I wasn't sure how big I wanted to make it, but when one of the fiber groups I belong to issued a challenge for an upcoming show I knew the size. The pieces have to be exactly 18" wide by 36" long, a very doable size. The piece is also supposed to be indicative of our style and this one certainly is. I like to do improvizational piecing and this was no exception. I just start with one piece of fabric and keep adding as I go, adding more pieces and inserting those skinny black strips
And here it is. Not quite sure how I am going to quilt it.
I really tried to make it about two inches longer and wider than it needed to be, knowing that it would shrink with squaring up and quilting. But it ended up 19 "x 36 1/2," so I added the black border. I'm hoping I can cut most of it away after quilting and just bind it in black.
I also did a few cards marrying fabric with stamping. I still had my Dupioni silks out so I added a strip along the bottom of the card, first fusing, then doing a machine buttonhole stitch all around. The bottom flower and the sentiment are popped up with dimensionals.
4 comments:
I really love the dupioni silk and your piecing here. I'm sure it would have looked good with the hand-dyes, but the sheen from the silk is such a great extra layer, and the sharp sheen and shards give an interesting dynamic feel to the whole piece. I love that the black lines aren't all the same thickness as well. And interesting hearing you say that the border wasn't originally part of the design. My first reaction on seeing it was, wow- it looks just like a stained glass window. I think it will look much more contemporary and more inspired-by-a-window rather than like-a-window after you've narrowed it.
I've done that before though, made something that was just not-quite-big-enough. It's always so aggravating. One time I just said screw it and made the thing 23" and I've regretted it lots of times since (so many shows it would have fit in with minimum widths of 24").
So glad to see your latest quilting!
Yes, yes……success on both sewing and paper art!!!
Nice interpretation of the stained glass, the dupioni was perfect for it.
Your stained glass quilt is absolutely gorgeous!
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