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Archive for joel dewberry

Olivia and the Bird

By Liz · Comments (12) · August 22nd, 2012

Olivia and the Bird

I make a lot of quilts as gifts for friends and family, or quilts-just-cause-I-wanna, but I do not take a lot of commissioned orders. For one thing, I find that if I do it too frequently, it stops being fun. And for another, as all quilters know, it’s not as though there’s much of a profit margin on quilt-making.  Fabric is expensive, and the quilt takes a lot of time. Precisely how much are people willing to pay for a baby blanket, you know?

Olivia and the Bird

But, sometimes the timing and the desire and all of that come together and I am more than happy to take a new order. Such was the case with this quilt. I made it for an old friend from middle school, whom I haven’t seen in 20 (!!) years but keep up with a bit online (thanks, Facebook!). A very close friend of hers (and someone else I know from our school days) recently had a baby girl, Olivia, and so came the impetus for this quilt.

Olivia and the Bird

The only big request from my friend was to include birds in the quilt. Birds are meaningful for her, so it would be neat that a quilt from her would have that motif on it. We found Joel Dewberry’s Aviary 2, and the rest of the fabric stack came together quickly from there. My goodness, that is a gorgeous line. I think Joel Dewberry is right up near the top of my list of favorite fabric designers. Anyways, I am SO SO happy with how this group of fabrics came together from the bits of Aviary 2 that I bought and my stash. I think it manages to be feminine without a ton of pink, bright and bold without hurting my eyeballs.

Olivia and the Bird

Making a quilt with equilateral triangles has been on my list for a while, now, and with a 60-degree triangle ruler, it was easy to cut and piece. These were all cut from 5.5″ strips of fabric, so the finished height of each triangle is 5″. I shuffled up the fabrics and randomly chain-pieced all ten rows at once, only trying to keep identical fabrics from being right next to each other. With random layouts, I find you can really over-think it and make yourself nuts, so I try to leave as much of it to chance as I can. (If only all of the points in the quilt came together as nicely as that little set in the picture did. Alas, I’m human, and I only take close-ups of the prettiest parts…)

Olivia and the Bird

I’m really happy with the quilting. As with this week’s mug rug, it was directly inspired from Angela Walters’ book – big layered flowers that remind me of peonies.  While it makes for reasonably dense quilting coverage, the size of the design meant that it all worked up pretty quickly. And though it’s hard to see in photographs, it gives the quilt a really cool texture after a run through the dryer.

Texture

The bright pink dots on the binding (who doesn’t love a polka-dot binding?) are from Jennifer Paganelli’s Queen Street line, which I think might be out of print. Too bad, those Siobhan dots are awesome.

Olivia and the Bird

The quilt measures about 40×50″, my very favorite size for a baby quilt. Big enough to be useful, but small enough to be portable. Approved by 100% of the 18-month-olds in my house.

Olivia and the Bird

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Comments (12)
Categories : Finished Objects, Quilts
Tags : aviary 2, baby girl, baby quilt, joel dewberry, triangles

Modern Heirloom

By Liz · Comments (8) · November 15th, 2011

This Fall, I spent Monday nights teaching a handful of friends how to make their first quilt. I decided to walk them through a Mod Sampler, in large part because I feel like it includes a number of useful and applicable skills and block styles for a beginner. There were times during the process when I wondered if I had overshot and given my new students a bit too much.  But while it took a few sessions longer than I expected to get through it, I think it was ultimately a good choice.  Complex enough to require accuracy and learn a lot, but still manageable. And when they’re done, they all have an honest-to-goodness useable throw quilt, even if they never make another one. Awesome.

Modern Heirloom

I decided I would make a quilt along with them, so I could demonstrate each step along the way. This one was made with a fat quarter bundle of Heirloom, by Joel Dewberry. Oh, these fabrics are so lusciously beautiful.  I was working on this top at Sewing Summit, and people literally could not help themselves from stopping and checking it out.

Modern Heirloom

I quilted it super simply, just on either side of the sashing seams, again as part of the demo for my class. I wanted to show them a pretty minimal, manageable option for quilting so they wouldn’t get too overwhelmed.

Modern Heirloom

As gorgeous as the fabrics are, the truth is that I don’t think they were actually so perfect for this project. I think the Mod Sampler is a great pattern, but I think the blocks look a lot better when there’s a more obvious contrast in the fabric pairings. Some of mine stand out quite a bit better than others. I’m still happy with it overall, but a good learning experience.

Modern Heirloom

This quilt is headed to Ohio this week. When I started it, I didn’t have a destination in mind. But then I was reading Barefoot Foodie (check it out if you like your humor crude and honest and generally awesome), and Brittany mentioned that her cousin had lost everything in a house fire. I chipped in via Paypal, but I’m a quilter. Immediately I wondered if they’d like to have this quilt.

Is that weird? I mean, it’s not something useful like clothing or bringing over some dinner. But for someone I don’t know, who lives hundreds of miles away, I just thought it might be nice to have something… nice. Something cozy, something handmade. I know the other quilters are nodding their heads right now. Giving a quilt is what we know how to do. So, off it goes, and hopefully it will serve its purpose and give someone a smile.

Modern Heirloom

Oh, that. Yes, well. Actually, I made TWO quilts for my class. I’ll show the other one shortly.

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Comments (8)
Categories : Finished Objects, Quilts
Tags : heirloom, joel dewberry, Mod Sampler, teaching
     

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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)
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  • Tickertape pair - warm and cool

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  • Forest Lake, Part I
  • Forest Lake, Part II
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