Showing posts with label strip quilts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label strip quilts. Show all posts

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Angle Improv: "where the measurements are made up and the points don't count!"

Piles of strips and scraps: the cast of my Angle Improv class.
While living in Chicago, my college buddies and I enjoyed several live performances at The Second City. [A great date nite or make it a girls nite out.] Second City is where many Saturday Night Live (SNL) comedians—John and Jim Belushi, Gilda Radner, Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Mary Gross, to name just a few—got their start, as well as the precursor of the TV version, SCTV.

Toward the end of a Second City performance, the troupe did an improv session [a favorite of mine and my friends] where the actors would take disparate phrases (a place, a career profession, a situation, etc.), suggested by the audience, and build a skit around it. If you've ever seen "Whose Line is it Anyway," you know what this is.

Improv is an unscripted, think-on-your feet, kind of performance—with an unexpected, delightful, entertaining and hysterically comic outcome that the actors cannot plan nor the audience anticipate. This is exactly how my Angle Impov class was earlier this month.
"Oh, what fabrics to choose… what to choose… let's be bold!"
Six courageous, open-minded, looking-for-a-fabric-adventure quilters attended my class. They sewed, sliced and shuffled fabric strips—mostly on faith and in the technique I was teaching.
Slicing and sewing.
The "project" was unscripted (NO pattern). All the cutting and trimming measurements were "made up" and, as Drew Cary would say, "and the points don't count!" 
The classroom design wall. Blocks in-progress.
What fabulous outcomes we had! The diversity of pre-cut strips and fabric scraps—batiks, prints, solids, florals, geometrics—the students brought to class were energizing and colorful. Here is Candy, analyzing a potential block layout on the design wall.
Standing back from the design wall to see the composition emerge.
Batiks were mixed with black/white prints, solids accented a monochromatic collection of prints, sweet florals mixed with stripes and brights.
My "Angle Improv" class at Pins and Needles Quilt Shop.
Photo courtesy of Stacy Slockbower.
I'll have one of my Angle Improv quilts at the upcoming AQS QuiltWeek ChattanoogaSeptember 10-13. And, if you're interested in taking this class, or would like me to teach it at your guild, let me know! You'll be surprised how fun, easy and liberating this technique is.

Whoo-Hoo—nothing needs to match and the points don't count!

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Draw momentum from your local quilting community

Finished cuddle quilt 34" x 58"
and strip pieced top (left).
You've heard the phrase, "It takes a village." I remind myself of this when I struggle to carve out time to contribute to my quilt guild's Cuddle Quilt community service project. I realize this project is a group effort, but I want to do my part, too.

Due to a deadline-driven committee meeting for the quilt exhibit at the Tennessee Aquarium for Chattanooga QuiltWeek, my friend, Vista, and I were regrettably unable to arrive in time to participate in our guild's annual Cuddle Quilt (CQ) workshop. This workshop is held one Saturday a year for guild members to get together and crank out charity quilts. It's a relaxing, social and productive day and we make phenomenal headway toward our cuddle quilt goal.

Vista and I arrived at the workshop just in time to help pack up the supplies and clean up the kitchen. However, I was able to pick up a stack of precut pieces that our workshop coordinator had prepared (thank you, Sherry!). So, with an impending guild meeting tomorrow evening, I felt the momentum and inspiration from my local guild community to put pedal to the metal and whip up a quilt top and finish quilting an in-progress lap quilt.

This little strippy quilt top was made last year. It has accompanied me to several Free-motion quilting demonstrations, so it has a variety of stitch patterns on it.
Loop-d-loops...
Free-motion quilting: loops.
swirls and bubbles...
Free-motion quilting: swirls and bubbles.
 feather and paisley shapes...
Free-motion quilting: paisley.
 ribbon candy...
Free-motion quilting: ribbon candy.
… and spirals.

Along with practicing free-motion quilting designs, charity quilts are also great palettes to experiment with thread/fabric color schemes. Here is a turquoise 50 wt. cotton thread on a tomato red border. Zingy… wouldn't you say?
Free-motion quilting with a contrasting thread color.
The binding was attached by machine.
Strip quilt 34" x 58"
With all the exhibit quilts, competition quilts and class samples lately, it was a welcome change to do some free-motion quilting... just for the pure enjoyment of it! I'll turn in my strippy cuddle quilt at tomorrow's guild meeting.

Friday, February 8, 2013

Are you a stripper?

As a Blank Quilting fabric rep, one of the items in my "bag" are samples of Blank's Fabrications. Lately, I've been enamored with the pre-cut collections of 2.5" fabric strips.
Crimson Inspired
Made with Blank Fabrications Red Hots.
Stripping Directions:
Open package of Fabrications. Pull out colors of your choice. Sew.
Stripping is that easy!

Here is my latest project, Crimson Inspired, just in time for Valentine's Day.
Crimson Inspired
24" x 37.5"
Detail of the free-motion quilting with Tutti by Wonderfil and King Tut by Superior.
Crimson Inspired, detail.
Last month at the Choo Choo Quilters guild meeting my team presented a program on using strips. Everyone is making a "lasagna quilt" top for Show and Tell at the February meeting. The strippy quilts will support our community service Cuddle Quilt project.

On Saturday, February 23, I'll be teaching my Angle Accents class using 2.5" strips and an improvisational rotary cutting technique. Contact Chattanooga Sewing to register. Let's get stripping!
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