Saturday, May 21, 2011
May Block of the Month
May's block gives the impression of four ribbons interwoven around a center square. It's constructed using partial seams, which is one of my favorite piecing technique. My intention from the beginning was to incorporate more fabrics and colors into the block than were in the Bali Pop. So this month I've added the left-hand blue, floral batik fabric and the rose center. Don't fear! We'll be using more of these new colors later in the year!
Friday, May 20, 2011
Summer Classes
Our summer newsletter is on its way to you! It's so full of new classes that we're sure you'll find something interesting. But, because it's so full, I didn't get a chance to say everything I wanted to about the new classes I'm teaching this summer. So here's my chance!
The Color of Your Stash
Thursday, September 8, 6:00-9:00 p.m.
If I had a dollar for every time a customer said to me, "I'm no good with color," or "Color is the hardest part of quilting," then I'd be rich. Not just comfortable, but rich enough to live on some tropical beach where I could sew and paint all day and occasionally pick a lemon off the lemon tree to flavor my iced tea. That's how common it is to feel less than confident about choosing fabric!
Since I haven't been collecting those dollars from my color-challenged customers (but maybe I should start!), next best thing is to offer a class that will help them become more comfortable with color.
If you look at any fabric, you'll see that there is a lot going on: color, value, scale, motif, and texture all interact to tell a certain "story." The story one fabric tells influences what other fabrics go with it. Once you can tell what one fabric is "saying" then you can make informed choices about what other fabrics to use.
In this class, you'll learn the principles of color and fabric choices while playing with your stash. We'll work through a series of simple and painless exercises that will help you understand each fabric's story and how to choose other fabrics that complement it. We'll also play with using a color wheel to guide your decisions.
You'll walk out of class feeling more comfortable about color, or I'll give you a dollar!
Locker Hooked Log Cabin
Thursday, July 21, 6:00-9:00 p.m.
Isn't it funny how the simplest things can become your greatest obsession? This is especially true when you are least expecting it.
A couple years ago I bought a Locker Hooking kit. It sat in my studio. And sat. And sat. I just wasn't inspired. So one day, in a fit of cleaning, I decided it had to get out of my house. I brought it into the shop to figure out what to do with it. It only had to sit in the shop for a couple hours before inspiration struck. In a fabric frenzy, I grabbed bright orange, purple, and pink batiks and began cutting narrow strips. Before I knew it, I had the design sketched on the rug canvas and started locker hooking.
Within five minutes I was addicted! There was something very compelling about the simple act of pulling up loops of fabric and then locking them in place. I loved how it felt like crochet. And I loved the texture of the fabric loops. And it felt like I was always making progress. In a matter of days I had my first project complete.
So of course, I needed to share my newest obsession with you! Join me to get hooked on locker hooking!
Painted Nine Patch
Thursdays, August 4, 11 & 18, 6:00-9:00 p.m.
If you've been reading my art blog, you know that last summer I started making paper-cloth, using paint, glue, paper, and fabric. I then began using the paper-cloth in art quilts, like the Painted Nine Patch above. It's not something I ever thought of teaching as a class, but when I brought this to stitch at the Block of the Month workshop in March, I got many requests to make it a class! So here it is.
Oh this is going to be fun! In the first class, we'll make paper cloth, using fabric, paper, glue, and acrylic paints. (Make sure to wear clothes you wouldn't mind getting paint on!) In the second class, we'll cut up our painted paper-cloth and stitch a block design. And in the third class, we'll design borders to enhance our quilts.
Summertime Strip Wrap
Tuesday, August 9, 6:00-9:00 p.m.

