Now that the Holidays Are Over

I took the week of Christmas off, and in between wrapping gifts, celebrating with my family, and reorganizing my sewing room, I was able to get a little more of both the College Fjord and Hus Ved Havet quilts done.

I decided once and for all that I wasn’t going to go back and fix the darkest blues in the College Fjord quilt. Even knowing that the blues were different, I couldn’t tell from a distance which ones were which. It just wasn’t worth my time.

The results are, despite the imperfections, pretty awesome. I am really happy with how this quilt is turning out!

This is the right half of the full image (with Fred the cat for scale). It has condensed quite a bit, as I knew it would when it was sewn together – the half-inch that disappears into the seam allowance for each vertical strip really does make a difference! The left half is still sitting on my design wall, but it’ll get sewn on soon. Maybe New Year’s Day.

I’ve also been able to cut the strips and piece them together for the Hus Ved Havet quilt. The colors are perfect – they work so well together. I never really laid them all out to check to see how they would combine when I was in the stores buying them. I got all of the blues together, and all of the greens, and all of the grays, but I never really put them together to make sure that they went well together. I consider it a happy accident that the colors work as well as they do together.

I’ve sewn all of the grays (mountains) to all of the blues (water) since those colors are consistently together. The greens are separate since the darkest green will be sewn to several different blues depending on how much water is visible. I haven’t yet cut the strips for the sky – that’s coming.

So…projects are moving along. I’m actually looking forward to January and the polar vortex that the New England Weather Guy is predicting through at least the middle of the month. A polar vortex is an excellent reason to stay home and work on these projects, among other things!

And the Quilting Begins

I finished up the vertical strips yesterday and started the quilt-as-you-go method of sewing them together today. It’s slow going. As I’ve always said, my ability to match seams in bargello quilts is quite frankly abysmal, so nothing lines up properly. You’d think that because I strip-pieced the sky, all of those seams would at least line up, but noooo. I literally don’t know how to make these things any better than what I’ve done. And I have little patience or motivation to go back and fix anything. Fortunately, the results look good from a distance, and I’m not looking to enter any fancy shows where people will be getting up close and judging my work anytime soon.

I started in the middle of the quilt and started working towards the right side, so I was working with the bottom half of what was on the design wall. I got about three quarters of the way through that bottom half, plugging away in front of Christmas movies and football games, when I realized that the very dark sky blues that I’d used at the top and the bottom of the quilt…are not the same. I used one from the beginning, and then switched to a darker one later, and then I switched back. Completely unknowingly. I started assembling the quilt using the pieces of the darker of the two colors, which is in the middle vertical strips. And then I sewed a strip onto the quilt that had the lighter of the two blues, as I got closer to the right edge, and I noticed it then. See if you can tell the difference.

Yep.

So now what? My sense is that I’ve been looking at these strips for weeks, in lots of different light, and I’ve not noticed a thing. So…since there’s precedent of leaving two different colors in the same spot, I’m probably going to go in that direction. Replacing any of them at this point would be a LOT of work. If it’s not a glaring error, I’m going to run with it and hope that no one but me notices.

I’m really glad that, after my adventure running out of one blue for this quilt, I got extra fabric for the Hus Ved Havet quilt. Need a 1” strip? I’ll take a quarter of a yard, please!

Making Progress All Around

It’s been a couple of weeks, and I’ve slowly been working on these three different quilts. The Oregon waterfall quilt has been glued in place and the edges have been sewn over. I used several different stitches to sew the edges, and I’m very happy with the results. I’ve put that quilt on pause while I make a decision about how I want to add all of the greenery at the top of the image. I have a couple of options, but I haven’t yet decided which of them to use.

I spent some time last weekend crossing a couple of state lines to go to stores that I know have an excellent selection of solid fabrics, and I was able to find all of the fabrics for the Hus Ved Havet quilt. I came away with a total of eight yellow-greens, three blue-greens, eight brown-grays, five water blues, a red and a black for the house, and four off-white-ish things for the clouds. I’ll be using the ombre fabric that I bought online, thinking that it would work for the College Fjord quilt, for the sky. So far, the colors look very nice together. I’m hoping they come together well once the sewing begins. Thankfully, I was able to find everything in solids and didn’t have to resort to fabrics that just read solid. I have cut strips of everything except for the sky and clouds, but I haven’t started sewing the strips together yet.

