Showing posts with label design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label design. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 July 2014

Going for Gold

The 'Cosmos' for my piece 'Cosmic Split is complete.

Free motion quilting on gold metallic foil fabric show quilt for festival of quilts

Oh, I really enjoyed making the Cosmos! This is the part that I absolutely love doing - it is the reason I make quilts at all. I don't mark out the patterns in the circle, but just trust my eye and as I come to the end of the round, either squeeze up or draw out the last couple of  motives to fill the available space. Mostly, that works very well. If you look closely, you might find the odd motif that really has been hard done by!

Here are a couple of close-ups.

Free motion quilting on gold metallic foil fabric show quilt for festival of quilts

I wanted the texture of the background quilting to be a different, much smaller scale to the spheres. I've used a mixture of pebbling and a motif much used by one of my favourite quilters - Jacqueline Heinz. These two motifs are mixed in with two others on the black background that the gold will be stitched to.



The gold fabric has just about held out. If you look at it through a magnifying glass, you can see areas around the thread where there is a threatening split and a peek of white batting underneath. Just cross your fingers that it holds out until after the show and that the judges don't used magnifying glasses!!

Next comes the really scary bit - the Split in 'Cosmic Split' - otherwise known as the rotary cutter. It is always a bit of a nerve wracking moment to slice hours of quilting in two! I plan to finish and get this quilt off by the end of next week. The show is 2nd week in August, and I will post the finished quilt then.

This quilt has been such a journey, I think I will really miss it when it's finished. What shall I do next? It is a bit like finishing a really good book. On the one hand it is great to find out what happens in the end, on the other hand there is a hole left by its absence. Yet I often feel I need to savour the story a moment before I am able to plunge into the next one. Do you find that - with quilts or books?

Thanks for dropping by...


Hilary Florence

Please find below a list of linky parties. I may not link with all of the every week, but with some of them most weeks. Please go and have a look at some of the other wonderful quilts and quilters there.
Anything goes Mondays @ http://marelize-ries.blogspot.co.uk/
Linky Tuesday at Free motion by  the river­­­­ @ http://www.conniekresin.com/
Fabric Tuesday @http://quiltstory.blogspot.co.uk/    
Sew cute Tuesday @ http://www.blossomheartquilts.com/ 
WIP Wednesday at freshly pieced   @   http://www.freshlypieced.com/
WOW = WIPs on Wednesdays  @ http://www.estheraliu.blogspot.co.uk/  
WIP Wednesday at TN + TN  @ http://needleandthreadnetwork.blogspot.ca
I Quilt Thursdays @ http://prettybobbins.com/
Really Random Thursdays @ http://www.liveacolorfullife.net/
Needle and Thread Thursday @ http://myquiltinfatuation.blogspot.co.uk/
Off the wall Fridays @ http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.co.uk/

Monday, 7 July 2014

Gold Fever 2

It would seem that my Gold Fever of last week was contagious, judging by your comments. How I wish those words of appreciation, encouragement and commiseration could, like the wave of a Fairy Godmother's wand, turn simple cotton into the much sort after gold cloth. Sadly, in the real world, the only allusion to it on the web that I have been able to find was to say that it is no longer manufactured. Thank you so much for your kind words and suggestions. They were much appreciated and at least raised my spirits!

Should any of you - particularly those of you able to go to the big shows in the States - see this fabric, please get the suppliers name for me - tell him I'll buy the whole bolt!


So I have gone with the last of the fabrics I showed last week, hoping that it will not split again. Colour wise and consistency wise, it was the best of my trials. I have been wisely counselled by Pam to consider it 'different' rather than inferior! Here is the structure outlined, ready to have the blank areas filled with pattern.

Making my marks

As I said in the last post, none of the usual markers work on metallic fabric and stitching from the back didn't work with this one, as it stuck to the sewing table. Incredibly, felt tip pen does mark and washes off! It does dull the gold where the line has been, but once stitched over that is barely noticeable. Still, it is a bit nerve racking doodling all over fabric with a felt-tip pen!

Going around in circles

The title of this piece is going to be 'Cosmic Split' - so think vaguely of space, orbits and heavenly bodies. I did not want perfect circles. After googling 'how to draw perfect eclipses' and playing around with pin, string paper and pen, I decided I didn't want eclipses either. A lot of paper covered with a lot of 'circles' later, I decided just to draw the lot free hand. Above is the 'artistic' photo with garden in the background. Below is a clearer version.