This wrap is inspired by a picture I saw in a British sewing magazine. (I never know where I'll find inspiration!) It pre-cut strips to make a reversible, light-weight, summer wrap in a snap! The left-hand one is from a Robert Kaufman solid strip pack and the right-hand one is the Hoffman Bali Pop from this year's Block of the Month.
X-Blocks
Wednesdays, August 10 & 24, 2:00-5:00 p.m.
This isn't an entirely new class, but it is one I wanted to highlight again because I have the sample done! X-Blocks takes ordinary blocks, like a nine-patch, and makes them fascinating by trimming with an twisted ruler. This class is great for diving into your stash because the more fabrics you use, the better the quilt looks.
Other Classes
Check out the shop website to see a complete list of our quilting, knitting, and crocheting classes!
The Color of Your Stash
Thursday, September 8, 6:00-9:00 p.m.
If I had a dollar for every time a customer said to me, "I'm no good with color," or "Color is the hardest part of quilting," then I'd be rich. Not just comfortable, but rich enough to live on some tropical beach where I could sew and paint all day and occasionally pick a lemon off the lemon tree to flavor my iced tea. That's how common it is to feel less than confident about choosing fabric!
Since I haven't been collecting those dollars from my color-challenged customers (but maybe I should start!), next best thing is to offer a class that will help them become more comfortable with color.
If you look at any fabric, you'll see that there is a lot going on: color, value, scale, motif, and texture all interact to tell a certain "story." The story one fabric tells influences what other fabrics go with it. Once you can tell what one fabric is "saying" then you can make informed choices about what other fabrics to use.
In this class, you'll learn the principles of color and fabric choices while playing with your stash. We'll work through a series of simple and painless exercises that will help you understand each fabric's story and how to choose other fabrics that complement it. We'll also play with using a color wheel to guide your decisions.
You'll walk out of class feeling more comfortable about color, or I'll give you a dollar!
Locker Hooked Log Cabin
Thursday, July 21, 6:00-9:00 p.m.
A couple years ago I bought a Locker Hooking kit. It sat in my studio. And sat. And sat. I just wasn't inspired. So one day, in a fit of cleaning, I decided it had to get out of my house. I brought it into the shop to figure out what to do with it. It only had to sit in the shop for a couple hours before inspiration struck. In a fabric frenzy, I grabbed bright orange, purple, and pink batiks and began cutting narrow strips. Before I knew it, I had the design sketched on the rug canvas and started locker hooking.
Within five minutes I was addicted! There was something very compelling about the simple act of pulling up loops of fabric and then locking them in place. I loved how it felt like crochet. And I loved the texture of the fabric loops. And it felt like I was always making progress. In a matter of days I had my first project complete.
So of course, I needed to share my newest obsession with you! Join me to get hooked on locker hooking!
Painted Nine Patch
Thursdays, August 4, 11 & 18, 6:00-9:00 p.m.
Oh this is going to be fun! In the first class, we'll make paper cloth, using fabric, paper, glue, and acrylic paints. (Make sure to wear clothes you wouldn't mind getting paint on!) In the second class, we'll cut up our painted paper-cloth and stitch a block design. And in the third class, we'll design borders to enhance our quilts.
Summertime Strip Wrap
Tuesday, August 9, 6:00-9:00 p.m.
This wrap is inspired by a picture I saw in a British sewing magazine. (I never know where I'll find inspiration!) It pre-cut strips to make a reversible, light-weight, summer wrap in a snap! The left-hand one is from a Robert Kaufman solid strip pack and the right-hand one is the Hoffman Bali Pop from this year's Block of the Month.
X-Blocks
Wednesdays, August 10 & 24, 2:00-5:00 p.m.
Other Classes
Check out the shop website to see a complete list of our quilting, knitting, and crocheting classes!
Thursday, May 5, 2011
Whirligig--April Block
Whoops! It's May now, but here is the April block for you. I called it Whirligig because it reminded me of pinwheels spinning in the breeze. Although given the weather we've had so far this spring, a better image might be a pinwheel slowly melting in the rain.
It was a really fun block to piece! So much so that I got inspired to design and create a picnic blanket using one of our Robert Kaufman Kona Cotton strip packs and our Amy Butler laminated cotton. I love the huge variety of colors and how well the laminated backing coordinates with the border. It was fun and fast to make. It'll be in the shop as a sample for a while so you can check it out. (Although I really want to test it out as a picnic blanket...)


Monday, March 21, 2011
March Block
March's block is constructed from chevrons that look three-dimensional because of the placement of medium and dark values.

I love making this block. It's really easy and fun. Make sixteen identical blocks and rotate them for a quick, fun quilt that has a lot of movement!

I've been collecting neutral fabrics in grays, taupes, browns, mushrooms, and charcoals, with touches of ice blue and chartreuse for accent. I'm thinking of making larger chevrons and setting them in alternating rows of browns and grays to make a lap quilt. The larger chevrons will show off the interesting patterns in the fabrics I've collected.

I love making this block. It's really easy and fun. Make sixteen identical blocks and rotate them for a quick, fun quilt that has a lot of movement!
I've been collecting neutral fabrics in grays, taupes, browns, mushrooms, and charcoals, with touches of ice blue and chartreuse for accent. I'm thinking of making larger chevrons and setting them in alternating rows of browns and grays to make a lap quilt. The larger chevrons will show off the interesting patterns in the fabrics I've collected.
Monday, February 21, 2011
February Block
February's block is constructed from four Log Cabin corners.
You can use these basic Log Cabin corner blocks to create a beautiful, woven-looking quilt. You just need to make two types of blocks that differ in value.
This block starts with a light square and gets progressively darker.

