I am in love! Come see the first block I made using my Tangential star pattern, from Angled course: I mean, wow! I think that it came out so well! The colors are absolutely divine. I love Anna Maria Horner’s saturated, dramatic tones with the Kona Avocado background.
Read MoreThis week my longarm has been at rest. That’s no surprise - as things always slow down in the quilting studio in the summertime. The warm weather beckons us all away from our sewing machines and out into the world where inspiration awaits. July will be a quiet month, I think, but in June I was still busy quilting. Come see some favorites from my customers! Two are English paper pieced wonders - ideal for sewing away from home.
Read MoreIf I had one artistic hero, it would be Anna Maria Horner. Over the years I have admired how she allows her private life to flow into her art and how she shares pieces of that publicly, like the collection she designed when her mother died or, more recently, the collection called Brave. Here comes my next quilt. With such showy, passionate fabrics, it will be an adventure for sure.
Read MoreWhat a quick and easy-going project. Not too many choices since I followed the look from the pattern cover, plenty of certainty and a satisfying, predictable result. I used the Sew Kind of Wonderful pattern called Happy Together and colored it in with Forestburgh fabrics by Heather Ross and Windham’s Ruby + Bee solids.
Read MoreWeaving together my life as a maker and other spheres of life: Best of June, experimenting with selling wholesale pattern licenses, anticipating an Anna Maria Horner quilt, gathering Purples and a pleasant distraction.
Read MoreDo you dream about visiting Europe? What about indulging in a creative retreat to foster new skills, encounter other quilters and recharge with fresh inspiration? Well friends, you could do both at once, and perhaps meet me as well!
Read MoreHere is my wall full of children! They do look happy together, don’t they? To me the bright, solid backgrounds are key to that effect. The solid backgrounds stamp the quilt with a sense of childhood joy, without being crazy-busy to the eye.
Read MoreIf you are a fan of modern quilts with a clean, dramatic style, Quilting with Curves is for you. Yes, even if you haven’t sewn curves yet, that’s no reason not to go for it. You will surely learn under Daisy’s experienced guidance. Those smooth curves will be worth the challenge!
Read MoreThis quilt is made up of big blocks, each one of a different child figure. I arranged solids as colorful backgrounds and paired them with various print fabrics to ensure a nice spread of patterns, colors and value. It looks happy, no? Come see the first blocks!
Read MoreThis quilt is called Rainbow Over Head. It represents my choice to believe that no matter what storms come in my life, it is possible to find a rainbow again. This is not the trite message that everything all works out and that everything is always somehow okay, but that beauty and love exist alongside the real loss. Like color in the darkness or a rainbow after a hurricane. I acknowledge the existence of both in my life. And I choose to be happy.
Read MoreWhat usually comes first - falling in love with a patchwork pattern or with a group of fabric? For me it varies so much that I don’t think I have a usual flow. This time it was perhaps both, if that’s possible. I am equally smitten by the pattern and the fabrics, and so excited to get to marry them together.
Read MorePeople often ask how long it takes to make a quilt. The most impossible question! First because the time varies radically based on the patchwork and quilt size. Second because most quilters don’t keep track! When we’ve really found our groove with a delicious project, time falls away into an immersive, satisfying present.
Read MoreThis weekend Elora and I sewed a gift for her friend’s upcoming birthday. The party for this twirly-skirt wearing girl is hearts-themed, thus we shall sew hearts. I printed out four copies of the Penny Sampler Pattern Club heart pattern, and we set out to make a drawstring backpack.
Read MoreMrs. Quilty was started by hobby quilters who wanted to help others fall in love with this craft. Once you catch the quilting bug, you crave more excitement, more colors, more unique shapes, patterns and fresh inspiration. The idea is simple - provide all this in one box so that you can get right to the sewing and enjoying.
Read MoreFor four years now I’ve been sewing together diamonds and kites and crowns. Each stitch by hand and only when my heart desired. Progress came mostly in bursts during my travels. But now all the blocks are sewn and the cadence has changed.
Read MoreHave you tried web piecing? It is an advanced variation on chain piecing that is ideal for joining lots of small pieces while keeping everything in order. The method takes some getting used to, but it is certainly worth it! I just learned how to web piece from Steffi @Quiltwerke, via her Tilda Quilt highlight reel.
Read MoreTa da, my finished Lavender Blue Teeter Totter Quilt. My satisfactions and dissatisfactions, in today’s post. I do hope that someone who loves purple will give this quilt a home! She’s listed in my Handmades shop, along with my previous multicolor Teeter Totter, aka Flower Fields.
Read MoreWeaving together my life as a maker and other spheres of life: Best of May, experimenting with web style chain-piecing, processing over slow stitches, celebrating 4 years in The Netherlands and looking back on a landmark month in my personal life.
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