Oh for a long arm! At least I imagine circles would be a lovely easy sweep on a long arm. On a DSM, even non-circular circles are tricky. It is not possible to do any but the very small circles in one. Every stop to readjust the fabric is an opportunity for an uneven stitch length. Every start is an opportunity for a needle jump to the side. And at no point can you see the whole track of the circle. The end is not in sight! Welcome to the universe of slightly wobbly heavenly bodies!

Tying off loose ends

... as in thread ends - well over 300 of them to tie off and bury. I wish I had taken a photo of them. It made a fair imitation of a fringe dress. Lots of threading needles and not knowing which part of my vary-focal specs to look out of!!!



Thanks for dropping by...


Hilary Florence

Please find below a list of linky parties. I may not link with all of the every week, but with some of them most weeks. Please go and have a look at some of the other wonderful quilts and quilters there.
Anything goes Mondays @ http://marelize-ries.blogspot.co.uk/
Linky Tuesday at Free motion by  the river­­­­ @ http://www.conniekresin.com/
Fabric Tuesday @http://quiltstory.blogspot.co.uk/    
Sew cute Tuesday @ http://www.blossomheartquilts.com/ 
WIP Wednesday at freshly pieced   @   http://www.freshlypieced.com/
WOW = WIPs on Wednesdays  @ http://www.estheraliu.blogspot.co.uk/  
WIP Wednesday at TN + TN  @ http://needleandthreadnetwork.blogspot.ca
I Quilt Thursdays @ http://prettybobbins.com/
Really Random Thursdays @ http://www.liveacolorfullife.net/
Needle and Thread Thursday @ http://myquiltinfatuation.blogspot.co.uk/
Off the wall Fridays @ http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.co.uk/
Lizzie Lenard @ http://lizzielenard-vintagesewing.blogspot.co.uk/

Monday, 21 April 2014

All Aflame and Arrow Heads from Learning Curves in 9 Squares

After the excitement of last weeks guest post with Lori at The Inbox Jaunt thanks to all of you who visited the tutorial. I hope many of you found a new source of inspiration in Lori's wonderful FMQ and welcome to new visitors who through the tutorial discovered this blog. If you left a message and I did not reply, this is because you are a 'no-reply blogger' - a problem that often crops up if you are on Goggle plus.

Arrow Heads - from Learning Curves in 9 Squares


So after dramas with show quilts and missed deadlines, back to the Learning Curves in 9 Squares. Arrow Heads is the 5th of the squares you have seen so far. A single border of this pattern is very effective - almost more so I think than en- masse as here.  I like the look of it, but it is not one of my favourites to stitch. I keep forgetting whether I am turning left or right and it takes a lot of concentration. Remember this piece is a trial - hence the learning curves - and one of the lessons learnt here is that pale colours don't work. You may be able to see the FMQ on this somewhat wonky photo (sorry about that), but step a few feet away, and you can't see anything.


All Aflame from Learning Curves in 9 Squares

There is no such problems with this square. The deep red shows up beautifully. The name I think is pretty obvious. This is a design that is very adaptable and works very well around corners


Cobbler's Nightmare from Learning Curves in 9 Squares

I asked your help in naming two of my motives - many thanks to all those who left suggestions. It was fascinating to see what was evoked in viewers. I did like the suggestion of DNA for the above one, but also a few visitors liked the humour of my suggestion of 'Cobbler's Nightmare' and since it appears the joke is obvious enough, I will go with that. The pale green by the way, poses the same problem as the yellow.

Fly-away-home from Learning Curves in 9 Squares

This was the one that really got your creative juices flowing. There was no doubt at all that all of you thought organic both vegetable and animal. There were flowers, hay and vines as well as hearts, lungs and back-bones! My thanks to you all, but particularly to Norma Schlager who came up with the nursery rhyme 'Ladybug, Ladybug, fly away home' as a title, which I really loved.

Now I can hear all my British visitors shouting 'but it isn't Ladybug, it's Ladybird'. A bit of Internet research has shown the common British Ladybird is indeed the same insect known as Ladybug in the States - a beetle loved for its appearance and eating of pests such as greenfly. And that got me wondering where the rhyme originated.

