It's been a while, but I'm back with a new project to share! I'm not sure what happened to me or why I haven't posted lately. It's weird because I've always loved writing blog posts and couldn't wait to share whatever I was working on. I suppose we all need a break every once in a while.
Since my last post I took my machine in for a deep cleaning. While I could continue to piece things together, I couldn't quilt any of the pieces until I got my machine back. It took two weeks and nearly went to three but one of the ladies who works at the shop told the tech that 'Jayne needs her machine today' and lo and behold...I got it back! It helps to have friends in high places.
What I'm sharing today I haven't quilted yet. It's in the queue and I'm excited about the possibilities!
I'm back to my comfort color combination! Pink, orange and yellow! It's always filled me with happiness and has never failed me in any of the projects made with these energetic colors. Coming up with a design or idea might take a while, but the colors never!
It started with a simple improv curve. I was off to a great start and eager to make more!
And so I did! Four perfectly imperfect curves that fed my need for a little improv magic! These were the easy part, the hard part was figuring out what to do with them and what to make next.
There's improv where you have a concept and there's improv where you start and figure it out as you go. I'm mostly in the latter category!
I thought a nice fit with the curves might be some small inset circles. Once again, not perfect which was very much intended. After a while even these changed form!
I also pieced triangles that at first I wanted to pair with the inset circles, but after sewing a circle to the top of a triangle it was plain and simply wrong. What I love about improv is if it isn't working...slice it up and try something else.
I often stare (or glare) at the parts and pieces of an improv project for an undetermined amount of time until something makes sense and the design become clearer.
The inset circles become double inset circles, the triangles become their own feature or in extreme cases I won't use them at all.
When I'm struggling with a design, walking away for an hour or a day is often the best thing to do. The break often brings clarity to a design idea. Fresh eyes! Fresh mind!
Eventually I made the decisions needed to bring this quilt to an end. Designing as I go, scraping ideas that aren't working and in the end feeling good about what I've done. Some improv comes together easily and sometimes it doesn't. Half the battle is not giving up! Who doesn't love a good challenge?!
I fell in love with the center circle and would love to explore more of that on a larger scale. Right now this wall hanging before quilting is 16" x 17". I'm considering making circles that are that size!
LINKING: