Let's get started -
"Moonlight Sonata" by Susan Stewart of Pittsburg, Kansas quickly stops me in my tracks. I had not considered making the quilt as one big block. This square in a square really calls to me. The black and white alone does the trick and then add in the rest of the features and I'm hooked. Susan writes, "This is a very simple design in black and white with lots of intricate quilting. It is embellished with bright machine embroidery and edged with free-standing lace."
In the category of A Celebration of Color, I fell in love with this next one. I truly would love something like this in the studio. It is entitled "Remembering Sochi" and based on different logos seen during the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. Claire Haillot of Laval, Quebec, Canada is the creator with quilting by Colleen Paul. Claire writes, "I was really inspired by the logos . . . and I started to wonder if they could actually be combined into a real quilt. I began playing with all my scraps, sorting them by color and hue and truly enjoyed the journey. I used a wide array of strips, ranging from 1" to 2 1/2" to make the quilt."
As I wrote before, it seemed as though a lot of the quilts in the show were of one color palette, but this category of A Celebration of Color definitely brightened things up. I absolutely adore this next one and it is right up my alley of string work. Oooh, oooh, oooh. Entitled "Sea Glass", Timna Tarr of South Hadley, Massachusetts has created such calm and joy in a quilt. I can already see the room to put it in --- of course I own nothing for that room, but I can see it. Timna writes, "After spending a week as an artist-in-residence on the island of Eleuthera in the Bahamas, I knew my takeaway from the experience would be a change in my standard color palette. This quilt is my interpretation of the sea, sand, and sky of that very beautiful place in the world." I love that the quilting gives it so much motion.
Art deco is my sweethearts passion. In fact, I just had him work on some certificates I need and they scream it in the design. This next quilt by Shannon Conley of Moore, Oklahoma is entitled "The Yucca and the Moth." I am captivated by it. Truly. Shannon writes, "This quilt was designed to capture the symbiotic relationship between the beautiful yuccas of the high desert, sparkling in the crisp New Mexico sunshine, and the tiny yucca moths that pollinate them."
Hello Autumn! Let me tell you what first drew me to this one. It's the way it is finished. Looking like a canvas that has been painted. Without border or binding (yes, the one above is done this way also), I truly get the feel of a painting. It is called "Transformation" and is by Denise Oyama Miller of Fremont, California.
Here is the same color play that I did on this year's mystery, Autumn Splendor. No wonder I love it so much. Just kidding. I would be drawn to it always. Again, I have bits of modern work that I really feel talk to me. This is one such piece. It is "Unchained Melody" by Jackie Benedetti of Seattle, Washington and quilted by Dionne Matthies-Buban. In the words of Jackie, "I've always been intrigued by the 1930s pattern Jack's Chain and love how different the pattern looks depending on color placement. I was inspired to make a modern rendition using solids, lots of negative space, and my favorite colors. Dionne's quilting helped highlight the background blocks. Minimal quilting of the Nine-Patch blocks helped make them pop. The entire top was hand-pieced except for the Nine-Patch blocks." That last line made me take another look. Wonderful!
Now, for some minis -
This next one combines the color explosion with tiny pieces and is the exchange for the previous quilt. Gotta love it. It is called "A World of Colors for a World of Quilt" and is by Laurence Robaix - Team 208 - of Provence, France. She shares, "I was wonderfully paired, as my partner lives in Des Moines, a city I visit regularly as my French nephew got married and lives there. Like me, she loves bright colors and Log Cabins. Log Cabin has been my favorite pattern for many years. The quilt is paper pieced by machine and was inspired by Andree Leblanc's work and Joan Wolfrom's Studio Color Wheel. It has been a great experience to work on such a small scale and I hope that my partner will love my quilt. I quilted it with my brand new Sweet Sixteen longarm that I received two weeks before and it worked well with all the multiple layers of fabric I had to manage. I pieced it on my dream machine, my Bernina 770QE." It's just so fun and I love the concept of an exchange quilt.
Back to full size -
"Marrakesh" by Barbara Ann McCraw of Denton, Texas with quilting by Fran Dorman is a burst of warm color. I have buckets and buckets of strings for upcoming workshops in Denton next April. Maybe something like this should happen as well. Barbara's words are, "I had never made a string pieced quilt, so after making two of these to donate, I decided to make one in the colors I enjoy." This one should have been hung right next to the Sea Glass one above to show how much color can change a simple concept.
Rounding a corner, this next quilt takes up the ENTIRE section. It is massive and that is not exaggerating. One would have to have a very large room with high walls to do it justice. It is called "Happy Sea" and is a collaboration quilt from Tainan City, Taiwan with 28 different quilters adding to it's beauty and depicting a joyous party under the sea.
Dang, we have come to the last one and the end of this post. However, I am leaving on a high note and another blue and white quilt. Doesn't this just take you back to a time of when dishes like this graced all the tables across the country? It sure does for me. "The Legend of the Blue Willow" is by Debbie Carrington of Kellyville Ridge, New South Wales, Australia and she writes that, "Inspiration for this quilt came from my love of the radiant flue and white china in my grandmother's home. A huge family heirloom, the Blue Willow meat platters was brought out every Christmas. As a child, I was fascinated with the design and the tragic romantic legend depicted on the plates." It includes machine embroidery and painting. And with that, another year is behind me, but the inspiration will continue on. Thank you for stopping in to feed your eyes. Come again and share with me as I keep on creating.
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