Instead, I finished sewing together the vertical strips for the College Fjord quilt. This is what they looked like on the design wall when I was done:

You’ll notice the sun is there. I decided to find a very pale yellow to serve as the sun, and I think the color is perfect. Fortunately, the space where it needed to go wasn’t hard to switch out – just getting more use out of my seam ripper!

I also discovered that the blue that was meant to replace the color I ran out of is not the exact same color – it’s REALLY close, but it’s not the same. (I have since learned that the brand of fabrics is known for its inconsistency.) I was actually debating going back to replace all of the old blue with the additional strips of the new blue. But it would have been a ton of work, and I actually completely forgot about it as I was sewing the final strips yesterday. So when I realized that I’d forgotten and that the different color didn’t stick out like a sore thumb like I thought it did yesterday, I decided that there was no reason to go back and replace the original blue.

Now That Proof of Concept Exists, Part 2

The Hus Ved Havet image (see previous post) will be divided into five sections, each with its own coloring and bargello method: the land in the foreground (greens/yellow-greens), the water (gray-blues), the mountain (grays), the sky (a blue-to-yellow ombre I originally bought for the College Fjord quilt but that didn’t fit there), and the clouds (creams/very light grays). There are three trees/bushes that will also be included, and the house, which I will claim artistic license on and make red like so many houses in Lofoten (where this was shot), will be appliqued.

In my head, the fabrics here are still solid. We’ll see how that goes, but that is currently the plan. If they’re not solid, they’ll be fabrics that read solid, but right now, I’m on the hunt for more solids. Currently planning an outing next weekend to two stores I know have a ton of them.

The College Fjord quilt has been fairly simple to put together because of the mirror imaging. This is very different. I can strip piece this (like how most bargello quilts are constructed), but each color group is going to have to be pieced separately and then all sewn together.

Like the College Fjord quilt, I started with the basic contours of the image sketched on a large piece of paper as the image was projected onto it. The vertical strips have to be the same from top to bottom, which so far has not been too much of a challenge but may prove problematic as I keep going (I got through about ⅓ of it yesterday). This is a sneak peek of what the planning looks like so far:

For reference, this is the center-ish of the image from top to bottom near the left edge. On the right, you can see measurements (1”, 1.5”, etc.) in blocks. The line to the left of those measurements is the water line. Anything to the left of that line in this image is the mountain moving to sky, and anything to the right of the water line is, well, water going into land. Adding the vertical lines (which in this image run left to right) is a bit of a challenge. 

In the College Fjord quilt, I put vertical lines anywhere the contour of the mountain changed. But in this quilt, I also have to pay attention to the contour of the water against the land in the foreground, and if that changes, a vertical line needs to be added, too. Sometimes – in fact, surprisingly more often than not, they line up or at least can be fudged to line up. Other times they just don’t. It’s a lot to take into account, and I am 100% sure I will screw it up at some point. But so far, it’s working well.

One more design choice I made is that everything but the sky will be 1” strips; the sky will be 2” strips. This is exactly like the College Fjord quilt. I think it works really well that way – I like the contrast between the sky and the land. The one thing I haven’t decided yet is whether the clouds will be 1” or 2” strips. One inch might give me more flexibility, but two inches will blend better with the rest of the sky. I might have to do some experimenting before deciding that piece.

Still lots more to go on this quilt, but I’m really excited to see where this one goes. Let’s just hope I don’t need to create a spreadsheet this time!

Now That Proof of Concept Exists, Part 1

When I originally decided to attempt an image using a bargello concept, I had two images in mind that I wanted this to work with. One was obviously the College Fjord quilt, which is on pause briefly until I have the right color again but is clearly going to be a gorgeous quilt in the end. I’m SO excited about that quilt!

