Quilts

Road to California 2013–part II

The next two posts are photo-heavy, but I decided to put the quilts I wanted to show you up in two, rather than three posts. (BTW, these are in no particular order.)

AmerSpirit

Laurie Wozniak’s American Spirit, was one of several done for the American Spirit batting display, and for which they handed out calendars with photos of the quilts.  I liked the postage stamp theme.

ColoradoQuilt

Lynette Hallmark’s Colorado Evening was the other one in this series that caught my eye.

Bubble1

Bubble-Licious was made and quilted by Karla Dahms of Minnesota, and was inspired by the Beatle’s song “Octopus’ Garden,” from A Yellow Submarine.

Bubble2

Bubble3

ChignikQuilt

Artists Mark McDermott and Cat Larrea of Alaska, participated in a curated exhibit titled “Perspectives: Fantasy and Reality.”  This piece, Chignik Bay Lagoon, is a digital image of an original watercolor, which was then enlarged, printed on fabric and quilted.  Both artists have geoscience backgrounds.

Chignikdetail

CircularReasoning

Road to California always has a section of Faculty Quilts, and this very well-known quilt, Circular Reasoning, is by Emily Cier, and is quilted by Angela Walters.

CircularReasoningdetail

CityEdge1

City Edge 1 and 2 (this quilt and the next one) were made by Gerri Spilka and Delia Dungan and are from the Perspectives exhibit.  Both are from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and were inspired by their cityscape.

CityEdge2

FromStone

This quilt by Hollis Chatelain, From Stone, was inspired by a trip to beach near Brisbane, Australia. (from the Perspectives Exhibit)  Confession: I’m always in a love-hate relationship with her quilts.

MidTown1

MidTown A and B (this quilt and the next) were made by K. Velis Turan of New York.  She used fabric, dyes, textile paints, and. . . shrink plastic (what we used to call Shrinky-Dinks) for the cars.  Since so many of us have a love affair with big cities (but often are glad to retreat to the ‘burbs), I thought these quilts were terrific at showing the compressed space of buildings side-by-side, but sited on river-like boulevards.

Midtown2

Midtowndetail

CrazyPlaidQuilt

Allison Aller, another member of Road faculty, made Crazy for Plaid, her version of the traditional Gothic Windows pattern.  She used machine and hand embellishment (below, sorry for the blurry photo).

crazyPlaiddetail

GirlPearl

The main reason I was fascinated by Girl with a Pearl by the Sea, was because of that incredible mass of textured silk on the quilt.  Detail below.  Quilt made and quilted by Sandy Winfree. Can’t decide if I like it or not.  It’s a novelty quilt, and I think sometimes Road goes overboard on those.  Overall, I have to say I think this year’s Road offerings are better than last year’s.  Fewer sparkles for sparkles’ sake, for starters.

GirlPearldetail

GoneFishin1

Another sea-themed quilt (there were a lot of them this year) was this young boy swimming in a school of fishes.  Sylvia Clary of Florida, titled this Gone Fishing, and is apparently inspired by her real-life young grandson Carson.  It’s the details and whimsy of this quilt which drew me in.

GoneFishin2

Check out the use of selvages in this waves. The fish were made of her hand-dyed fabric, and this quilt included hand-painted, hand drawings duplicated for use, along with thread play, crystals (this is one quilt that I didn’t object to them being attached to, as they were used in the design, not to overwhelm the design) and lastly, photo collage.  It was a real treat, but as usual, my favorites don’t always get the ribbons.

GoneFishinBack

Ignore the words floating above this postcard, which was the back of the quilt.  Fabulous.

GoneFishingDetail

JenningsQuilt

Suzanne M. Riggio, maker and Terri Kirchner, quilter, both of Wauwatosa, Wisconsin (say that quickly) put together this “slice quilt” by the Milwaukee Art Quilters of an old home where they held their meetings.  The Jennings Homestead has applique, fusing, painting, inking, embroidery and discharge techniques.  Is anyone else wanting to do a “slice quilt”?  They are fascinating to me.

Jenningsdetail

JumpingQuilt

Jumping Off the Cliff with Freddy Moran, made by Kathryn Bernstein and Pam Dransfeldt of Los Angeles, California.  It’s fun to see Freddy influences in a quilt again.

Jumpingdetail

LoneStarburst

Another faculty quilt.  Lone Starburst was made by Kimberly Einmo and quilted by Birgit Schuller. Einmo wanted to create a quilt “one Jelly Roll Bundle plus one background fabric.”  She succeeded.

MonetQuilt

Monet in Pasadena, was made and quilted by Melinda Bula of California.  She used fusible applique and heavy thread play to create this quilt from her hand-dyed fabrics.  The inspiration was the Huntington Museum and Gardens in Pasadena, CA. Details below.

MonetDetail

Monetdetail2

Monetdetail3

NYStateQuilt

Two sisters, Sue Nickels and Pat Holly, made this quilt together (Sue quilted it).  It’s titled New York State of Mind, and is part of the faculty exhibit. Didn’t we used to call this orange color “cheddar”?

