blue was a really neat combination of wavy lines and pebbling that I saw on one of the examples Angela passed around at our meeting. I don’t know if she has a name for it, but it makes me think of a riverbed. Both of those patterns seemed to lose some of their detail after being washed and dried, though they still are really obvious on the back.

The red was filled with leaves, though I think it could almost pass for flames on the bold red fabric. This proved a surprisingly tricky design for me. I found it challenging to make the sizes and shapes consistent, and it really seemed to want to move vertically instead of filling the space randomly. I was glad that it wasn’t a huge area of the quilt. (Also? Solid red = wicked hard to photograph.)

Google quilt - back quilting detail

I saved the green for last. I knew I wanted to use the woodgrain design, but it made me really nervous. I practiced it a bunch on the re-purposed first backing, and finally went for it.  First of all, it’s a SUPER dense design, so it doesn’t feel like it moves super quickly. And I found the left-to-right movement somewhat tricky on my home machine, since I ended up jamming a fair amount of quilt in the throat of my machine. But in the end? I am COMPLETELY in love with it. It turned out so, so cool. I am thrilled.

Google quilt - woodgrain quilting

Not to beat a dead horse, but I really am proud of the quilting. It’s the most ambitious I’ve ever been, and it is CERTAINLY the most densely I have ever quilted – I think the final count was around 17 bobbins of thread for a 60×70″ quilt. And though it was nerve-wracking, I am glad I pushed myself and didn’t take an easier way out. Sure, I could take some close-up pictures to show you each and every little flaw that I can see when my nose is pressed up against it. But I think the effect is exactly how I wanted it, and for that I am glad.  Especially the way it comes through on the back.

Google quilt - folded, binding

Finally, it was time to bind it. Adding a print seemed crazy at this point – trying to find one that really worked, after I had been so careful to pick just the right color solids, not to mention adding additional “busy-ness” to the whole thing, no thanks. I decided the dark gray from the back (Kona Charcoal, if you’re wondering) would make a nice frame, and added a little piece of each of the other colors in the order they sometimes appear in Google branding. Though I have fallen in love with machine binding over the last year, I finished this one by hand.

Google quilt - binding detail

As a post-script, I was really, really afraid of washing this quilt. With all of those saturated solids and a huge swath of white? Oh, I was so scared this would be the one to bleed. But I washed it in cold water and tossed three color catchers in there (no idea if extra ones boost the effectiveness, but I was willing to try). Not a single spot of colors running, and even the color catchers stayed nearly white and didn’t seem to pick up any loose dyes. Thank you, Kona cottons.

There you have it, the saga of the Google quilt. It is done, and I am psyched. I hope you like it. (And I hope no one sues me for using a probably-copyrighted image. It’s an homage! It’s art! Have mercy on me, benevolent internet overlords!)

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
Comments (41)
Categories : Binding, Finished Objects, Quilting, Quilts
Tags : angela walters, flower quilting, free-motion quilting, google quilt, Kona solids, lap quilt, pebble quilting, woodgrain quilting

A Parting Gift

By Liz · Comments (9) · August 20th, 2012

Because, sometimes you have to set aside all of your works-in-progress and make something completely new.

Mug Rug for our OT

My littlest one has an occupational therapist through our state’s Early Intervention program. She’s been working with us, every week, for over a year. Sadly for us, she is taking a new job, so Monday was our last day together. I wanted to wish her well and send her off with a little something, which meant that Sunday night, I dropped everything to make a mug rug for her new office.

Mug Rug for our OT

She’s a bit younger than me, and a whole lot more fashionable. I got the idea that something with navy and gray, with pops of brighter colors, might work for her. I pulled my precious Lotta Jansdotter fabric out of the stash and cut 2.5″ strips, then used paper to foundation-piece them in a little diagonal.  In my haste, I totally messed up the first two (the white/gray and yellow florals on the left), so they didn’t cover the upper-left corner at all. Instead of picking out stitches, I called it a design element and added the orange. No harm, no foul.

Mug Rug for our OT

Wanting to get out of my quilting rut, and being thoroughly inspired by Angela Walters‘ book, I decided to do a different quilting design on each print. Turned out kind of cool, I thought. Some of the designs could use some more practice, but it’s nice to feel like I have more options. (And seriously, if you do any free-motion quilting AT ALL, get Angela’s book. It’s wonderful and totally practical and helpful, not just pretty.) Plus, I did some of the teeny-tiniest quilting I have EVER done.

By far the tiniest quilting I've ever done.

The finished piece is around 6 x 10″, and since I’ve gotten in to making jam this summer, of course she had to have a jar of the strawberry rhubarb – so dang delicious. Our much-loved Courtney seemed to dig both the mug rug and the jam, and I hope they both serve her well on her new adventure.

Mug Rug for our OT

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
Comments (9)
Categories : Crafts, Finished Objects
Tags : angela walters, echo, free-motion quilting, lotta jansdotter, mug rug
     

Crafty Folks

  • artsy-crafty babe
  • Cluck Cluck Sew
  • crazy mom quilts
  • During Quiet Time
  • Film in the Fridge
  • Lit and Laundry
  • mamieknits
  • Moda Bake Shop
  • My Three Sons
  • Oh, Fransson!
  • Quilt Dad
  • Sew, Mama, Sew!
  • Tallgrass Prairie Studio

Find me over here, too

  • Goddess in Progress
  • How Do You Do It?
  • On Flickr
  • On Twitter

Wish List

Ideas swirling around in my head that haven't gotten going yet...
  • Modified Bento tutorial from Film in the Fridge
  • Aqua and off-white (and green?)... something
  • Half-hexagons
  • Picnic quilt
  • Citrus (orange, yellow, green, pink?)
  • Las Brisas (orange, pink, blue)
  • Owl houses
  • Tickertape pair - warm and cool

Works in Progress

  • Forest Lake, Part I
  • Forest Lake, Part II
  • Triangle Madness
  • Avian Therapy
  • Quilt Class, 1 and 2
  • APOWB Wonky Starlings
  • Bee Addicted 2 Quilt
  • Scraptastic Owls
  • One Block Over Modern Meadow

Sharing!

Grab My Button





Archives

Goddess in Progress Quilts
Copyright 2009-2011 All Rights Reserved
iThemes Builder by iThemes
Powered by WordPress