Tag: Quilting

  • #3: Thames Barge Quilt

    #3: Thames Barge Quilt

    And finished! In time to give away as a gift this weekend to my step grandmother. Her and her partner volunteer for a charity that restores Thames Barges, so I thought that the fabric was appropriate!

    It was basically a learning experience. I wanted to practice piecing HSTs (half square triangles) before embarking on a much more complicated design. I wanted to get a bit more practice at being accurate with the walking foot. And I wanted to hand sew a binding neatly. The binding took one evening – about six hours in front of the TV. And I am very pleased with it.

    Pretty good I reckon, and not bad speed at all – pieced in less than a month (about four/five days total work?). I think it’s just about 43 inches square.

    What I’m most pleased about is the cost. Two Moda charm packs – £22 in total. Three meters of Ikea Calico – £6 in total. And Hobbs Heirloom batting – £7. So that’s about £35 for the materials – plus thread. Not bad at all for a practice quilt.

    Thames Barge Quilt | Modern HST (Half Square Triangles) | Moda Fabric - More Hearty Good Wishes

    Thames Barge Quilt | Modern HST (Half Square Triangles) | Moda Fabric - More Hearty Good Wishes

    Thames Barge Quilt | Modern HST (Half Square Triangles) | Moda Fabric - More Hearty Good Wishes

    I treated myself to two books over Christmas, and I’m looking forward to getting stuck in using those for some inspiration. It’s Modern Rainbow and Brave New Quilts. I also have Patchwork City on the way from America with a load of fabric I got in the sales.

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    And I’ve also got five meters of red fabric and five meters of cream ready to go for a red and white heirloom quilt inspired by this exhibition…

  • #1: Thames Barge Quilt Top

    #1: Thames Barge Quilt Top

    So I’m taking part in a Facebook group this year to improve my crafting skills. The aim is to make 52 things and improve your skills along the way.

    This is a finished quilt top that I started working on just before Christmas. It’s made from MODA’s More Hearty Good Wishes fabric range. I picked up two 5″ charm packs and used some cheap Ikea muslin as the cream fabric. This way I didn’t have to think about the design or colour.

    Anyway, I focussed on getting the points really nice and accurate. They’re not really nice an accurate, but they’re better than the last quilt I did, so that’s an improvement. I feel like I’m ready now to tackle something more complicated with half square triangles.

    'Thames Barge' Quilt Top, made from HST's (Half Square Triangles)

    'Thames Barge' Quilt Top, made from HST's (Half Square Triangles)

    'Thames Barge' Quilt Top, made from HST's (Half Square Triangles)

  • Flying Geese Quilt – Piecing

    Flying Geese Quilt – Piecing

    Work in progress photos…

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  • Tentmakers of Cairo

    Tentmakers of Cairo

    Islamic art has fascinated me for a long time. If I’m right (and I don’t have a reference book here with me now) Islamic art focusses on geometry, colour, pattern, and text due to ideas of non-pictoral representations in local religion. That’s why it’s so different to our art here in the UK – it’s grown up with a different religious tradition and with different restrictions.

    At The Festival of Quilts there was a large exhibition of a group of men who use traditional tentmaking techniques to produce beautiful quilts. Several factors have encouraged more contemporary work from these men, including exhibiting abroad and a generational shift where younger artisans have replaced those who have retired. Traveling around the world and showing their quilts has exposed their work to Western influences which can also be seen in the work that was on display. While the works are firmly routed in Islamic and tentmaking traditions, the motifs were clearly fashionable and influenced by Western style (and customer demand, I’d imagine).

    The quality of work was incredible. I’ve included a close up of the stitching further down to show the accuracy. And the men were so fast too. Some of them were stitching while sitting and being asked questions by visitors – I’ve never seen someone sew quite so fast. Certainly puts my own hand-stitching to shame. The technique used is needle-turned applique, and I’ve been planning on embarking a project using this technique for a while now.

    It was huge inspiration for costuming to see these works. I’d love to make a huge cloak based on this kind of work for the next part of the Mythlore costume. Just need to convince Simon he wants to play another game as a Persian influenced character.