 'Ladybird, Ladybird, fly away home. Your house is on fire and your children have flown'

It is thought to have dated back to 18th century (I mean 16th century - see Marly's kind correction below) England and the time of Henry VIII's break with Catholicism. The Lady in question is Mary, mother of Jesus as representative of the Catholic faith and a suggestion to return home to Rome. 'Your house is on fire' is probably a reference to those burnt at the stake for refusing to convert to the new Church of England. 'Your children have flown' refers to Catholic congregations - who had flown into hiding, exile or converted. Fascinating where a piece of FMQ can take you!
To avoid the bird/bug confusion - and because although the motif does look like some kind of flying insect, it definitely isn't a ladybird, I thought I'd just call it 'Fly away home'.

Thanks for dropping by...

Hilary Florence


And for all those of you who missed it, here is the tutorial that appeared as a guest post on Lori's blog last week


Hello Quilters. I am Hilary Florence and I am really thrilled and excited that Lori has agreed to let me do a guest post on her blog. Although our quilting styles are very different, like Lori, I love to create new free motion quilting patterns. So, what better topic than how to start with a simple idea and by playing here and tweaking there, changing it to create:

Theme and Variation

I am going to start with a very simple, elegant design which lets you get into a lovely rhythm on a swinging cross over curve.



Start with a simple downward curve out to the left.



 Stitch up  the middle stopping just short of the starting point



 Now do a mirror image of the curve - out to the right this time, cross over and do another curve to the left - making and inverted S shape.

Go straight up the center, stopping short of the cross over line. You are now ready to begin the motif again with your inverted S - and that's it. Keep going as long as you want.



So - that's the theme, on to the variations

If you have a curve, alter the depth of it.


My first curve was pretty shallow. Here I have made it much deeper, into semi - circles. You can do anything in between or even push it even further and make the motif wider than it is long.

If you have a curve, turn it into a V


Instead of soft curves you now have sharp angles, giving the motif quite a different character. The central line is now enclosed in a box. Think of going across from right to left at 45 degrees, making the exterior angles 90 degrees.

 If you have sharp angles, round them.


The change here is more subtle. Still Vs rather than curves, but this has a softer look.

If you have straight lines, put a kink in them.


This again is not a great change but it gives another feel. Each side of the box should kink slightly towards the centre. Put the kink in the outer lines only, not the central line. The cross right to left cross-over line is now a little more complicated as it has to first kink upwards towards the upper box and then downwards towards the lower box.

Now come the real fun!

If you have a central line, embellish it!



Anything goes here and there are lots of possibilities. Here are just some examples.
I've taken the semi-circle version, started my upward line and then inserted a (more-or-less) symmetrical meander. You could also think of this as a very squashed S.


Next I've gone back to my original flat-curve shape and filled it almost meanders. Just enter and exit with a short bit of straight line. This is one of my favourites and it usually finds a place somewhere in my quilts


The sharp cornered square version deserves a couple of sharp thorns.


And here is the same motif with all the corners smoothed out!


This 'squiggle' also makes a good centre line. Start curving upwards to the left, change direction and curve gently upwards, change direction again and curve upwards to reach the top of the inverted 'S'. 

If you have a nearly close point, open it up.


In all the samples up until now, the middle line has nearly but not quite met the upper line giving the illusion of a square or circle. Now, I have only gone about two thirds of the way up (with the embellishing circle placed about one third of the way up)and dropped the next cross-over line opening the motive up more.


And finally, if you have been there, done that, go back and do it all again!



This one is taken from the current piece I am working on, hence the enclosing 'tram lines'. It is a combination of two of the above variations. Firstly, I have done the rounded square version without central embellishment. I have then gone back stitching over with the circular version and the central squiggle - and I do mean gone back. Of course you could start at the top again, but I suppose I am too lazy to deal with all the threads involved in stopping and starting. When ever possible, I will stitch down a row and then back up. This is also excellent practise for when dealing with items that are too bulky to turn round.

So there we are - from one idea to many versions. All of the above samples are about 1 inch wide with the exception of the last which is one and a half inches. One inch is a good width to start with, but you can also vary the density by varying the size.

Finally, a word about marking. I often say that I mark as little as possible and advocate learning to love your wobbles! I am in awe of the skill of FMQ quilters who produce absolutely identical motifs, but I like the organic look of everything a bit wonky and each repeated motif having its own individuality. I admit to being anxious about this when I considered Lori's wonderful tidy accurate quilting and wondered if I should make an exception. In the end, I decided to be true to my philosophy and stay a bit messy! To start off with I advise marking guide lines 1 inch apart until you can feel the motif. You can chose whether to be neat and tidy and do this with a ruler, or free and easy and mark the lines free hand!  I would be interested to hear where you find easier/better for you. I personally also feel it helps to draw the motif first, or at least to trace it with your finger.

