Raevenfea

Maker of various fabric things

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Posts tagged: Fabric: Reproduction-style

Maxing out Miniatures

Posted in Quilting

  • Batting: wool
  • Fabric: Reproduction-style
  • Finished projects
  • Q016DB
  • The Miniatures Nine-patch

In 2015, I worked my way through some of my oldest unfinished projects, turning boxed-up, almost forgotten fabric into quilts. This second quilt of 2016 is more of the same. This one started life as a pack of 18 fat quarters in February 2011 (my fourth quilt started), and is now a 54×72″ quilt using up almost every bit.

"Miniatures Heart", Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54"x72".
“Miniatures Heart”, Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54″x72″. Photo by Carl Pfranger.

I planned out this nine-patch with a twist, cut all the fabric out, sewed the heart section, and even created all the strip piece components for the blocks, then packed it away. The remaining construction comprised sewing lots of three-patch strips together into nine-patch blocks, then the row and column piecing.

"Miniatures Heart" (detail), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54"x72".
“Miniatures Heart” (detail), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54″x72″.

I finally finished the top during a self-designed mini retreat when I found myself spending a snowy vacation day in Utica (thanks to Shelly and Sew Wilde Quilt & Co for providing workspace for me and my machine that day!).

"Miniatures Heart" (detail), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54"x72".
“Miniatures Heart” (detail), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54″x72″. Photo by Carl Pfranger.

I don’t recall why I purchased the fabric or started this quilt (although I think the inner dialogue may have been “hey, buy, buy, fabric, sale, sale, Fat Quarter Shop, buy, buy buy”). I do vaguely remember wanting to quilt it ambitiously for one of my first few quilts, but can’t pinpoint exactly how. The end is a rather scrappy quilt with very little thought into where each block would go apart from the pieced heart, and quilting that is far beyond anything I’d previously attempted when I cut the first pieces.

"Miniatures Heart" (back), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54"x72".
“Miniatures Heart” (back), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54″x72″. Photo by Carl Pfranger.

The backing and binding are solids that I bought years ago for this quilt. While not my first choice as my style has evolved, I stuck with them to get them out of stash. I considered doing something more complicated in piecing the back together somehow, but I only had the six 2.5″ squares leftover after finishing the top and a nine-patch for my history quilt. The brown reminds me of the ubiquitous brown glazed underlining in Victorian bodices, continuing the theme of old-timey romanticism with the color scheme, heart, and reproduction fabrics.

"Miniatures Heart" (detail), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54"x72".
“Miniatures Heart” (detail), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54″x72″. Photo by Carl Pfranger.

I quilted a few ghost hearts into the quilt, then did the rest in an orange peel pattern that was simple to pull off with the nine-patch construction of the quilt (although far from perfect). It seems appropriate that the orange peel quilting looks like exes and ohs. The hearts are quilted in two shades of pink, while the orange peel is mostly beige with a few pink highlights.

"Miniatures Heart" (detail), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54"x72".
“Miniatures Heart” (detail), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54″x72″.

I used wool batting for the first time since my War of 1812 Challenge quilt, and am not sure what I feel about it. It is wonderful to cuddle under during winter here in VT, but I’m not sold on the texture and drape of the finished quilt. I’m also worried about washing this one, uncertain how the Quilter’s Dream will react.

"Miniatures Heart" (detail), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54"x72".
“Miniatures Heart” (detail), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54″x72″. Photo by Carl Pfranger.

As my mother very bluntly noted on an in-progress social media post, the colors and design of this quilt are really not “me”. Yet I’d count it as one of my favorites. There’s just something about it that makes me happy, and it’s pretty apropos to the time of year. I foresee it being my quilt of choice here at home until spring comes around. That is, if Moof doesn’t keep stealing it.

"Miniatures Heart" (detail), Rachael Arnold, February 2016, 54"x72".

February 28th, 2016

Reproduction Sky

Posted in Quilting

  • Fabric Designer: Barbara Brackman
  • Fabric: Linen
  • Fabric: Metropolitan Fair
  • Fabric: Reproduction-style
  • Finished projects
  • Q013AG

When I purchased a charm pack of Metropolitan Fair by Barbara Brackman this summer, I knew it needed to be paired with linen, but the proper pattern eluded me for months. Then, though I am not a trendy sort, I couldn’t help but being inspired by the recent flock of flying geese quilts showing up on Flickr, Pinterest, and in my RSS reader. Reproduction Sky was born.

Reproduction Sky
“Reproduction Sky”, Rachael Arnold, finished December 2013, 60″×70″.

I turned 39 of the 42 charms into 168 flying geese (the remaining charms and a few unused geese are on the back), paired it with one light linen/rayon blend, a darker 100% linen, and just a bit of a FQ from Old Sturbridge Village that has been in my stash for a while.

Reproduction Sky (detail)
“Reproduction Sky” detail, Rachael Arnold, finished December 2013, 60″×70″. Photo by Carl Pfranger.

I think it took longer to cut and trim those flying geese than it did to sew the entire quilt top together.

reproduction-sky-cutting

Among other imperfections, I didn’t baste the back on perfectly straight, so the piecing of it is a little skewed when compared to the vertical quilting from the front, but it’s not too bad. I had just shy of three yards of this Etchings print in stash, as well as the green vines, which made for quick piecing of the back.

Reproduction Sky (back)
“Reproduction Sky” (back), Rachael Arnold, finished December 2013, 60″×70″.

Nature’s Touch batting gives it a nice drape. The quilting is a mix of 40wt Gütermann thread and a 28wt hand-dyed white to beige variegated thread I picked up at a local quilt show. The latter was used to echo the seam lines of the geese columns and continue that grid to the edges, while the lighter-weight thread was perfect for a few more lines in between the others and stitching in some ditches.

Reproduction Sky (detail)
“Reproduction Sky” detail, Rachael Arnold, finished December 2013, 60″×70″.

This one isn’t staying around the house for long, as it’s intended as a Christmas present for some friends of ours. I do look forward to cuddling under it while I finish up the binding. I cheated in the photos by using Steam-a-Seam to fuse the binding to the back. Not only does it clean up the binding for photos, but it holds it in place perfectly when I hand sew it down. With 6″ of snow on the ground and more forecasted, sewing binding while sitting under a warm quilt sounds lovely!

December 15th, 2013

 

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