Book Winners and Acknowledgments

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Congratulations to #93 Emily, #154 Michelle and #160 Mary! You are the winners of the 1, 2, 3 Quilt giveaway! And Mary was one of my pattern testers, so she can see her name in the acknowledgments. While I’m here, I’ll list all of the amazing folks who tested patterns for me:

Rebecca Policastro Aranyi, Brooke Crook, Mary Emmens, Cristy Fincher, Sarah Jackson, Heather Loney, Katie Loney, Rebecca Makas, Cindy McCamant, Kellie King Morgan, Deb Robertson, Mandie Segura, Emily Sposetta, Jennifer Sylvia, and Kerry Wilkinson. I don’t seem to have all of your blogs/websites, so send me the links and I will post them here. Thanks for all your help!

I also wanted to talk a bit about the top quilting of the quilts I made for 1, 2, 3 Quilt. I had help from some amazingly talented people.

Tia Curtis quilted the Random Rectangles Quilt using her beautiful free-motion technique, the Honeycomb Quilt with echo quilted lines, and the Cluster Dots Quilt with pebble quilting (all pictured in detail on the top row above). Lisa Sipes did some amazing line work on the Triangles Quilt at bottom left. A local quilter, Regina Carter, added some organic shapes to the Stars Quilt (bottom right). And as I mentioned in a previous post, Diana Taylor did the hand quilting on the Lopsided Squares Quilt (bottom row, center). And Jessie Edens helped me out by finishing the binding on most of these quilts. Thanks to everyone!

Design Process

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Today I’m participating in a blog hop about the design process. Wendi from Shiny Happy World asked each of us to talk about a recent project, along with the design decisions that went into it. So I thought I would talk about the design process for the Lopsided Squares Quilt in my upcoming book 1, 2, 3 Quilt

This quilt ends the first chapter of the book and it’s the first quilt that I started to make. I’d already given rough sketches of all 24 projects, which were submitted in my book proposal. I love having this outline with my general ideas already worked out, but I frequently change fabric and sometimes make minor changes. A couple of projects in the book were scrapped altogether during the design process.

Most of my designs are worked out for weeks or even months as I go about my daily activities. I contemplate sewing construction dilemmas while I’m waiting in carpool line, get a sudden creative idea in the shower, or work out a design in my sketchbook at bedtime and ask my husband for advice. My design process also includes making blocks and squinting at them from across the room for a few days. Sometimes I take photos and squint at the computer screen too. I guess when things are blurry, I can see the basic shapes and contrast. I never really thought about this much, but now I realize that I do an awful lot of squinting at my works in progress!

For this quilt, I knew I wanted to make a simple log cabin quilt in a wonky style as sort of a tribute to Gee’s Bend and Denyse Schmidt quilts that originally inspired me. And I think this is just the first kind of quilt anyone should make. So I submitted the drawing below in my proposal. At this point, I had already named it Lopsided Squares Quilt, but I had a lot of negative space in the design here.

sketch

I was pretty certain that I wanted to use all or mostly solids, but I also wanted to experiment with pattern and different color variations to see how they might look. Here’s a quick photo of some sample blocks on the floor of my sewing room. I really wanted to include fabric variations for each quilt in the book, but there just wasn’t time or space. For this quilt, I did include measurements for an alternate block to make a perfectly accurate log cabin block, with no wonky lines.

sample-blocks

Then I decided on neutrals with pops of bright colors, as shown below.

more-sample-blocks

So I made this quick and sloppy digital image to see what the full quilt might look like, though I must have been thinking of adding a few patterned pieces here and there, which I didn’t do in the end. I guess this is the point when I decided to eliminate the negative space. You may notice that I don’t use any sashing or borders on my quilts in the book. This wasn’t really a conscious decision, but is probably a reflection of my style.

digital-image-of-lopsided-s

And then a finished quilt top. My husband is holding it up here.

quilt-top-lopsided-squares

And then it was clear to me that my deadlines were fast approaching and I was going to need help! I wanted to hand quilt this one, so I enlisted the help of Diana Taylor, who worked at Whipstitch and now owns Fabricate Studios here in Atlanta. She hand quilted the entire thing and also basted and did the binding. I know she spent many, many hours with this quilt on her lap. Thank you, Diana! Here’s the finished quilt.

lopsided-squares-quilt-completed

Photo by Laura Malek.

Honestly, it makes me a little tired to think about the process of making this book! I wonder where I found the time. But I hope this gives you a peek into my design process. I look forward to reading about how everyone else goes about making things. Do they squint at their designs too? You can visit the other participants on the Blog Hop below. And please feel free to comment and share your own design process!


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Folk Modern Table Runner Sew-Along Updates

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All done! Head over to Kollabora to see the full tutorial for the Folk Modern Table Runner. Upload photos of your version of this runner for a chance to win a copy of 1, 2, 3 Sew.

I also posted about some ideas for simple variations, as you can see below. It’s amazing how simple variations can make such a difference in a quilt block.

folk-modern-runner-two-square-variation

folk-modern-runner-rectangle-variation

Love Quilting & Patchwork Magazine

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My Rail Fence Tote Bag is in the latest issue of Love Quilting & Patchwork magazine, a new modern quilting magazine from the makers of Mollie Makes. You can order the latest issue here or you can download it from the Apple Newsstand.

The Rail Fence Tote is a project from my new book, 1, 2, 3 Quilt, which you can pre-order now. The tote is lined and features roomy boxed corners. It’s a simple project and will introduce you to the basic Rail Fence quilt pattern which you can use to make quilts or other patchwork projects.

Rail-Fence-Tote

Photo by Laura Malek.