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It was a glorious fall day and the gingko leaves were turning. We grabbed cameras, a couple of quilts, and went in search of photo ops.
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As we drove around town looking for public access to beautiful trees, Jim was looking at the sky, wanting the contrast of blue skies and golden leaves.
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I was looking for a carpet of fallen leaves to blanket my latest quilt creation, Heaven in a Wildflower.
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We found both shots through our camera lenses.
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My quilt guilds challenge for 2019 was to be “charming”. A charm quilt is one in which each piece of fabric is different from all the others. Traditionally, the pieces are all the same size and shape, such as a tumbler quilt. But our challenge always encourages us to think in a new way, so I came up with this design.
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I selected a piece of an overdyed fabric with fruits and vegetables on it. I believe it started as an old tablecloth. The artist who painted it is Wendy Richardson. I have amassed a collection of beautiful fabrics from Wendy and selected this as the focal point. I added bits from my Cherrywood hand-dyed fabrics and some woven stripes from a Kaffe Fassett collection, then pieced the selections improvisationally in a modified log cabin layout.
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Those big blocks of solid fabrics needed details that luscious quilting could provide. I wanted to incorporate a word or phrase in the quilting.
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When I asked Jim for advice about a word or phrase that the painted segment conjured up, I got more than I bargained for. He came up with a lot of words: from William Blakes Auguries of Innocence.
To see a world in a grain of sand,
And Heaven in a wildflower,
To hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
And eternity in an hour.
So intense quilting ensued!
The challenge specified a perimeter of between 120 and 200. My quilt measures 34 x 41.
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The colors seemed destined as a background for posing gingko leaves. Mission accomplished!
This is the most beautiful blog posting I have ever seen! The quilt is amazing , a work of art from the stitching to the colors and fabrics.Using those lines of poetry also add so much, you and your Jim make a great team. Thank you so much for sharing your gifts.
Thank you!
Beautiful! Love the whole outcome… colors, design and quilting!
I was pleasantly surprised, too. Every quilt goes through a phase of “what was I thinking?”. This one had several of those moments, but it turned out well.