This block starts with a dark center and gets progressively lighter.
When you combine both blocks in an on-point, alternate-block setting, you create a quilt that has a woven appearance like this. It's quick and simple and so very much fun!

If you make a quilt based on this idea, please bring it and share with the rest of the Block of the Month friends!

This block starts with a light square and gets progressively darker.
This block starts with a dark center and gets progressively lighter.
If you make a quilt based on this idea, please bring it and share with the rest of the Block of the Month friends!
Monday, January 17, 2011
January Block of the Month
We're celebrating the start of another Block of the Month! For 2011, I've been inspired by Claude Monet's Nympheas painting at the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh. We'll be using a Hoffman Bali Pop as the basis for the twelve blocks. So each month, I'll post a picture of the pieced block that you can use as a reference as you piece your block.
January Block
As I was playing with the block in Electric Quilt, I came up with a fun design based on that block that I wanted to share with you. I took January's block and used a dark contrasting fabric for all the middle stairstep pieces. You can see how that changes the overall look of the block, making it stronger and more dynamic.
So then I made a reverse (mirror image) of the same block, in which the stairstep moves in the opposite direction. When you have asymmetrical blocks like this one, you can often come up with interesting designs by playing with the block and its reverse.
I then took both blocks and alternated them in an on-point setting. Then I rotated the blocks and came up with this dynamic design. It's fun! And shows how even the simplest block can serve as the beginning of an interesting design!
January Block

Thursday, July 22, 2010
Ordinary Superpower
What's your superpower? No, I'm not talking about invisibility, or flying, or telekinesis, or the ability to shoot plasma blasts from your hand. (Although that would be so totally cool!) I mean those mundane, everyday superpowers that enable you to always find a parking spot even if it's raining and crowded, or always nab the last pair of shoes in your color and size. You know, a situation where you are always lucky or an uncanny ability you have that people find kind of freaky.
My brother's superpower is the ability to estimate accurate amounts for anything. He can pick up a stack of newspapers and tell you exactly how many there are. Or tell you how many ounces are left in a cup. Or how many karats there are in a diamond. Or how much someone weighs, which is probably something he should keep to himself!
My superpower is knowing how to estimate space and volume. This comes in really handy on Thanksgiving. I have the uncanny knack of picking just the right-sized container to store leftover gravy so that it comes right to the brim without slopping over. I also am really good at packing cars so every last suitcase, bookbag, and cooler fits efficiently.
But my ordinary superpower is probably most helpful at the shop. As you know, our shop is pretty cozy, but we also have lots of great stuff in there. But for some reason we always want to be able to squeeze in a little bit more.
So every summer, before the big brown UPS truck pulls up and delivers our fall goodies, we take a fresh look at our shop and figure out ways to reclaim just a few more inches here and a little more space there so we can cram in just a little more merchandise. This is usually a big process that involves taking everything off the shelves, moving them around a little, then putting everything back.
Just this week, Cynthia and I moved almost every single bolt of fabric and almost every single fabric shelf. We only had to move things a few inches this way and a foot or so that way, but those subtle changes have made a big difference in the look and feel of the shop. It feels more open now, it's easier to get around, and it offers way more room for shopping and classes.
We're still have a few things to do over the next month or so, but we're feeling ready for fall. Bring on that big brown truck--we can handle it!
My brother's superpower is the ability to estimate accurate amounts for anything. He can pick up a stack of newspapers and tell you exactly how many there are. Or tell you how many ounces are left in a cup. Or how many karats there are in a diamond. Or how much someone weighs, which is probably something he should keep to himself!
My superpower is knowing how to estimate space and volume. This comes in really handy on Thanksgiving. I have the uncanny knack of picking just the right-sized container to store leftover gravy so that it comes right to the brim without slopping over. I also am really good at packing cars so every last suitcase, bookbag, and cooler fits efficiently.
But my ordinary superpower is probably most helpful at the shop. As you know, our shop is pretty cozy, but we also have lots of great stuff in there. But for some reason we always want to be able to squeeze in a little bit more.
So every summer, before the big brown UPS truck pulls up and delivers our fall goodies, we take a fresh look at our shop and figure out ways to reclaim just a few more inches here and a little more space there so we can cram in just a little more merchandise. This is usually a big process that involves taking everything off the shelves, moving them around a little, then putting everything back.
Just this week, Cynthia and I moved almost every single bolt of fabric and almost every single fabric shelf. We only had to move things a few inches this way and a foot or so that way, but those subtle changes have made a big difference in the look and feel of the shop. It feels more open now, it's easier to get around, and it offers way more room for shopping and classes.
We're still have a few things to do over the next month or so, but we're feeling ready for fall. Bring on that big brown truck--we can handle it!
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