Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show 2017 — Part 3 of 3


And now . . . my final post on thequilts displayedfor one day only (July 8)at theSisters Outdoor Quilt Show in Central Oregon, starting with oneof my favorites:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
In Honor of Great Granny (82″ x 94″) by Tamra Dumolt of Bellevue WA, quilted by Laura Simmons

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Doves in the Window (73″ square) by Sheree Lloyd of Eugene OR

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Blue Plate Special (51″ x 64″) by Kathy Chism of Bend OR, quilted by Marilyn Littleton

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Slaphappy in Sisters (97″ x 104″) by Sharon DeBoer of Bend OR

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Best Friends Forever (48″ x 64″) by Marcia Jacobson of Prescott AZ

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Wedding Ring for Samantha (60″ x 70″) by Brenda Sirignano, quilted by Corni Quinlivan

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Cursive (34″ x 36″) by Paige Alexander of South Carolina

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Man About Town (62″ x 78″) by Carol Croak of Bend OR, quilted by Tracy Mertes

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Two for One Deal (62″ x 70″) by Tamra Dumolt of Bellevue WA, quilted by Laura Simmons

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Mom’s Love (65″ x 88″) by Patty Six of Santa Barbara CA

 

When I saw the next quilt from a distance, my first impression was that it was inspired by Native American or perhaps Inuit art. Imagine my surprise to learn it was based on a winter vegetable garden!

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Winter Squash (89″ x 73″) by Maren Johnston of Santa Barbara CA

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Spring in Bloom (46″ x 56″) by Linda Reinert of Vancouver WA

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Round the Bend (92″ square) by Kristi Willard of Camano Island WA

 

Sometimes the simplest quilt designs are the most striking. I love how the two quilts below, made primarily of blue and green batiks, makesuch a strong visual impact (despite the distracting effectof the sun’srays):

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Not Just Another Square (58″ x 66″) by Crystal Darr of Willamina OR

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Welcome Home (51″ x 71″) by Dawn Williams of Terrebonne OR

 

Some of my friends have made quilts based on designs in Lori Holt’s delightful Farm GirlVintage book. I know they will enjoy seeing these two versions:

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Farm Girl (62″ x 76″) by Frances Drennen of Sisters OR, quilted by Sandy Lachowski
A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Farm Girl Feedsacks (60″ x 81″) by Carol Dixon of Sisters OR, quilted by Sandy Lachowski

Carol’s quilt was made with 1930s-era feedsacks. Check out the vintage fabric on the back ofher quilt:

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Back of Carol Dixon’s Farm Girl Feedsacks quilt

 

Fans of foundation paper piecing and the designs of Judy Niemeyer will appreciate the work that went into this beauty:

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The Birth of Paradise (95″ square) by Mark Palmer of Richland WA

 

There was one quilt on display at the show that is very special to me: Lee Fowler’s Pickle Dish quilt. My photo failed to do Lee’s quilt justice, not only because the photo was taken in the harsh afternoon sun but also because I inadvertently included my thumb in the photo. This photo, taken in 2013 just after it was completed, gives you a better look at it:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Pickle Dish (65″ x 66″) by Lee Fowler and Friends, quilted by Janet Fogg

The quilt was made by Lee with the help of severalfriends and completed two weeks before her untimely death in July 2013. You can read more about Lee and the Pickle Dish quilt here. My favorite photo of Lee’s quilt is this one, taken in a park in Sisters in 2015:

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Lee Fowler’s Pickle Dish Quilt

And there you have it. Over the last three posts I have shown you about 50 of the nearly 1500 quilts on display at the show. Though the percentage is small, you can see that the quilts cover a wide range of styles. That’s one of the things that makes a quilt show so enjoyable: there really is “something for everyone.”

I didn’t have a quilt in the 2017 SOQS show but I did have one on display for a few seconds one evening before the show. A few seconds? Yes! You see, during Quilter’s Affair (the week of classes and special events preceding the outdoor quilt show), quilters who’ve taken classes in previous years can show their completed work during an evening event that also features quilts made by this year’s group of teachers. Each quilt is walked across the stage so that audience members can get a good look at it.

In 2015 I took a class from Karla Alexander based on her design Rewind and made a quilt I named Where It’s @. When you see the quilt, I think you will understand the name. Since I was on stage when my quilt was shown, I didn’t get a photo. On my way out of town after a wonderful week in Sisters, I stopped at a particularly scenic spot and took this photo:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Where It’s @ (57″ x 72″) by Dawn White, quilted by Karlee Sandell

 

Thanks for taking a virtual stroll with me through the 2017 Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show. See you next year!

 

 

 

Posted in Quilter's Affair, Sisters OR Outdoor Quilt Show, update, wonky Greek key | 6 Comments

Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show 2017 — Part 2 of 3


Here you go: more quilts from “the biggest outdoor quilt show in the world,” held in Sisters, Oregon last month. The first ones you see were displayed in the Teachers Tent and were made by quilters from near and far (i.e. local, national, international) who taught classes in Sisters the week before the show:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
El Vecindario (56″ x 40″) Hilde Morin of Portland OR

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Deschutes (34″ x 44″) by Jean Wells Keenan of Sisters OR

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Raven (30″ x 42″) by Karla Alexander of Salem OR

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Crosscut Blues (60″ x 68″) by Pam Raby of Albany OR, quilted by Nancy Stovall

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Great Blue Heron (24″ x 45″) by Ann Shaw of Camas WA

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Orange Starburst (18″ x 52″) by Sheila Sinclair Snyder of Eugene OR

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Counting Stars (62″ x 72″) by Tamra Dumolt of Bellevue WA, quilted by Laura Simmons

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Power Play (31″ x 58″) by June Jaeger of Sisters OR

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Here and Now (28″ x 50″) by Rosalie Dace of Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

 

A few more quilts in the Teachers Tent were featured in my last post, in case you haven’t seen it yet.

The Portland Modern Quilt Guild had a special exhibit showcasing challenge quilts:

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Persimmon Slices (77″ x 89″) by Cris Pera of Portland OR, quilted by Kazumi Peterson

 

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Challenge Quilts by PMQG Members

 

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Challenge Quilts Made by PMQG Members

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
PMQG Challenge Quilt Made by Kristin LaFlamme

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
PMQG Challenge Quilt Made by Maria Cardenas, Quilted by Nancy Stovall

 

Every year quilts made by employees of the Stitchin’ Postare hung on the side wall of the quilt shop:

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The Stitchin’ Post’s Wall of Quilts

One of my favorites in this year’s group was this one:

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Painted Ladies by Edie Hines

 

Speaking of the Stitchin’ Post, Helen Robinson of Sew Kind of Wonderful was invited by the shop to demonstrate the Quick Curve Ruler and the QCR Mini on the day of the quilt show. When I heard she would be in town, I just had to meet her!

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Dawn and Helen

Check out the quilts behind us — they’re all Sew Kind of Wonderful designs.

My third post on the 2017 Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show is coming up in just a few days! Do come back for a look.

 

 

 

Posted in Quilter's Affair, Sisters OR Outdoor Quilt Show, update | 3 Comments

Quilts Galore — SOQS 2017, Part 1 of 3


Almost 1500. Fourteen hundred and ninety-seven, to be exact. That’s how many quilts were on display Saturday, July 8, at the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show in the tiny town of Sisters, Oregon in Central Oregon. An all-time high. The quilts are up by 9:00 am and come down starting at 4:00 pm the same day. I did my best to see as many of those 1497 quilts as I could and to photograph the ones I found most striking.

We start with the ones featuring hand appliqué, as this was on my mind after taking an excellent class on needle-turn appliqué from Australian quilter Sarah Fielke, subject of my last post, during the week of classes known as Quilter’s Affair that precedes the quilt show.

I was in Sisters that week with my quilt group, the Quisters, and this is one of the very first quilts we saw as we headed out on Saturday morning:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Ruffled Roses (91″ square) made and quilted by Cindy Nofziger of Albany OR

There were plenty more.

The proud fellow in the the photo below is the husband of the quiltmaker, Nancy Payne-Schomaker. He was clearly delighted with the positive comments he was overhearing about his wife’s quilt, so of course I had to ask him to pose with it:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
5½ Years (74″ x 73″) made by Nancy Payne-Schomaker of Bend OR and quilted by Sandy Lachowski

It was her first appliqué project; no wonder he is proud!

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Detail of Nancy Payne-Schomaker’s Quilt
A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Detail of Nancy Payne-Schomaker’s Quilt

 

Christmas in July, anyone?

