Friday, August 30, 2013

Into the Blue

A few weeks ago, about five days before I left Michigan for a conference in New York, I made plans with my friends Josh and Adam who, as it turned out, just returned to the city with their new son. Josh and I have been friends since high school and it's the sort of friendship sustained over irregular yearly-ish visits rather than regular emails and phone calls. Hence it was only when I announced I was flitting through town that I learned about Leo's arrival. At which point a flurry of fast sewing and quilting ensued.

I decided to continue the minimalist monochromatic series with a perennial color favorite: aqua. (Also, I knew I had enough solids or near-solids to make this design work, which is not something I can say for most colors. Aqua: it speaks to me and makes me buy it.) Working on a fast deadline meant that simplicity reigned, and a giant starbust seemed fun and (relatively) simply. I drafted 4 20" blocks on butcher paper and paper-pieced the quadrants. Keeping giant pieces of fabric in line was a tad tricky, but I only had to unpick and resew 2 seams, which I considered a victory.

Keeping with the simplicity theme, the back consists of two large pieces of fabric from Erin McMorris collections: a large red chunk from Weekends and a smaller saffron bit from LaDeeDa. I had been waiting for an opportunity to use the large red flowers, as chopping this particular large-scale print seemed counterproductive. I made this quilt a couple weeks after Rossie's thoughtful post about gender and quilting, and I was particularly pleased to use a giant floral print on a quilt for a boy because, seriously, flowers are awesome for everyone (in fact, it was a former male roommate who taught me that sometimes you should just buy flowers for yourself, because they're lovely and pleasing to look at and increase joy).

The quilting is "echo-plus," which is to say quilting lines offset about 1/8" from each seam, plus a line through the approximate center of each wedge. Enough to hold the quilt together but scant enough to keep it soft and drapey. When I arrived with the quilt, I learned that my color selection was prescient as Leo's room has a Tiffany blue accent wall.

Black and white chevron-striped binding? Yes, please. I adore this binding. I'm convinced it's brilliant, so don't tell me otherwise. The stark contrast between the soft aquas and the robust black thrills me. Also I got to sew it with black thread and I so rarely use black thread that I think the spool has been with me for at least 5 years. It was crying out to be used.

8 comments:

  1. Congratulations on you finish. I love aqua too and just cant stop buying it!!! Gorgeous quilt and I love the backing. Thanks for sharing. Stopping by from Crazy Mom Quilts. Marie (mlismore@optusnet.com.au)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Love it! The aqua and red go great together. I really like the simple quilting, too :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Love those colors! What a fun little quilt!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Looks awesome! You are so good at fast and beautiful quilts!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Love the quilt, the colors are so calming.

    ReplyDelete
  6. aqua is my favorite and I am again loving this one. Keep up the color work friend. They're getting better and better.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hi Ronit, I just used your challah cover tutorial from sew mama sew to make one as a bat mitzvah gift for a young friend. I had never done paper piecing, but it went like a dream! (I made the background out of natural linen I had left over from a dress, and the lettering in scraps of Kaffe Fasset "paperweight" in blues, with a scrappy patchwork strip towards the left side.) Thank you for such a great tutorial; I was very happy with the way it turned out.

    ReplyDelete