I started by pulling out a favourite book from 2000.
Not only does it teach colour theory, but it also has several quilts to make following the lessons within the book. I turned to Opposite Colours, and found Butterflies are Free which caught my eye, illustrating this colour harmony but with an accent. It uses blue-violet and yellow-orange with an accent of red-orange.
| Peeking out is a colour wheel I made in a class I took from Judy Villett at Earthly Goods in Edmonton in 1998! |
I liked the quilt, and the colour palette so off I went to my stash. The sun, moon and stars fabric was near the top of the dark blue pile. This is one I've had for well over a decade, maybe close to two, and have only used a bit here and there. This was my starting point. Sun and Moon complement each other too, right? It didn't take long to add a yellow, and some purples in the blue-violet and blue and violet ranges. Next I looked in EQ8 for this block, which doesn't have a name in the book. There wasn't anything, but in the Five-Patch category was one that was similar, so I added it to my PQ Sketchbook, deleted a bunch of lines, added in those I needed, resized the block, which was 7 ½" finished in the original quilt, to 15" finished, and coloured it accordingly. Cutting ensued.
And agonized. For hours, I kid you not. Walked away at night, came back the next morning, asked MacGyver for his opinion, put it into my new Hey.Cafe Quilters...Not So Anonymous! café group and asked what they thought.
Sidetone: Hey.Cafe is a Canadian-made version of FaceBook, I guess how it used to be (I've never been much of a user and completely off since I quit being an IB ambassador) without the rage, without ads, data is stored right here in Canada, and it's free. Anyone can sign on, though apparently some states have passed draconian laws that won't let their citizens use other country's sites. Since Tod Maffin did a post about it, it has had thousands sign up. Consider joining the quilters' café...
The more I'd looked at them both, the more I was okay with the first block, though I still preferred the second one. But truth be told, I did not want to rip out that first block, and I did not have enough of the white background to make a fifth block. "Should I go with two of each?" I'd asked the café members. Sandy, who shares my last name, though hers was her maiden, not married, name, said that's what she was thinking, and the more I considered it, the more I liked it, because it made your eye move around. To preserve the marble blue-violet, of which there was barely a fat eighth, I used my 3 ½" HST template to cut the triangles as you can see in the cutting photo.
Next was finding an accent. I tried red-orange, orange, burnt orange, salmon (which, btw, looks terrific in my EQ rendition, probably because I put lavender in the marble or zigzag triangle patches). None of them felt right, until I went back into the blues pile of yardage and found this.
| It's not this bright in real life but you get the idea of what a cool fabric it is. |
Next I agonized (and I'm not exaggerating) over borders. More hours and walking away and asking MacGyver for thoughts. I'll spare you (and I didn't take photos) of all the iterations of blues, purples, blue-violets, medium blues, as well as the sun, moon and stars fabric, etc., etc..
You can see the selvage in the photo above, yep that close, though sadly I'd loaded the top about ½" too high (better than running out of backing however!) so the lower bubble of every other dangling bubbles is gone. It still looks pretty stunning imho.
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| Even MacGyver said, "Oh wow," when I showed him Sunday morning. |
I bought that bubbles fabric at a quilt show in Port Charlotte, FL, about nine years ago, just absolutely loved it, with no idea as to what I'd use it for. I'd used a bit of it in a couple of small projects (no clue what, maybe makeup bags?) because one top side had a 3" piece cut out and the opposite had a 2 ½" short strip cut out. A little y-seam filled in the one corner which gave me the width I needed since I trimmed the top 4" off.
Two choices popped out at me from the stash for binding, but this one, a gorgeous Hoffman Fabrics print, yet another percolating in the stash for years, bought as a potential binding for some quilt, somewhere, was the one.
| I've taken a photo three times but I think the waves and silver sparkles wreak havoc with the camera focus! Sorry for the eye weirding out it causes here. |
I took a photo on the grass in the sun. The light blue Aurifil I used for the swirls blends in well over the quilt centre.
I have enough of all the fabrics but for the white, to make another though with slightly different borders, which I plan to list in my Etsy shop.
Quilt Stats:
Size: 37.5" square
Pattern: based on Butterflies are Free from the book Color Magic for Quilters
Fabric: Centre squares - Solstice by Nana for Balson Hercules Group; gold - Mercury by Alison Glass for Andover Fabrics; blue frame is Winter and Holiday Jewels, blue-violet corner triangles is Freefall and blue-violet star points is Shadowblush all by Benartex, zigzag blue-violet is unknown, white background is unknown, sashing is Imprints by unknown, Aurora Borealis in the upper borders is unknown, the ombré is Aurora collections by Takako for RJR Fashion Fabrics, and the bottom border is a cotton screen print style 568 by Benartex; binding is Kaleidoscope Style by Hoffman International Fabrics.
Fabric: Centre squares - Solstice by Nana for Balson Hercules Group; gold - Mercury by Alison Glass for Andover Fabrics; blue frame is Winter and Holiday Jewels, blue-violet corner triangles is Freefall and blue-violet star points is Shadowblush all by Benartex, zigzag blue-violet is unknown, white background is unknown, sashing is Imprints by unknown, Aurora Borealis in the upper borders is unknown, the ombré is Aurora collections by Takako for RJR Fashion Fabrics, and the bottom border is a cotton screen print style 568 by Benartex; binding is Kaleidoscope Style by Hoffman International Fabrics.
Batting: Nature's Touch 100% cotton by Pellon
Backing: Effervescence by Robert Kaufman
Quilted: on Avril, 38 880 stitches
Threads: pieced on my Bernina with Essential; quilted with Aurifil 2715 and Essential 21144; rayon by Floriani in the bobbin.
Linking up










All the care and consideration you put into this quilt really shows; it shines as do you in the photograph with it! I love the focal print you started with (and think I used to have some of it in my stash, too), and hooray for just the right amount of backing. A truly stunning quilt. It's hard to believe how much we can get done in a week, isn't it?!?
ReplyDeleteWhat a great quilt and lots of agonizing over fabric choices. It tickled me to read about how many older fabrics went into this lovely quilt. You did a terrific job.
ReplyDeleteTaking all that time going back and forth was well worth it! This is a beautiful quilt!
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful finish, the quilting sets it off perfectly!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful, beautiful, beautiful!! I love the sun, moon and stars. I used to buy fabric like that. In fact I used to have some of that. I am amazed that you can do all that work in one week. From your comment about enough leftover fabric (minus the white) to make another, I'm guessing you are keeping that one and making one for your shop. Oh, and I have that book on my shelf, too. And the backing fabric...I think I bought three different color variations of it! Congratulations on another Project Quilting finish.
ReplyDeleteThe stars are perfect as are all the little choices and decisions you made with it. I love it and I do have some of that effervescence in black that I have been keeping for a hand piecing project. You did another fabulous job on PQ!
ReplyDeleteYou've outdone yourself again. I know I've said that more than once about your PQ projects. So much angst. Good choices, though. You must not have gotten anything else quilty done last week.
ReplyDeletePat
Wow, this is beautiful.....and another meaningful quilt. I love how quilting is such a learning journey!
ReplyDeleteA very fun finish! It's always interesting to see how you make your design choices.
ReplyDeleteThis is so pretty, Sandra. I love reading your thought processes too! Hope you are doing as well as you can. Thanks for sharing with us at Monday Musings. Have a great weekend and upcoming week!
ReplyDeleteHi Sandra, what an amazing finish! I guess that's what you get for agonising each element. I particularly like the very thing strips of the cool fabric! Thanks so much for linking up to I Quilted This!
ReplyDelete