Sunday, November 04, 2012

International Quilt Show

Here are photos of some of my favorite quilts from the show.  Next year I will take a more substantial camera than my iPhone.

This beautiful piece is Japanese.  The Japanese quilts are very delicate, this one had more color than most of them.


 The two above are such skilled landscapes I had no words!
 This quilt out of NZ was possibly one of my most favorites.  A train! But the colors and the perspective are amazing.  (Might have something to do with the fact that Orange is one of my favorite colors).

Freakishly photographic kangaroo.  The quilter saw this doe in her yard, snapped the photo...  and created a quilt!

I did not know that quilts don't have to be angular!!!!   

 Another landscape.

 The two above are mapscapes from an English quilter.  One is a daytime view of farm land, the second is a night view of a city.  AMAZING.



 This quilt and the detail represent ecological devastation.  Not only is it a great artists' interpretation of disaster, but the materials used are so varied and interesting; dryer lint, paper, fabric softener sheets...  And if you notice in the larger image, like Pandora's box, there is hope in a small sliver of green.

 I know this dog,  I live with him, but my guy weighs in at 150.

 I laughed out loud when I saw this quilt, it is the "spittin' image of a good friend of mine.

 Can't resist the dog stuff.

 The colors in this quilt spoke to me.


 The detail in this quilt is spectacular.

Is is 2013 yet!!!!  I can't wait to go again!





Endings and Beginnings

The Center Panel Shawl is off the needles!  It was a very fun knit, but languished for a few months during the hottest part of the summer.  The weather got cooler and I got back to knitting.  It is a lovely piece and one that I will enjoy wearing and showing off...  It is not entirely fault free, but I really don't want to anger the goddess of knitting by being perfect!

 Here it is pinned like a butterfly.  I wonder about the wire blocking frames, and if they really work.  I usually block on a towel on this particular rug, but pins make for little scallops along the edges.

Here it is in all its glory.

 Detail of the center panel.
The corner, which is very cleverly constructed, and where all the extra stitches are added.  It was a kind of magic getting it off the circular needles, where it looked like a giant's beret, to lay it out and have the angular corners revealed.


This brings me to other things that happened this summer in my crafty lair.  A dear friend of mine took me to the International Quilt Show at the Santa Clara Convention Center.  To be honest I have never been drawn to quilting.  When I was a little girl my mother made the most magnificent quilt, she stitched the squares while I practiced piano.  She made enough squares to make two quilts.  I look at the quilt today and I see scraps of dresses that she made for both of us, sheets that I used to have on my bed, it really is a great work of art, and all hand stitched.  That was the first and only quilt mom ever made.  And I did not get any better at piano either!  The long and the short of it is that neither mom nor I ever really pursued quilting.  She is a fantastic knitter, and we both love to knit and sew, so quilting just never made it on to my radar.  I had always just assumed that quilting was a stunning but very precise art, and one that I excluded my slap dash approach to creativity.  And then the International Quilt Show turned my head right round.

I had no idea that quilting could be so marvelous.  In fact I will add a post after this one of some of my favorite quilts from the show.

Anyway I was inspired.  I purchased this kit for a wall hanging.  It is called "Window Spots" and is by Overland Originals http://chefab.cherrywoodfabrics.com.  My friend invited me over to help me put this lovely creation together.  This is not the most inspired photo of it, and I haven't finished quilting the swirls.  My sewing machine is not a long arm machine, so sewing circular patterns causes a great deal of bunching.  I will finish this piece, and it will hang in the living room.

  Then I got a little crazy and went off on my own tangent...  I purchased this beautiful piece of grey cotton fabric with black star bursts on it, and two small fat quarters of silk, one red one deep cadmium yellow.  I cut out the centers of the star bursts and appliquéd the silk behind each one.  Then I stitched the star bursts in black thread.  I think I am going to hand quilt it in variegated yellow thread in a squiggle pattern.  (This baby kept my hands busy during the very exciting San Francisco Giants post season....  I almost wish they had come home to win, I might be a bit further along).


And finally, true to my nature and this blog, I cast on for Cheryl Oberle's Cuzco jacket yesterday.  I am an exciting 12 rows in!  Hope to wear it by Christmas.

Other projects are in the works, but this time of year I can't share them because some people might get wind of their holiday fun !