KnittenKaboodle - Handcrafted Fiber Art to Fit Your Lifestyle

Showing posts with label Modern Quilting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Modern Quilting. Show all posts

Monday, March 2, 2015

Waiting for Spring

As winter refuses to release its grip on Central Pennsylvania, my own inclination has been to channel that cooped up energy into creativity.  After a very nice holiday season at Taits, Furs by Susan, and Vera Fran (THANK YOU!! everyone) , I turned towards some projects I put on the back burner to work on holiday.  While still bleak outside,



 I've been playing with vivid colors and cheerful stitching in this modern quilt.  The neutrals will have  to wait for some other time!


"Paint Chips with Improvisational Blocks"


On the Knitting front, I finally got to work on some projects I've been wanting to get to!  Warm and cozy is the rule of the day.  



Variegated hand-dyed merino yarn



"Sonoma Stole" in Madeline Tosh merino light - leading a knit along March - May at Stitch Your Art Out


Lucy Cardi in merino wools

Poncho in four yarns

Stay tuned for progress on new spring projects and new aprons for the season.  Think Spring!!  


Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Autumn Update


Autumn is in full splendor here in Central Pennsylvania, and KnittenKaboodle is as well.  Many new items are added to the website, and more coming through the next few weeks.

Additionally, we have a new retail customer in Hanover, Pennsylvania: Furs by Susan, which is owned and operated by the creative and interesting Debra Markle.  Her boutique focuses on a wonderful selection of luxury outer ware and accessories in many different fabrics and fibers.  If you are in the area, please stop in and visit her at 1 Frederick Street, Hanover, PA 17331 web address . Two of the items she selected: Alpaca and kid-silk mohair caplet with removable pin closure and silk-mohair triangle scarf with fancy border.



It's time for harvest and fall vegetables and plantings at Tait's Harvest Shop and I've added a few new aprons and spiced trivets there:

Spiced trivets that waft lovely spices when meeting a warm cup, dish or kettle


Very clever owls with a gentle bottom ruffle, and appliqued owls

Low volume is very big this year; halter neck styling and deep pockets with accent trim

Dreaming of the tropics, even as summer passes; extra long ties in belt carriers and pockets


On the knitting front, I've been busy working on new items for the holiday season, for the website and for the shops.  I continue to focus on the lovely and popular silk-mohair creations, and am also working on a few cowls inspired by the highly popular Outlander series.  More on that later ....
I did a few new things for friends and family:  A pretty scarf in technique that looks woven and a yummy bulky neck warmer (matching hat yet to come).  



 On the quilting front, I completed the table runner I discussed in earlier postings, which was waiting of the quilting and binding steps.  This was a birthday gift for my Mother.



Thanks for checking in!  More to come in the days to follow.  Enjoy Autumn.





Saturday, February 22, 2014

A Creativity Challenge

Sewing & Quilting
On a recent visit, my Aunt (a very talented quilter!) gave me the pieces and parts of an abandoned quilting project.  The focal fabric featured a  Kaffe Fassett print in a deep reds and related hues.  Any of you familiar with his wonderful fabrics and designs for both quilting and knitting, know that he is fearless in the use of color and large scale prints.  I was so excited to get these blocks, but at this time I know I do not have the time to make a large, formal quilt.  However, I was itching to play with the newly inherited loot.

Inherited quilt pieces: featuring the 'square in a square' and pretty coordinating fabrics
Challenge: Come up with a smaller scale project featuring the bright 'square in square' blocks AND use only materials from my stash (on hand fabric supply).  In a creative quilting course I took last year, we worked on exercises that focus on constraints as a way to step beyond our normal perspectives and perhaps arrive at an interesting and perhaps fresh result.  My constraint is to work within existing resources in my studio.  Since my typical 'comfort zone' is usually aqua, green, turquoise, teal, violet, blues and combinations of those colors, starting with deep red was a plunge into a whole new palette set. 

First decision: project scale:  table runner.  Next, what fabrics and coordinating colors?

Result:  


Choices from the stash, focusing on complementary colors 
The purple in the focal block really presented an opportunity to coordinate with complementary color ways.  Additionally, the assortment I came up offered some variety, texture, and movement with the assorted prints.   Next, a design for the runner.  I really want to keep it simple - not use a lot of fancy and intricate blocks and patterns, since the fabrics are busy and the color powerful (plus it would be faster to assemble and see how I felt about the result!).


Next Issue:  How it came together.  Decision about quilting design looming ahead. 

Knitting:

Sweater pieces ready to sew together and add a neckline.  Almost finished, and just in time for the (eventual) warm weather.




Monday, February 3, 2014

The Ups and Downs of in the Creative Process

About a year ago I made my first quilt block, thus branching out from my existing passion for sewing (aprons, bags, accessories, and some garments).  Since then I've made a lot of blocks (really a lot!!) and done some modest quilting projects.  So in January, I decided I wanted to make something for our own home, which I do not do much.  I'm always getting little hints, that would be nice here...
One side to be 'whole cloth'

So I'm totally in love with the wonderful fabrics that were recently released by Birch Fabrics with Charley Harper prints. We have what I've discovered is now called a 'mid-century modern' home and these fabrics are perfect.  A friend and I sent away to California to grab some of the special booty for ourselves.  Then I saw the project I wanted to do and needed to get more fabric for the backing. Panic! Sold out all of the place.  Finally located what I wanted, placed the order and waited.  

Charley Harper prints chosen for the wedge pieces














Many little decisions crop up in every sewing project, and this is no exception.  First off, the two sides are very different in coloration and feeling, which is not typical but I want a piece that can be used at different seasons and with different table settings for us. The blue side is already graphic enough to be effective and interesting in whole cloth, so the other prints could be the wedge pieces.  Another decision: use the gold twigs as binding, since the gold will unite both schemes.

Next, decide the print order and directional orientation was decided.  I was working from a pattern published by Jacquie Gering, but I wanted different sized pieces (bigger) and more pieces.  I also had eight prints to work with, not a different print for each wedge as the pattern suggested.  Most of the prints are directional, meaning they run one direction.  Cutting was a careful process to make sure that within a set of wedges each faced opposite directions (a design decision by me).

Lay out order and orientation of wedges
Once pieced with neutral strips between each wedge, the batting and whole cloth backing are put together and the 'quilting' step began.  Yet more decisions: what color(s) of thread? What type of stitching design?  I decided I wanted grey on the wedge pieces, and neutral on the insert  pieces between the wedges.  Grey looked great on all the prints, but would look terrible on the blue, gold and neutral on the back.  I tried threads in all three colors and decided that blue worked the best, gave texture, showed up but did not glare and stand out like neutral and gold.  Good! Since I am new at quilting, straight line techniques are all I will venture, but since this is so geometric, I think that will work well.  Follow the wedge shape in concentric lines.  Good again.  Go.

"Echo" stitching pattern, following wedge shapes

Loving the effect of grey thread choice
All is great, over two days I got all 17 wedges stitched, trimmed the excess, and put it on the table to review the look 'in situ'.  Wonderful, right?  NOOOOO!!   

I spotted a major problem - I accidentally used the wrong color thread in the bobbin for 6 of the 17  wedges on the blue side.  Some were in neutral and others in blue.  What to do?  Live with it? Claim artistic license (I meant to do that!!)? Rip it out and fix?  I am always told to let things stand a bit, don't react instantly.  See if you can live with it.  Is it big, small?  


Leave it or fix it?

What should I do?  Next chapter coming soon.