Centre quilting - back of quilt
A new quilt has eventually come off the quilting frame today! I say eventually because I had serious doubts I would ever be able to finish this one and poor old Rosie would be waiting a month of Sundays for her quilt. Rosie pieced this 110" square quilt for her master bedroom and spent many hours looking for the right shades of green and lemon to coordinate with the multi-blue floral furnishing fabric dotted throughout the top. I know how much she is looking forward to getting this quilt finished and on her bed and I feel sooo bad that it has taken me sooo long to quilt for her. The month of May has conspired against me though and has seen me pulled emotionally and physically in all directions, and mainly from my children in one form or another.
No 1 son passed his pre-divers assessment, came home elated but was informed the next day that he could face waiting up to a year to get into HMS Raleigh ... surprisingly depression followed .. and not from no 1 son but mum and dad. Love him as we do there comes a time when children should fly the roost (lol). But good news followed and he will join the Navy as a Diver - second class on July 19th! Yeah! He is very pleased .... and rightly so I think too!
DD has been in the throws of exams and I have been ferrying her back and forth to school for what seems like weeks. A last minute invitation to interview for art college also presented itself but meant a flying visit to Devon - a 4 hour drive for us and after a morning Drama exam too. It was a good job the drama went well and the roads were clear! I was mentally exhausted by the time we got there. But good news again .. she was offered an unconditional place on the day! This was great until we discovered that the city she will be studying in has 30,000 students and most of them had already booked accomodation for the forthcoming 2010 school year. Frantic or what! Well good news again - I have now found her a lovely house with, what sounds like, a lovely landlady.
No 3 son has had several school activities needing my attentence at school culminating with a really great sports day last Friday, where I managed to get a little sunburnt! On the plus side No. 2 son has been surprisingly quiet throughout May inspite of his uncanny ability to miss/forget the school bus home and ring for taxi-driver mum to take him home - which is all very well if its planned! Asides from this, DH is STILL seaching for the perfect car and is currently sharing No.1 sons Mini yet somehow I am often needed to drop him off to work or pick him up.
So, all in all I have been busy and you can perhaps see why quilting this rather large quilt has taken me way way longer than I had planned. Add to this its 'quirky' measurements and it was a bit of a task!
Medallion (or bullseye quilts as they are sometimes called) are a bit of a bugger at the best of times to quilt on a longarm frame. If they aren't perfectly square in the centre, incremental inaccuracies can accumulate border by border you end up with a monster in need of taming. Somtimes you can work with them and gently coax them back into square, other times you dont stand a chance! This one was an in-betweeny! Each border was slightly out and each block was not really a square or a rectangular in many cases (what do you call a 4 sided polygon where all sides are different lengths?).
Cutting or sewing innaccuracies of just one 16th or one 8th of an inch per seam doesn't sound alot until you realise that there masy be as many as 20 seams (or more) in a row. Add these togther and you can easily be out of square an inch or more per border and eventually the whole quilt top can take on a dog-eared effect with elongated corners. Some quilts can be brought back into square on the final border but the centre then puffs up like a parachute, alternately some borders may be ok and others not giving smaller but as problematice "ripples " border to border. But whatever the characteristics of the 'out-of-squareness' the innaccuracies become very evident when they are placed on a square quilting frame and somehow the quilter has to try and quilt these out - which isn't always easy! But then as one of my teachers said years ago ... " if it were easy it wouldn't be worth doing" . Uhm ! I'm not sure I would always agree with him, even if I do appreciate his sentiment.
Unfortunately many people seem to forget that each 'round' on a medallion quilt is infact a border and this means that you should measure opposite sides and ensure they are the same length before applying them.
Some time ago I wrote a booklet on how to apply borders. I have been known to give these these to customers with problematic quilts! I have one ready for Rosies. On the upside it has come together quite well in the end and the overall difference is just 1 inch across 2 sides with the other 2 being spot on. With a proper blocking session this 1" difference could be made to magically dissappear too. I have a tutorial almost finished on how to block a quilt so watch this space!
For those that are interested in such things I used almost 7000 metres of 50wt Aurifil cotton thread in 3 colours and the patterns I used are mainly from a series by One Song Needle Arts called "Carmens Roses" plus a beautiful heirloom rose design by Shannon Hicks which unfortunately I cannot find a link for anymore. I have looked for it but it appears to have been discontinued, although it would be worth asking Shannon if you really wanted it. I echoed all of the designs and quilted a simple freehand feather as a background fill to create the psuedo trapunto effect. I used Matildas Own wool/poly blend batting which I have to say is my all time favorite.
Unfortunately with all the stopping and starting with my May conspiracy I have lost count of the number of hours I spent quilting this one but I think its in excess of 50 hours.
Do you like?
5 comments:
Congrats on getting it finished!! Relieved now???? It looks great, hope she was pleased.
super quilting on what looks like an interesting quilt. BUT what a month you have had....congrats to son and daughter who have achieved their dreams, I wish them success in their futures.
So what is next? more commissions?or something for your self?
Thanks for the kids congats. I am soo pleased for them. but for me an overgrown garden, a messy house and a new hairdo are in order I think! But I may just make that little redwork piece I've had in mind for a while too!
Wow Tracey, this is stunning! Such beautiful quilting, I thinks its wonderful. Congrats to both children, not easy to join the RN, you should all be proud, and an immediate offer of a college place .. excellent achievements, and also to get accommodation too! Hopefully June will be a little more restful. :o)
The quilting here is absolutely magnificent, Tracey! The customer must have been speechless -- your work is impeccable!
Diane
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