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Christmas Medallion (104″ x 102″) made by Kathy Chism of Bend OR and quilted by Sandy Lachowski

 

This quilt by Carolyn Friedlander was part of the QuiltCon exhibit:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Rin (59″ x 73″) made and quilted by Carolyn Friedlander of Lake Wales FL
A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Detail of Rin by Carolyn Friedlander

Carolyn Friedlander was one of the teachers taking part in Quilter’s Affair. This quilt of hers was hanging in the Teacher’s Tent:

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Wildabon (40″ square) made and quilted by Carolyn Friedlander of Lake Wales FL

 

This is another quilt in the Teacher’s Tent featuring hand appliqué:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Tea Party Time (43″ x 48″) made and quilted by Laura Wasilowski of Elgin IL

I took a class from Laura a couple years ago and loved her whimsical style so much I bought one of her quilts. It hangs in my sewing room.

You saw this quilt in my last post but I have to show it off again. It was made by Sarah Fielke, inspired by an old quilt in the collection of the American Folk Art Museum:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Sweet Home (94″ square) made and quilted by Sarah Fielke of Chatswood, New South Wales, Australia

 

This quilt was made by a woman who took a Quilter’s Affair class in 2015 from Sally Frey (I wish I had taken it, too!):

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Twistin’ Dresden Style (53″ square) made and quilted by Anne Zick of Hinsdale IL

 

Look at this beautiful Baltimore Album-style quilt:

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High Desert Blooms (73″ square) made by Sharon Rosen of Redmond OR and quilted by Mardyth Peterson

Guess what? It’s not hand appliquéed! I couldn’t tell it was raw edge appliqué until I got right up next to it.

There were a few other raw edge appliquéquilts at the show that caught my eye, including this one by Deborah Boschert, another teacher at Quilter’s Affair:

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Green Bowl (40″ square), made and quilted by Deborah Boschert of Lewisville TX
A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Detail of Green Bowl by Deborah Boschert

 

This quilt by featured quilter Tamra Dumolt (also a teacher at Quilter’s Affair) is from a forthcoming book:

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All in a Row Again (48″ x 60″) made by Tamra Dumolt of Bellevue WA and quilted by Karen Burns

 

And look how cute this wool appliqué quilt is, instantly recognizable as a Bonnie Sullivan design:

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Tuxedo’s Tales (40″ x 51″) made by Denise Kuppinger of Joseph OR

These quilts run the gamut from traditional to contemporary to modern. And there were so many more . . .

Thanks for stopping by. Please check back in a few days for another post about the quilts of the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show 2017.

 

 

 

Posted in appliqué, Quilter's Affair, Quisters (Quilt Sisters), Sisters OR Outdoor Quilt Show, update | 3 Comments

I’ve Got Sunshine


I took a needle-turn appliqué class last month from Australian quilter and designer Sarah Fielke. Shewas teachingatQuilter’s Affair in Sisters, Oregon.Quilter’s Affair? That’sthe week of classes leading up to the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show, which is always held on the second Saturday in July. My quilt group, the Quisters, goes every year and we all take at least one or two classes.

Sarahcreated a series of contemporary quilts based on old quilts in the collection of theAmerican Folk Art Museum, making both “a direct interpretation” and “a modern reinterpretation.” The class I took wascalled I’ve Got Sunshine, also the name of a quilt in her book Old Quilts New Life (CICO Books, 2015). Our class project was a block from that quilt.

We spent the day learning how to appliqué sunflowers,leaves, and hearts. Here’s my block, still under construction:

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Sarah’s Book, Dawn’s Block

Here’s a look inside the book:

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On the right you see Sarah’s quilt I’ve Got Sunshineand on the left the quilt that inspired it: Sunflowers and Hearts,made sometime between 1860 to 1880.

Sarahteachesthe classic needle-turn appliqué technique in whichshapes of fabric are attached to the backgroundby hand, using asewing needle to turn under the seam allowance. It’s a technique I have yet to master, despite having taken two other classes on it. This was by far the best of the classes I’ve taken.With the others we spenttoo muchtimegetting the design ready and not enough time stitching. In Sarah’s class we had needle in hand within the first hour, and she circled the room several times to give us individual attention,gently correcting our techniques and providing tips as well as encouragement.

And I am encouraged.My plan is to spend a couple hours every week working on mypractice piece. There are at least three quilts I want to make that require lots of appliqué; more on them in a future post.

Sarah had a couple of other quilts on displayin the Teacher’s Tent at the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show.Take a look at this one:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
32 Is a Bushel (59″ x 76″) by Sarah Fielke of Chatsworth, New South Wales (2016)

It’s an improv quilt — no templates and certainly no needle-turn appliqué. The apples and stems are cut free-form and sewn by machine on different low volume background fabrics.I was totally charmed by the fabrics Sarah chose for her apples. The only thing these fabrics have in common is that they are mostly red. They couldn’t be more different:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

 

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Getting back to needle-turn appliqué, this is Sarah’s quiltSweet Home,inspired by a Whig Rose Quilt made in 1857-58:

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Sweet Home, 94″ Square, by Sarah Fielke of Chatsworth, New South Wales (2015)

It’s not the best shot as the quilt was backlit by the sun but here’sa charming detail that highlights Sarah’shand quilting as well as her appliqué skills:

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Detail from Sweet Home by Sarah Fielke

Having taken this class from Sarah two days before the quilt show, I found myself drawn to quilts featuring hand appliqué. In my next post I’ll show you several examples from the show.

 

 

 

Posted in appliqué, Quilter's Affair, Quisters (Quilt Sisters), Sisters OR Outdoor Quilt Show, update | 3 Comments

Home to a Heat Wave


The DH and I got home today from a week-long road trip that took us north into Washington State and British Columbia. Our goal was to watch a minor league baseball game every night. (Yes, I do love baseball that much.)

Mission accomplished: seven games, six stadiums, and about 1250 miles of total driving.The trip was fun and relaxing and totally enjoyable. We took our time each day, taking secondary roads when we could and really enjoying the scenery. I’ve lived in the Pacific Northwest my entire life and never cease to marvel at its natural beauty.

Coming home to triple-digit temperatures was not part of the plan. The temperature is expected to hit 105 degrees in Portland today and 106 degrees tomorrow. My sewing room is on the second floor of our 1913 Craftsman house. Air-conditioned? Nope. Guess I won’t be spending much time up there the next couple of days.

The night before we left on our trip I finished the baby quilt top I’ve been working on:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

This is a variation of the Pineapple Plus design by Karin Hellaby. Adding white sashing strips to lessen the intensity of the stronger colors was a good call. I added an outer border of the birdie fabric (Garden Birds by Pam Kitty Morning for Lakehouse Dry Goods) and love how it turned out. The top now measures 46″ square.

The only problem is I used up almost all of that birdie fabric. On a whim I decided to check the Internet to see if it was still available. You know, just in case. Not only did I find another yard of the fabric, I discovered it also came in a green background color called “lettuce.” Well, you know how much I love green . . .

Look what was waiting for me when I got home:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Do you ever like a fabric so much you search for more more when you’ve used it up? Surely I’m not the only one.

Our road trip involved stops at quilt shops in some of the smaller cities where minor league games are played. My sweet husband even made a list of shops for me to visit. Be it known: I did not come home empty-handed.

While I wait for temperatures in Portland to drop — the forecast is for another week of temperatures in the low to mid-90s — I’m going to hunker down in the basement where it’s nice and cool. Instead of sewing I’ll continue editing the photos I took at the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show last month. The plan is to have a couple of posts about that in the near future. I hope you’ll check back.

 

 

 

Posted in baby quilt, family, pineapple quilt block, Sisters OR Outdoor Quilt Show, update | 8 Comments

Fussycutting After All


A funny thing happened when I got a few moreblocks made for the baby quilt I’m making from Karin Hellaby’s Pineapple Plus book. When I put the blocks up on my design wall, I wasn’t loving what I was seeing:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
No matter how I turned them, the deepest of the blue and pink fabricsseemed too intense. I was going for a softer look. When the blocks werespaced outon my design wall I liked the effect a lot better:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
“Ah, yes,” thought I. “What this quilt needs is some white sashing strips.”

Then I thought of those darling little birdies in the centers of the blocks:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white backgroundThe birdies are scattered over the fabric every which way,which is why I didn’t fussycut them to begin with. I like the fact that no matter which way you turn the quilt, you see some birdies right side up.

I realized they were just the right size for the intersections of my sashing strips:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

I wound up fussycutting a few after all. They’ll look really good against the crisp white background fabric. I like where this is going now, don’t you?