But as I was planning the College Fjord quilt, there was some trepidation that it wouldn’t work for that one, and if it didn’t work there, I wasn’t going to even attempt a second one. Bargello quilts are just too detailed and difficult to put a lot of work into if it’s not going to be successful. So I said early on that I was going to attempt the College Fjord one, and if that worked, I’d attempt a second one.

Now that I have proof of concept, it’s time to start work on the second bargello. I am also really excited about this one, and now that I’ve looked at it a little bit, I’m REALLY glad I started with the College Fjord one. The College Fjord quilt is symmetrical – it’s a mirror image. The second one is not, which means it has its own special issues. Here’s the original image:

This image reminds me of a song, “Hus Ved Havet” (House by the Sea) by Halvdan Sivertsen, one of my favorite Norwegian musical artists. I have an early songbook of his that includes many images to go along with the music, and this image reminds me of the pencil drawing that is in that songbook to accompany this song. I’ve always wanted to do my own rendition of that idea – a house by the sea. So here we go.

While Waiting for the Mail

I ended up ordering another one of the jelly rolls. Even though I’m pretty sure I had the name of the color I needed, the color on the screen and the color of the fabric aren’t always the same, so I couldn’t be 100% sure. I also couldn’t find the color I thought I needed at any of my local shops, so I thought it was better that I just get the jelly roll. That way, no matter what color it was that I needed, it would be there. Anyone have a suggestion for what to do with the rest of the blues? I have a ton of them…

While I am waiting for the order to show up in the mail, there was an open sew yesterday with my guild that I had signed up to go to. I decided to break out two of the other quilts I was planning and get some work done on them. The Oregon waterfall quilt was one, and the “Hus Ved Havet” quilt was the other. Let’s talk a little about the Oregon waterfall quilt. As a reminder, this is the image:

The plan was to use the puzzle piece method that I’ve had iffy success with – the same method I used for the Tracy Arm quilt, only without actually printing the image out on fabric. The challenge for this version is that there is no sky, and I have not used the puzzle piece method on an image – real or imagined – without a sky.

Previously, I had projected the image onto my design wall and drawn the rough outline of the image onto a piece of paper, making the template for the image. I also had all of the fabrics (except for, as it turns out, one that I conjured up out of my stash today). The next step was making the templates for the fusible.

This is not a terribly difficult quilt. With the work I did yesterday at open sew making the templates and getting them onto the fusible, I could have finished the layering of the puzzle pieces tonight if I had had any energy left over from my very busy weekend. But no, there was no energy left, so I got as far as ironing the fusible onto the fabrics and cutting out the puzzle pieces. The rest of it will have to wait until tomorrow, when I will be keeping my hands busy during the Executive Committee meeting (on Zoom) that I have to attend. So this is where I stopped today.

This is a good start! There’s obviously a ton of stuff missing – there needs to be more trees, and I might need to fill in some details – but I can actually see the image, and I like the fabric choices I made.

With chorus on pause over the holidays and the gym closed for renovations until the day after Christmas, I have no reason to leave the house for the next five days (except perhaps to go to the mailbox to fetch a jelly roll). To some people this might sound like hell, but I am in heaven! It’s cold, and I’m lazy. Let’s see what I manage to finish over the next week or so…

Also stay tuned for the “Hus Ved Havet” quilt update – I had a chance to work on that yesterday, too, and I’m excited!

And It Comes to a Screeching Halt

That fabric that I substituted in – yeah, I didn’t have enough of that. I don’t have enough of that. So I have gotten this far, which you’ll notice isn’t a heck of a lot further than last time I posted.

And so the hunt begins. I know little about the fabric other than that it came from a jelly roll of Kona solids, so I am off to see the wizard to find Kona solids, hoping that when I do find them, this particular color will be among them. I need one 2” strip. If all else fails, I do have the information about the jelly roll and can buy another one of those, but I’m hoping to avoid doing that ‘cause, well, I really only need that one 2” strip. I have plenty of the other fabrics I’m using.

This, my friends, is where the fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants nature of my quilting habits bites me in the ass. I really need to learn to write stuff down.