It remains to thank Lori for allowing me to do a guest spot on her blog. I feel very honoured. At the time of writing this, she has just revealed that she has been asked to do a bimonthly column for the  American Quilter  magazine and I want to add my voice to the congratulations. It is richly deserved.

If you would like to see more of my work and fmq designs, please visit my blog at http://quiltingworkshop.blogspot.co.uk/  

Thanks for reading

Hilary Florence

Please find below a list of linky parties. I may not link with all of the every week, but with some of them most weeks. Please go and have a look at some of the other wonderful quilts and quilters there.
Anything goes Mondays @ http://marelize-ries.blogspot.co.uk/
Linky Tuesday at Free motion by  the river­­­­ @ http://www.conniekresin.com/
Fabric Tuesday @http://quiltstory.blogspot.co.uk/    
Sew cute Tuesday @ http://www.blossomheartquilts.com/ 
Show and tell Tuesday @ http://ihavetosay.typepad.com/randi/
WIP Wednesday at freshly pieced   @   http://www.freshlypieced.com/
WOW = WIPs on Wednesdays  @ http://www.estheraliu.blogspot.co.uk/  
WIP Wednesday at TN + TN  @ http://needleandthreadnetwork.blogspot.ca
I Quilt Thursdays @ http://prettybobbins.com/
Really Random Thursdays @ http://www.liveacolorfullife.net/
Needle and Thread Thursday @ http://myquiltinfatuation.blogspot.co.uk/
Off the wall Fridays @ http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.co.uk/

Monday, 24 March 2014

More learning curves...

This is another test piece for a larger work that I have in mind for a quilt show later this year. This is one of 9 squares (although the final version might have more).


This is a motif called 'hour glass'. Each square will be done in a different colour, using a different motif. At the end, there is, I hope, a bit of a surprise which I won't tell you now, because I want to know if you can see it. I've dyed material in the same colour as the thread to frame each square. I've been working in black and white for a bit. It is stunning, but I do miss colour! There is no doubt quilting on white makes the quilting really stand out, so this is a bit of a compromise.

In the recent black and white pieces, I've quilted the motifs in 'straight' rows. I say straight, because I don't mark them and they certainly wouldn't match up with any ruler! Here, I do mark the curves. I tend to stitch the parallel-lined curves first, then fill them in with the motif. I don't try and keep the 'parallel' line perfectly parallel. In fact, I often deliberately try to vary them a bit, opening up at the apex of a curve. Distorting the pattern to fit the resulting shapes is perhaps my favourite part of quilting.

Thanks for dropping by...

Hilary Florence

Please find below a list of linky parties. I may not link with all of the every week, but with some of them most weeks. Please go and have a look at some of the other wonderful quilts and quilters there.
Anything goes Mondays @ http://marelize-ries.blogspot.co.uk/
Linky Tuesday at Free motion by  the river­­­­ @ http://www.conniekresin.com/
Fabric Tuesday @http://quiltstory.blogspot.co.uk/    
Sew cute Tuesday @ http://www.blossomheartquilts.com/ 
Show and tell Tuesday @ http://ihavetosay.typepad.com/randi/
WIP Wednesday at freshly pieced   @   http://www.freshlypieced.com/
WOW = WIPs on Wednesdays  @ http://www.estheraliu.blogspot.co.uk/  
WIP Wednesday at TN + TN  @ http://needleandthreadnetwork.blogspot.ca
We did it Wednesday @ http://www.sewmuchado.com/
I Quilt Thursdays @ http://prettybobbins.com/
Really Random Thursdays @ http://www.liveacolorfullife.net/
Needle and Thread Thursday @ http://myquiltinfatuation.blogspot.co.uk/
Off the wall Fridays @ http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.co.uk/


Friday, 21 February 2014

Black and white layouts - playing around



I showed this piece in a post last week and said when it was finished (there is about twice as much still to quilt) I would cut it up and applique it.  I have some hand-dyed charcoal material for the background which I will quilt in black - probably in pebble or some other overall pattern.Quite a few visitors were very curious to see how I chop it up. Well, so am I!!