    I believe the artists attending were Hosam Al Farouk and Tarek Al Safty. The exhibition was called ‘Tentmakers of Cairo’ and the pieces were made by various artists from Khan El Khayamiya. They’ve had a documentary made about them – you can find out about it here.

    And even better – you can buy their beautiful quilts here.


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  • Fabric Shopping at The Festival of Quilts

    Fabric Shopping at The Festival of Quilts

    So it was The Festival of Quilts this weekend in Birmingham at the NEC. I’ve been meaning to go for the best part of about 15 years now, and this year I finally got along!

    The real reason I wanted to go was to scope out the competition entries. For a while now I’ve been considering entering a quilt into the competition and figured that the best way to scope out the standard was to actually go and look at them in person. But that’s for another post.

    This post is about the exhibitors stalls in the marketplace areas. And the lovely things that caught my eye.

    In no particular order:

    Bazaar

    I couldn’t help myself here. I had to buy a stamp. You see, when we were making Simon’s Mythlore Costume we discussed the idea of a golden-yellow overcoat. I wanted to use linen, dye it by hand, and then stamp using traditional woodblock stamps a white design on it. Well, the idea has stuck with me and I ended up bringing home that gorgeous one on the left hand side of the shot.

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    The sari trim was lovely too. None of it was quite right for any costumes I’ve currently got on the go, and I’m trying to be better about buying trim (saving my splurges for Keith’s gorgeous stuff).

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    The textiles on the stall were just beautiful. Check out these, with their running stitches running through them.

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    Art Van Go

    Not the prettiest shop at the show, but amazing for picking up dyes and paints. They had a sale on Procion mx Dyes. 25g pots for £3.50 as a show special. So I picked up an Olive Green, Orange, and Black. I have plans, you see. The Olive Green is most likely to be for Simon’s next costume and the Orange and Black for a quilt I’ve now got in my head. Possibly next year’s entry to the competition!

    Higgs & Higgs

    I could have bought almost everything in this shop. Loads of contemporary fabrics and lots in grey. I think this one with the stags was part of the Makower Sherwood range.CM-150808-0155web

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    Village Fabrics

    Another one in Oxfordshire – Wallingford to be precise. Seemed like a fairly standard range of quilt fabric, but thought that this cupcake display was particularly cute.CM-150808-0159web

    I think that this orange fabric was on their stall too – but in retrospect I’m not so sure. I like the texture of it though. This is going to get applied to a future quilt.CM-150808-0158web

    KSDP Charity

    So much gorgeous stuff here. Everything is bought at fair prices from either Thai Hill-Tribe people or from Burmese Refugees living in camps. These textiles are the result of buying traditional pleated skirts and disassembling them to sell as fabric panels. At £8 a meter the price was steep – but it’s great to know that the money goes back into a student development programme where they’re teaching skills to help people become independent.

    I couldn’t just splash out on the fabric without having a purpose for it, but I’m certainly going to try and come up with some ideas for using this fabric so that I can pick some up at a show in the future.
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    These are the tops of the skirt. The bottoms have over six meters of fabric in them – and they’re often complexly cross stitched! I love the way that a simple chain stitch has been used to hold the pleats in place.CM-150808-0162web

    M Rosenberg & Son

    Beautiful wools for LRP. That’s all I’m saying. I’m regretting not buying stuff for Adam’s cloak now, but I’m sure we’ll find something else… right?
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    African Fabric Shop

    I’ve bought from these guys before. I have some really lovely African block printed fabric with elephants on.

    I wanted the bags for Odyssey.CM-150808-0169web

    And I wanted the batik fabrics for wallhangings.CM-150808-0170web

    And the strip cloth for… well… I don’t really know. I just wanted it.CM-150808-0171web

    The Silk Route

    Yeah. ALL OF THIS TOO.

    Regretting not picking up this tan and green textured fabric square.
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    And these too. I could have had all of these.CM-150808-0174web

    The hand dyed silks were lovely too.CM-150808-0177web


    And this was the haul that I came home with. John James were selling off packs of 25 needles for 30p a pack. I should have bought more in retrospect. I have no idea what ‘Au De’ needles are – but they’re straight and sharp!CM-150808-0199web