 

 

 

Posted in baby quilt, pineapple quilt block, update | 6 Comments

Another Pineapple Plus Baby Quilt in Progress


I so enjoyed making a baby quilt using the technique Karin Hellaby describes in her book Pineapple Plusthat I’m making a second one:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Isn’t that a sweet block? The print in the center of the block features parasol-toting birds scattered on a field of flowers. The fabric, from my stash, is called Garden Birds by Pam Kitty Morningfor Lakehouse Dry Goods.The birds are tossed every which way . . .

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background. . . so I didn’t bother fussycutting the blocks.

This quilt will be quite scrappy compared with the first one. I’m using mostly medium light values of blue, green, pink, and aqua for the triangles, neatly organized on a cookie sheet:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Here are my first four blocks:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

This is just a temporary arrangement. I won’t decide on the final setting till all the blocks are made. The largest triangles that form an on-point square in the center can be one color, four colors, or two colors forming an hourglass as shown above.

I like the design and the process of Pineapple Plus so much I am thinking of making a grown-up version. But first I need to finish this one!

 

 

 

 

Posted in baby quilt, pineapple quilt block, update | 4 Comments

Paris Pillowcases for Diane


It’s been a very busy winter and spring for me. Between preparing for and teaching two new classes at the Pine Needle (one at the shop and the other at the quilt retreat I wrote about in my last two posts) and serving as an officer on a local board, something has been neglected. No, not my husband! My house. Despite my best efforts to keep up, the Portland White House has not undergone really deep cleaning since . . . well, let’s just say it’s been a while. More than a winter and a spring, to be sure.

To the rescue: my twin sister Diane. At the end of June she flew out from her home in Georgia to spend a week helping me with my long deferred spring cleaning. What a gal! We spent four days on the kitchen alone, emptying out every cupboard and drawer, recycling duplicate tools and items I haven’t used in years, tossing rusty implements, and basically reorganizing the kitchen for efficiency. Every single surface in the kitchen has been wiped down and everything sparkles. Including the floor behind the refrigerator.

How to thank her? Besides wining and dining her, I made her a gift she always loves to receive: pillowcases.

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white backgroundThis pair of of king-size pillowcases was made using my favorite roll-it-up method with no exposed seams (see my tutorial here.) Diane put them in her large guest room, the one we call the Swankienda. She loves how well the fabrics in the cases go with the coverlet:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

The fabrics are the same as the ones I made for the Portland White House in May except in those I didn’t add the band of gold scrolled fabric in mine — only because I had overlooked it in my stash:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
I sure love that Paris print in the band!

Here’s a look from the foot of the bed at Diane’s new pillowcases:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

The pillowcases will actually go behind the shams I made for her several years ago when she was first decorating the Swankienda. I made the pleated bedskirt, too:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

My house will never be as spotless as hers but it’s looking pretty darn good right now. (Thanks, Nubs — you are the best!!)

Here’s hoping you have a wonderful weekend doing what you love best. What should I be doing? Sewing or cleaning? Hmmm . . . .

 

 

 

Posted in bedskirt, family, Paris, roll-it-up pillowcases, update | 2 Comments

Pine Needle Retreat 2017: Group Two


A pattern of green and yellow colors with white backgroundAren’t these lovely? They are the first group of Mini Mod Tile blocks coming from the second group of quilters attending the Pine Needle Quilt Shop’s retreat in western Washington last month. (You can read all about the first group’s output in my preceding post.)The blocks you see above were made by Sandra and Dena (top row) and Linda and Barbara B. (second row).

Here are the second group of blocks:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

These were made by Lorri and Barbara S. (first row) and Liz and Roxanne (second row).

The venue for the retreat was St Andrews House on Hood Canal near Union, Washington. In my previous post I showed you the view of the Olympic Mountains from the long porch at St Andrews House. Here are some photos of the house itself starting with the porch, which runs along the back of the house:

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The view from the parking lot:

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The herb garden:

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A pleasant shaded seating area:

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Such a lovely retreat and conference center!

Now for more blocks. These blue and white blocks were made by Joyce . . .

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

. . . and these were made by Sue and Lisa:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
So far all the blocks you’ve seen measure 11″ unfinished and were made with the QCR Mini, the small version of the original Quick Curve Ruler by Sew Kind of Wonderful. Kay was one of those making my “supersized” version of Mini Mod Tiles in which the blocks measure 18″ unfinished:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

What about those three blocks on top? Kay was also working on a second project, makingRibbon Star blocks from the Missouri Star Quilt C0. It’s pretty clear Kay likes color!

