Sunday, January 26, 2020

The Hard Stuff

As a baby quilter, in the mid-1980's, I was taken with a wonderful quilt by Jinny Beyer, Ray of Light, made in 1977. It won the Good Housekeeping contest "The Great American Quilt". It is both pieced and quilted by hand. I clearly remember telling new quilter friends "Some day I want to make a quilt like that". At the time, that seemed pretty unlikely:

Ray of Light, by Jinny Beyer

It was about 5 years ago when I saw a collage of my quilts that I realized how many Medallion style quilts I have made and immediately made the connection to Jinny's quilt I had seen so many years before. I am a huge fan of Jinny Beyer, her fabrics, her patterns, her books, and her spirit. One of those who have really made a difference in my quilting world.

In the last 10 years or so, I have taken on ever-increasing "degree of difficulty" quilts as a challenge to myself.

Here are a few more I am hoping to make:

1. Made by Catherine Butterworth, an Australian quilter who continues to make great quilts and win big awards. Look at her Instagram feed and be amazed:  ccbutterworth. I wish I knew the name of this quilt--she made it for her daughter who uses it every day on her bed:


When I saw this in a quilt magazine,  I was able to track her down and corresponded with her about my desire to make one similar. She was gracious, had no plans to create a pattern, and wished me well.  It was my intention to make a Diamond Jubilee quilt to celebrate my 60th birthday. So far I have 4 blocks done. Since I am now on the other side of 65, it may never get done. But I still love hers:


This shows how this block is made, without Y-Seams, it is paper pieced using a Sue Garman pattern, Washington-Medallion:


2. Another Challenging quilt I want to make is Western Sun, published in a book by Barbara Brackman, Butternut and Blue.  

I saw this quilt on Julie Silber's website and wanted to make it. I was so happy to learn Barbara had already created the pattern because it's not easy to draft.  Immediately, I ordered the book from Barbara and told her it was officially on my "bucket list".

This is the photo Julie had that got a lot of attention from those of us who love antique quilts:


It's got a lot I love: many fabrics, star points, circles pieced or appliqued, and a flying geese sashing border throughout. Isn't it luscious?

There are a few more challenging quilts I hope to make, time will tell. There are a few more easy ones too. Those are coming in the next post.

Let's quilt.

Barbara

8 comments:

  1. You always inspire me, thanks! I also realize I need to get my act together and give myself more sewing time!

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    1. Lori, check out my Time Management For Quilters tips, under Tutorials

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  2. really enjoyed this post. Got me thinking about my own journey and, just like you, pleased to think I have masteren some techniques that my less experienced self would have swore I would never be able to do. Thanks also for the links - roamed around on Sue G's website and ordered a few patterns I now ready to tackle!!

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  3. So interesting that you mentioned a diamond jubilee quilt. I've been trying to find examples done by other quilters online but hadn't had any luck. One thing that was new to me is that diamond jubilee can mean either 60 or 75 years, who knew?! As I'm quickly approaching the latter, I'm hoping to start one this year, thinking of the Sunflowers and Flying Geese quilt in Betsy Chutchian's book 19th-Centuryatchwork Divas' Treasury of Quilts.

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    1. That’s a good one. Use your favorite fabrics and make it just for you.

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  4. So many beautiful star blocks and quilts! I've made a few feathered star medallions, but nothing so amazing as these. Fun to see how Sue Garman put hers together.

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  5. It's always so fascinating for me to see quilts 'deconstructed'. It makes what looked so difficult, much more do-able/manageable!

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