Each subsequent person followed her lead by doing an applique with a spring theme. And each managed to include a little bit of their themselves in their block. All of them are beautiful hand appliqued pieces!
Of course Dutchy was the one who introduced me to quilting and taught me all about using the rotary cutter. Including a lesson we BOTH learned about keeping your hands away from the blade! Red work is another talent she's shown me. She has several groups of beautiful red work (and blue work!) blocks she's done that I hope will some day get into several quilts.
For Jane's table runner Dutchy had this cute idea for using hexies as the flowers in her block. She added a button in the middle of each one.
Carol's block includes some embroidered stems and buttons to embellish the centers of the flowers. Carol's hand embroidery is beautiful and this is just a little example of it. Each month I look forward to seeing her progress on the "State Flowers" she's doing. She and Jane are both doing the state flower blocks and it's fun to see the different ideas for colors and techniques they are using.
Tami's our expert applique artist. She's good and she's fast! She's helped me with becoming brave enough to try my own applique projects. The first one I did was on the Twiggy quilt I made for a wedding present. She taught me how to use the English paper piecing method. It wasn't the first applique method I tried but it's was the first that actually looked good when I was done!
Charlene's block was the same one she used in her own Round Robin project bringing the project together in a unique way. The bird and egg definitely signify spring. As a quilting teacher Charlene has provided all of us with tips, tricks, and techniques for piecing all kinds of project through her classes. Having her as part of our small group gives us a chance to pick her brain once a month! She's a talented quilter and a genius with scraps!
Deb R.'s block is her signature bee and bees-keep. It's something she likes to include in her quilting and we've all come to recognize it. The name Deborah means "bee" and Deb is certainly the embodiment of a busy bee. She's great at so many things from refinishing furniture, quilting, and cooking, to Tree House building! She typicality has half a dozen project in several mediums going at the same time. Her energy is contagious and her creativity inspiring.
With all these talented, creative people making these beautiful blocks I just knew I had to put them all together so Jane would have a finished table runner. For my addition I chose to do the sashing and borders. The colors for all of the blocks were just lovely. Each one had a bit of golden yellow and some blue.
I found these two great fabrics in my stash. Although the blue initially seemed dark to me it had that pretty little golden yellow flower that worked beautifully with the golden sashing I picked.
With all the blocks up on my design wall I was able to come up with several layouts. I really struggled with doing a long narrow table runner or a rectangular one. I was concerned that if I did them all in a row it might not fit on Jane's table. Even now I question my choice. This layout seemed to be balanced and light but maybe a single row was what she really wanted. Which order would you have put them in?
Here's Jane with her finished Spring Table Runner. She really liked it and I hope she'll use it. I gave her the rest of the blue fabric and I told her I would not be hurt if she changed it to the long single row of blocks. I don't think you can go wrong with such pretty blocks!
Next up will be my Round Robin project, #7 and that last of the series. I hope you'll come back and check it out!
4 comments:
These are beautiful . You are true artists. I do have one question: can a beginner do this?
Thanks for commenting Laurie! For a beginner I'd say try something a little simpler. Maybe start with a few leaves like the ones on the "Twiggy" quilt seen here: http://gladroxquilts.blogspot.com/2011/03/twiggy-quilt.html
What are some projects that you would recommend?
Should I go to a cloth store like Joanne's? Can I find a pattern online?
Post a Comment