Raevenfea

Maker of various fabric things

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Posts tagged: Modern quilting

Making it Modern—A Pixelated Churn Dash

Posted in Quilting

  • Blocks
  • Education
  • Modern Quilt Guild
  • Modern quilting

In an effort to create tools for education and promotion of modern quilting, my guild started a challenge series (of sorts) a while back that we call “Make it Modern”. Members are encouraged to take a traditional block, make it up in an 18″ quilted square, then make a second one “modern”. The goal is to explore some of the aesthetic differences that exist between modern and more traditional quilting when it comes to fabric selection, quilting, and styling of a block. We have a collection of the blocks now that we are able to take to demonstrations and talks, as well as providing a quick programming bit at our meetings when a member presents their block pair.

Make it Modern Churn Dashes

After giving and organizing a few talks for local traditional guilds about modern quilting, I noticed that we were missing a good example of pixelation, which has been a trend in modern quilting. Since I’d signed up (many months in advance) to do a Churn Dash block, I decided to play around in Illustrator to see if I could come up with something that evoked the look of the traditional block, but allowed for me to piece ‘pixels’ that weren’t too incredibly small for an 18″ mini.

Make it Modern Churn Dashes: Traditional Churn Dash

The traditional churn dash is straightforward—four half square triangles, a center square, and side rectangles, made from fabric I purchased early in my quilting journey. The more traditional text print is a great foil to the more modern, low-volume math print used in the other block. I stitched in the ditch to quilt it, because I didn’t feel like FMQ at the time for something more advanced.

Make it Modern Churn Dashes: Modern Pixelated 'Churn Dash'

The super technical details modern details: I drew a vector churn dash, shrank it to 0.15″, rasterized it, then blew it back up to 18″. I played around with different sizes prior to rasterizing, but this was the best combination of “still looks like a churn dash if you squint” and “has big enough pieces (1.5″) that I won’t hate making it” I found.

Make it Modern Pixelated Blocking Structure

The more quilty modern details: after I had my design, I broke it up into blocks that let me piece as few 1.5″ squares together as possible (but, I was winging it, so there could be even more efficiencies I didn’t think of). I used a low-volume white math/text print from the stash as background, and two greens (Kona Peapod and Kona Limelight) that are just a little different so that you really get the pixelated blend from far away (that is, the farther away you are, the more it looks like it’s a normal (perhaps fuzzy) churn dash). I quilted it in geometric spirals, starting with a churn dash shape as a nod to the original block.

Make it Modern Churn Dash

And here’s what it looks like once we take photos and drop it in a template to publish on Instagram and Facebook for the guild. I love the way this project has encouraged me to think about the different ways modern quilting can be expressed, and it’s been amazing to see the creativity of my fellow guild members in how they approach their own make it modern blocks.

April 11th, 2017

Traditional as Modern

Posted in Quilting

  • Exhibits
  • Inspiration
  • Modern quilting
  • Traditional quilting

Those of you who have been following me for a while know that I’m not a big fan of the tension between traditional and modern quilting. I’ve made traditional. I’ve made modern. I’ve made modern with traditional. I’ve made a lot of things that are just quilts. I spend more time with a modern guild and modern quilters, but it’s not at the expense of respecting and learning from traditional sources. I think that we as quilters and people are better for acknowledging that both sides (and everything in between) have much to bring to our craft and art.

In my Web wanderings recently, I came across a digitized collection of early 20th century quilt design paintings. The 419 watercolor paintings were done by Virginia Beauchamp around 1919-1923, but many depict quilts from the previous century. What drew me into the collection was how her framing and cropping of the quilt down to the desired design motif is incredibly similar to how we often make modern traditional quilts.

Sometimes it’s as simple as taking a traditional quilt design and making it in solids.

Quilt Pattern 186: Shell / cumulus from color continuum — no. 01 monochromatic by Emily Cier
Quilt Pattern 186: Shell /
cumulus from color continuum — no. 01 monochromatic by Emily Cier
Quilt Pattern 026: Streak of Lightning / Stacked Zigzags by Rebecca @alreadyinmypjs
Quilt Pattern 026: Streak of Lightning /
Stacked Zigzags by Rebecca @alreadyinmypjs

Other times, we take a single block and make it very large.

Quilt Pattern 221: Sunflower / Giant Starburst by Megan Pitz
Quilt Pattern 221: Sunflower /
Giant Starburst by Megan Pitz
Quilt Pattern 256 / Fly Away by Heather Jones Studio
Quilt Pattern 256 /
Fly Away by Heather Jones Studio
Quilt Pattern 175 / Tribute Star by Becca Bryan
Quilt Pattern 175 /
Tribute Star by Becca Bryan

Some of the paintings go beyond depicting what we call modern traditional and straight into modern.

We break the grid.

Quilt Pattern 28 / F*ck The Quilt Police by Nancy Purvis
Quilt Pattern 28 /
F*ck The Quilt Police by Nancy Purvis
Quilt Pattern 273 / Flight Quilt by Alexis Deise
Quilt Pattern 273 /
Flight Quilt by Alexis Deise
Quilt Pattern 320: Blazing Star / Luxe in Bloom Lone Star by Amy Friend
Quilt Pattern 320: Blazing Star /
Luxe in Bloom Lone Star by Amy Friend

We decompose the design in places.

Quilt Pattern 12 / State of Being by Cheryl Brickey
Quilt Pattern 12 /
State of Being by Cheryl Brickey
Quilt Pattern 38 / Quilt from Strip Your Stash by Gudrun Erla
Quilt Pattern 38 /
Quilt from Strip Your Stash by Gudrun Erla
Quilt Pattern 67 / Contrast by Linda Miller
Quilt Pattern 67 /
Contrast by Linda Miller

We use negative space to great effect.

Quilt Pattern 111 / Echoes by Leanne Chahley
Quilt Pattern 111 /
Echoes by Leanne Chahley
Quilt Pattern 96: Jacob’s Ladder / Migration by Season Evans
Quilt Pattern 96: Jacob’s Ladder /
Migration by Season Evans

This collection has left me inspired with ideas of quilts to make for years to come. I hope you find similar inspiration.

Quilt Pattern 224
Quilt Pattern 224

Further reading:

More about the collection at the Onondaga County Public Library

The digitized collection from New York Heritiage Digital Collections

Thanks to Barbara Brackman for posting about this originally

June 18th, 2016

 

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