NYStatedetail

OldChina1

Old China was made and quilted by Nita Markos, and was inspired by a photo from her childhood.

OldChina2

OneFineDaydetail

I’m showing you the detail first on Cynthia England’s quilt, because it’s made of so many teeny tiny pieces.

OneFineDayQuilt

One Fine Day (from the faculty exhibit) was inspired by a photograph she took of Lake Tahoe, spending a day there with friends and her family,  a good “day to remember” she says.

OrganicLogCabindetail

The pieces in Organic Log Cabin #3, made and quilted by Jennifer Emry, were “scissor-cut. . . without measuring to get that ‘organic look.”

OrganicLogCabinQuilt

This one was fun to study.  Until I went to the other ballroom to see the quilts, it was about the only “modern” quilt in the exhibit.  Road trends toward the traditional, so I was happy to see a bit of a break-out here.

OutBoxQuilt

Another from the Perspectives exhibit was Out of the Box, by Sandra E. Lauterbach from Los Angeles California, and is based on a map of Shanghai, China.

PocketPaisley

Lorilynn King’s Pocket Full of Paisleys had a “private name” for the quilt while she was working on it (she called it her LOUD quilt).  She decided to learn her embroidery software, and used turquoise thread when testing.  She kept going and this was the result.  (As you may have noticed, some of these quilts are hard to photograph, because they either have signs on stands in front of them, clear plastic tape strung across, or the lighting and/or angles are a struggle to work with.)  I liked hearing that she had an “official name” for this quilt, and a “private name.”  I do the same thing, feeling like giving a quilt a name is sort of like naming a child–you can’t really know what that name is until the quilt is finished.

PocketPaisleydetail

Remick

Helen Remick had an alcove all to herself, showing off some of her quilts.  The one that caught my eye was YoYo 11: Reflections on Changing Technology.  She writes: “As one technology replaces another, some things are preserved, others lost.  CDs in yo-yos hold manuscripts, family history, rituals and vacations.  The collage on the back side is made from images and documents on these CDs.”

RemickQuilt1

RemickQuiltBack

RemickQuilt2

I also liked this one, but didn’t catch its name.  It evolves into yoyos at the border.

SecretGardenQuilt

Deborah Sorem’s My Secret Grandma’s Flower Garden has many allusions and references to her grandchildren in the quilt, and “represents three generations.”  Detail below.

SecretGardendetail

SolidsSign

Lupine designed and made by Emily Cier, quilted by Cathy Kirk

SolidsExhibit

I finished the exhibit in the main ballroom, and slipped over to the smaller ballroom, where I found this gem of a display by Robert Kaufman.  Of course, I read a lot of blogs by modern quilters, and this past weekend was QuiltCon–a modern quilt convention (next one is in two years!), so have been surprised that the organizers of Road haven’t yet made a nod to the influences of these quilt.  But here was a small exhibit of some amazing modern quilts.  One frustration was that none were labeled: not the maker, nor the title, which is a glaring oversight, I think. Enjoy the modernism of these quilts. Update:  Leanne of She Can Quilt emailed me all the correct titles.  I’ve amended the blog to add in this new information.

Leanne writes: “The quilts are all from the book called We Love Color, compiled by Susanne Woods, published by Stash Books.”  The one quilt not shown below (but shown above) is TV Color Bars Quilt, designed and made by Betz White.  I hope I put these in all the right places!

Solids1

Stepping Stones, designed and made by Lisa Call

Solids2

Orbit, designed and made by Jennifer Sampou, quilted by Angela Walters

SolidsQuilting

Solids3

Stacked Blankets, designed and made by Valori Wells

Solids4

Think Big, designed and made by Jacquie Gering, quilted by Angela Walters

Solids4a

Solids5

Sanibel designed and made by Weeks Ringle and Bill Kerr

Solids6

Modern Cross, designed and made by Kathy Mack

Solids7

Centered, designed and made by Cherri House, quilted by Angela Walters

Solids9

Color Frames, designed and made by Amy Ellis, quilted by Natalia Bonner

Solids10

Ladders, designed and made by Elizabeth Hartman

Solids11

Keys, designed and made by Alissa Haight Carlton

SolidsVendor

One of the vendors also had a touch of the modern in her display. This was Ginger’s Quilt Shop in Ontario, California, which I found a week later was closing its doors.  I was sad, because they’d been so helpful when I was making my Scrappy Stars quilt, in helping me figure out which color to use to back the stars.  I did go up to one of the closing days, picked up a slew of solids (I’d purchased a stack from them at the show), and said my good-byes to a great quilt shop.

Next post: last of Road to California quilts.

 

FAL · WIP

WIP and FAL are real motivation!

WIP new button

I’ve been doing Lee’s Work In Progress Wednesdays for a long time now, and I love participating and reading her blog.  Head back there to see more of what others are working on.

FinishALong Button

And Leanne’s Finish-A-Long has certainly focused what I’m working on.  I’ll get back to posting up Road to California pictures next post, but here’s what I’m working on today.

EPP outer pieces

I’ve finally figured out the outer pieces of my EPP quilt.  And the border after this, too.  Now just to sit and watch something interesting on television, so I can finish it up.  What to watch now that Downton Abbey’s all finished, and the Oscar broadcast is over?  I do have some interesting Netflix coming.  By the way, if you like quirky movies, I can recommend Moonrise Kingdom.

Lollypop Tree Border Blocks2

And I finished appliqueing all the pieces on my Lollypop Tree Border Blocks.  Now I have to cut away the backs of those that have freezer paper in them, pull out the paper, then press them.  When that happens, it means that all the components of the Lollypop Tree quilt will be ready to be put together.  I first saw Kim McLean’s pattern on the blog for Material Obsession–a blog you should defininitely have in your Reader.

Lollypop Tree Border Blocks3

A few of my favorites.  Happy Quilting!

Quilts

Road to California 2013–part I

Okay, here’s a truth.  When you are sewing your brains out, you aren’t  blogging much.  And since I’ve been on a tear with a couple of quilts, I haven’t yet given the recap of Road to California 2013 version.  I’ve been remiss.  Let’s begin.

Group1

As we’ve noticed this week at QuiltCon, the connections we make with other quilters are valuable and as invigorating as creating new quilts, and so I want to start the post by acknowledging my debt to some of my quilty friends–thank you all.  Here we are at the first day’s lunch: Leisa, me, Laurel and Lisa.

Dinner

Dinner that night was at our local El Torrito, where Jean, Laurel, JoDy, (me) and Leisa ate chips, chewed over the quilt show, inhaled the guacamole.  We sort of do this every year, so if you come, join us.

Lunchgroup

Last group shot: Debbie from Miss Luella, Cindy from Live A Colorful life and the rest of us.  I am happy to have such great friends.  Now here’s some other people we saw at the quilt show.

queenmermaid1

Queen of the Nereids: Deborah Levy was the quilter and maker.  This was a lot of fun to look at, ooh over and find the interesting details (like how did she keep those shells on?)

queenmermaid2

  She’s from New Orleans–the quilter, not the mermaid–so she does know water.  I love the texture in that hair, and she used some of my favorite thread: Superior (I’m a fan!).

Saint

Laurie Tigner made and quilted this fascinating homage to ancient religious icons, Silver Madonna -1 .  First she painted silver spandex, then quilted it.  She said the fabric was stretchy in four direction, “but worked beautifully.”

saint2

saint3

The quilting made me swoon.

samson1

Samson and Delilah, by Jerry Granata from California (near me!).  This was such an interesting image, prompted by his love of Art Deco and the art by Erte.

samson2

He quilted it all on a regular sewing machine.

Vixenfishmaid

Sirena has a secret.

vixenfishmaid2

This quilt, by DeLoa Jones (who was on the faculty of Road) lit up this quilt with LED lights and sparkley things that we buy at Disneyland.

visenfishmaid3

visenfishmaid4   Very ingenious.

Grandmafishing1

I couldn’t get a great shot of this, but it was wonderfully made by five different quilters of the Collective Visions quilt group: Kathy Adams, Joan Baeth, Susan Massini, Louise Page, with Kathy Adams as the quilter.

grandmafishing3

Grandma’s Big Fish was based on a photograph taken in 1959.  Don’t we all want to be like this woman?

Celise

Celise, by Carol Swinden, melted my heart, but then again, it was a picture of Swinden’s granddaughter that prompted it.

Celise detail

The quilting was really amazing, drawing in the contours.  I apologize for the harsh lighting, but the colors were more delicate in person.

Celise quilting

Hope you can see this background quilting.

surrender

Surrender was a quiet quilt, tucked in among some showier ones, but took my breath away for the depiction of a mother saying good-bye to her newly deceased newborn. Maria Elkins of Ohio, paid homage to all those moms who have had to say farewell at birth.  She dedicated it to her grandchild, “who was given into the loving hands of her daughter and son-in-law.” I studied it for a long time.

Pink Display 2

One of their special exhibits was “Pink,” a lovely collection of quilts with pink as their predominant color.

Pink Display1

Makes you want to go out and get some pink, right?

Quilts

Lollypop Tree Blocks Completed


LollypopBlocksAll

All stitched down.  But I remembered in the middle of the night, that I wasn’t done stitching.

BorderBlocks

I still have the border blocks to finish.  But first, I’m going to enjoy being at this point (for closeups of the last three blocks, head to “Lollypop Trees” in the header).  I finished taking off the back of the pieces last night before I went to bed, then pressed it and put it up on the wall.  I think sometimes in our rush to have a finish, we forget to stop and smell the flowers.  So I’m stopping today to smell these flowers–even though there’s no fragrance, there’s a sweetness to the air in my studio–all these up on the wall.  They’ll cheer me on while I grade the poetry papers that came in yesterday from my students.  So, in honor of getting this far on this quilt, and this far in the semester, I leave you with a couple of haiku, bare whisps of poems appropriate to the season.

Tom Tico:

Into old pots and pans

thrown out in the backyard—

the musical rain

Harriet Axelrad:

snowflakes glued

to the kindergarten window—

no two alike

Enjoy the weekend!