Another quilter making colorful supersized blocks was Kristine:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Missy was making the mini version using a palette quite similar to Kristine’s:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Three of my students were using the original Quick Curve Ruler to make different designs by Sew Kind of Wonderful. Janna started with the free pattern Spring Fling from SKW but departed from the design to do her own thing. Here’s her first block:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Katie fell in love with the pattern Dancing Churndashdesigned by SKW for Cut Loose Press. Here are her first two blocks:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Delia chose SKW’s Chic Diamonds design:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

With the second group of students I was much better at getting pictures of them with their projects toward the end of our time together. Here is Rosalie with her five beautiful blocks:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Barbara B. completed a runner . . .

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
. . . and had enough fabric left to make a mini Fun Poinsettia block:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Here’s Missy with her four blocks sewn together:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white backgroundDo you see how there’s a fifth block in the center that is made up of partial blocks from the four? This is an example of a secondary block design being the same as the primary.

In addition to their blocks (shown behind them), Dena and Kristine made self-binding baby blankets in soft flannels:

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Dena showed several quilters how she mitered the corners on her baby quilt. Joyce practiced the technique, making a square with mitered corners in addition to her lovely runner:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Another vision in blue and white is Roxanne’s quilt top:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Linda decided to change the 3 x 3 setting to 4 x 5 to make a bigger quilt. Here is half of her Mini Mod Tiles quilt sewn together:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Mini Mod Tiles looks wonderful in both traditional and modern fabrics. Here is Sandra with her four-block runner in soothing muted colors. . .

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

. . . and Lorri with her five-block runner using bright Tula Pink prints:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Lisa’s runner makes me think of pink lemonade:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white backgroundOr maybe raspberry sorbet?

Liz completed her purple pansy runner and made a second one with a charming pinecone print:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Sue departed from the original design by incorporating sashing strips inside some of her blocks:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Remember Janna’s bright batik block? Here is her quilt top complete with narrow and wide borders:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Here is Katie with her four Dancing Churndash blocks:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Can you believe Katie is working on hervery first quilt? Amazing! She has a bright future as a quiltmaker.

Katie’s sister Barbara S. was originally planning to make a runner but she liked her blocks so well she kept making them and wound up with a quilt top!

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

In this photo Kay has laid out her supersized blocks and is auditioning the scrappy connector strips between blocks:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Kay also made a few more fabulous Ribbon Star blocks:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

During her time at the retreat Delia finished quilting a quilt begun in an improv class with Jean Wells:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

The back is as interesting as the front:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

It was all quilted on Delia’s domestic machine. She was on deadline: her quilt needed to be in the mail the following week to Sisters, Oregon where it will hang in the world’s largest outdoor quilt show on Saturday, July 7.

That’s the perfect segue to let you know I am in Sisters right now with my quilt group, the Quisters. We’ve taken classes this week put on by A Quilter’s Affair and we will all be at the quilt show tomorrow where a record 1,497 quilts will be hung for one day. Of course I will be keeping an eye out for Delia’s quilt.

I hope you have enjoyed seeing the beautiful blocks, runners, quilt tops, and other projects created by my students at the two Pine Needle retreats!

 

 

 

 

Posted in baby quilt, free motion quilting, mitered corners, QCR Mini, Quick Curve Ruler, Quilter's Affair, Quisters (Quilt Sisters), Sisters OR Outdoor Quilt Show, table runner, update, wall hanging | 3 Comments

Pine Needle Retreat 2017: Group One


A pattern of green and yellow colors with white backgroundDon’t these quilters look happy? This photo was taken the first evening of the Pine Needle Quilt Shop‘s retreat last month in Union, Washington just after completing a pillowcase exchange. The retreat had a western theme, which is why you see cowboy hats, boots, and bandana prints on both people and pillowcases.

The retreat was held at St Andrews House, a retreat and conference center run by the Episcopal Church of Western Washington. I had the pleasure of teachingforthe Pine NeedleatSt Andrews House last year and returned this year for two back-to-back retreats.

What a lovely spot for a sewing/quilting getaway! The house sits aboveHood Canal and offers commanding views of the Olympic Mountains. This is what you see from the long porch that runs along one side of the main building:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

I stayed with Geri, owner of the Pine Needle andorganizer of the retreat, in Bayne Cottage, a little house below the retreat center also owned by the church. Every morning before walking up a short (but very steep) hill to the retreat center, I had coffee on the deck that sits right over the water when the tide is in. This was my view:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

The design I chose for this year’s retreat was Mini Mod Tilesby Sew Kind of Wonderful:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
This is the quilt that appears on the SKW website. It was made with the QCR Mini, the smaller of the two specialty curve rulers designed by Sew Kind of Wonderful.The block finishes at 10½” and the entire quilt finishes at 35″. Did you know the pattern is a free download? You can find it here.