I got out some black and white paper and started playing with layouts. For the next few posts I'll show you some of the ideas I have come up with - although I haven't yet decided which - if any - of them I will use. Today's layout is mostly squares, starting with just a few...



These just landed on the paper like that as I was cutting... so I added a frame...


but it is very basic, so I added more squares...


again framed, playing with strips of different thickness...


felt it still needed more squares...


more or less happy with those square, so now trying out different frames. Elements to play with are thickness of strips, weight given on each side by thickness/number of strips and the negative space between strips.




I'm not quite sure about the thick strip on the base...




and then if you turn it on it's side the whole thing looks different again...



These are just ideas. What is black might become white and vice-verse. The only reason it is this why around is because I have bigger sheets of white paper than black!

Thanks for dropping by...

Hilary Florence

P.S. I have linked this post to:
Off the wall Fridays at http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.co.uk/#
Show off Saturdays at www.sewcanshe.com
 Do go and have a look at the other quilts and quilters there.







Trio of Leaves - free motion quilting cameo 26

free motion quilting designs sampler on hand-dyed indigo fabric
Trio of Leaves - free motion quilting cameo 26
This is a spin off from the previous post 'Leaf Triplets'. The leaves have become more stylised and symmetrical. The curved stem has gone and the straight veins jet out at a 90 degree angle, each vein with an ending - triangles for the first leaf, circles for the second and kites for the third.

Thanks for stopping by...

Hilary Florence

Friday, 14 February 2014

Leaf Print - free motion quilting cameo 24

free motion quilting design original
Leaf Print - free motion quilting cameo 24

We are back to parallel lines. They are oh so flexible and rich in potential. I'm sure I have seen this idea in a drawing somewhere, but I can't remember where and when. Evidently I filed it away as inspiration for free motion quilting. Like the Funky spider web - this would be a great design for simple plain squares, especially if you kept to the idea of filling in the space between veins with parallel lines, but changed the size and shape of the leaf. Now there is an idea!

Thanks for dropping by...

Hilary Florence

Monday, 10 February 2014

Funky Spider Web - free motion quilting cameo 23




There is nothing original about parallel lines and spiral, but I'm rather fond of this funky spider web. I always like playing around with the dimensions of a motive - making it bigger or smaller. I find these 3 motifs work well together and giving the web nine arms lends a nice symmetry. I haven't yet tried the idea with other motifs - but I'm filing the idea. I have a quilt top of 6" squares that I made in my very early days of dyeing (idea was to see how many colours you could make using just 3 dyes). I have never got around to quilting it. This might must be the job. Watch this space!

Thanks for dropping by...
Hilary Florence

Wednesday, 29 January 2014

Stamping: funky foam, rolling pins and scrim = more procion paper play

More procion paper play, using a variety of home-made stamps. All but one use the turquoise/ rust colour scheme. These 2 days mix well to give a verity of greeny sludges.

surface design, stamping, printing, procion dyes

This is just one overlapped and layered narrow stamp that I cut out of funky foam. I experimented using the soldering iron for this, as the design was quite fiddly. I wouldn't recommend it as the foam tends to bead. Also, I health and safety notice, I have no idea what fumes might be released burning through foam and I did this outside.

surface design, stamping, printing, procion dyes

Another paper, featuring the same stamp. It also shows a line stamp that I made by cutting out uneven stripes to stick onto a cheap rolling pin.


surface design, stamping, printing, procion dyes
Add caption
 More layering of various stamps. I've also added a bit of pseudo writing with a needle-noose bottle.

surface design, stamping, printing, procion dyes



surface design, stamping, printing, procion dyes



surface design, stamping, printing, procion dyes



surface design, stamping, printing, procion dyes

In these last 2 I've also used some hessian scrim as a printing tool.

surface design, stamping, printing, procion dyes

Enjoy. 

Thanks for dropping by...

Hilary Florence

Saturday, 18 January 2014

Design Workout 3



collage, design exercise

just managed to de-glue my fingers from the latest 'design-workout'. You'll notice a change in colour scheme and an A4 format. There is no reason - again, I'm just using up old photocopies.Though  the odd word showing through adds interest don't you think?  Maybe is could double up as a workout for the imagination as well!


Just as a reminder, if you haven't seen previous posts, the idea here is to create a series of designs out of collaged squares and rectangles - not too much thought, just playing and producing.

collage, design exercise

collage, design exercise