I decided to “supersize” the block so that the quilt could also be made with the original Quick Curve Ruler. That way I could offer my retreat students two options. Here are my two test blocks, one finishing at 10½” and the other finishing at 18″:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

In no time at all, my students were sewing curves the Sew Kind of Wonderful way: no pinning! The fabrics are cut slightly oversize and trimmed so that when the block components are sewn together, they fit the way they’re supposed to.

Here are the first three blocks:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

The blocks in the top row were made by Diane and Lynn. We were all dazzled by Diane’s choice of Kaffe Fassett prints combined with a bold text print for the background. Doesn’t Lynn’s block look like real tile? She chose the perfect batik for her focus fabric to get that effect. Lynn’s sister Karen made the block in the second row. She reversed the usual placement, using a lovely floral print for the background and a dark blue solid where a print would normally go.

As the first day progressed, the number of blocks on the wall quickly increased:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

The new blocks were made by Denise (Asian fabrics in second row), Colleen (aboriginal fabrics in third row), Puff (autumn colors on the far right side of photo), Marti (marbled print with rust background in lower left), Tamara (rich purple batiks in bottom row), and me (blue and green holiday print in third row). As you can see with Puff’s two blocks on the right, one block was made with a contrasting center square and one without. Puff decided she liked the top version better.

I told the students, “Once you have your curves sewn and trimmed, I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised how quickly the quilt goes together.” When I came to the classroom on the morning of the second day, I was flabbergasted to see a finished quilt top. Kay had finished hers the evening before!

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
As always, it’s so fun to see the different fabrics that students choose. Candyce’s blue and white fabrics are Shibori prints:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Susie’s focus fabrics are from the Marks line by Valori and Jean Wells. She found the perfect background fabric from another line to go with them:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Best friends Martha and Sandy wanted to make a different Sew Kind of Wonderful pattern, Metro Rings. That was fine with me, as I’ve made Metro Rings myself and could offer them some special tips. This block represents a joint effort, as they are using the same fabrics. See how the big block is made of four smaller ones? Two of them were made by Martha and the other two by Sandy. The four blocks haven’t been sewn together but you can see that their points of the triangles in the center are going to come together perfectly:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
Here is Linda’s supersized version of Mini Mod Tiles, made in one of my favorite color combinations, green and purple:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
I had suggested that students making the supersized version save their fabric scraps, as they’re large enough to be used in something else. Linda proved my point. She sewed four curvy scraps together and then trimmed them to make an hourglass block. Five hourglass blocks (see the center block?) then became part of a larger nine-patch star block:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Linda’s background fabric, from the Alison Glass Sun Print 2016 line, goes so well with her wild floral print.

Jan had a charm pack of 5″ squares in grey and white prints, pairing them with white and yellow to great effect:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

Kitty used that same fresh color combination in her runner:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

She added a border of her yellow accent fabric. See how the edges of the runner have been cut to match the curve? That was an option I suggested to accentuate the curve within the block. Kitty will bind her runner in the focus print which will give her runner nice definition.

Here is Kitty’s sister Puff with her lovely runner:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

She’s going to make a set of napkins from the print to go along with the table runner.

We had three sets of sisters at this retreat! Marti came all the way from New York to join her sister Vicki. Here are their bold and beautiful supersized blocks:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background

I also cut curves on the runner I made at the retreat:

A pattern of green and yellow colors with white background
When I bind this in the dark green, the curved ends will really stand out.

My plan was to snap pictures on the last day of all the quilters with their projects but alas, that didn’t happen. Still, I think you have an idea of the many wonderful ways in which Mini Mod Tiles can be interpreted. Sometime this fall the Pine Needle will have a reunion for retreat participants. Many of these projects will be completed by then and I promise to get some good pictures.

In my next post you’ll see more versions of Mini Mod Tiles, including some supersized ones, made by the second group of retreat participants. Do come back to see!

 

 

 

Posted in QCR Mini, Quick Curve Ruler, table runner, table topper, update | 2 Comments