Paper Piecing the Hard Way

On Saturday, I got out the projector and some large pieces of paper and outlined three potential quilts – the Oregon waterfall and the two bargello quilts. I’m pretty sure I have all of the fabrics for the Oregon waterfall quilt, but I haven’t yet started putting that one together yet. I think I need a full day for that one, so I don’t foresee that happening anytime soon. (I have some pretty busy non-quilting weekends coming up over the next few weeks.)

This was an interesting process. First, trying to trace an image that disappears into shadow if you stand in the wrong place is a pain in the ass. Second, trying to line up a ruler – in this case, a yardstick – with a projected image is actually a lot harder than I thought it would be. I mean, how hard could it be? Line up the straight edge of the yardstick with the straight edge of the image. So, so much harder than it looks. One side of the image was shorter than the yardstick, so that one was easy. But the other was not, so I needed a waypoint. I am 100% sure none of the horizontal lines I drew are straight. There’s no way.

The Oregon waterfall image was far easier than the other two. After all, it was just a matter of outlining the different areas of the image that would be covered by different areas of fabric. For the most part, this was straightforward. I drew lines, I made notes, I labeled different parts of the image. Now all I have to do is make all of the template pieces and put the thing together. That is a project for another weekend.

The bargello quilts were another story. I drew out both of them because I had the projector on and it was just easier to do both while my brain was immersed in the logistics of them. All I really did was draw a rudimentary grid, labeling the water line and providing some structure for the rest of it, then outline each image as if I was going to do it with the technique I’ll use on the Oregon waterfall image. Each of the bargello quilts will be about 30” x 50”, and I was a little surprised to find that some areas of the images were much smaller than I’d imagined they would be when projected on the wall. I’m not quite sure how well that will translate to the bargello pattern, but I haven’t yet overlaid the full horizontal grid lines over it yet to see how well it’ll work.

Now that I have the images on paper, I can start to produce those grids to see whether or not what I have in my head will actually work!

Not What I Thought I’d Be Working On

A couple of blog posts ago, I talked about what I thought my next project would be, now that I’ve finished the Tracy Arm quilt. Well, that one has stalled out. I still don’t have a definitive image of what it might look like in my head, and when I really looked at it to start to source fabrics for it, all I really saw was green and white, and two colors do not an interesting quilt make. So I have, for the moment at least, tossed that one aside in favor of another one that is similar but has more color and texture variation.

The more I look at this one, the more I think I will like the challenge of it. I’m going to use the puzzle-piece-layering method that I learned from Trudy, but this will be the first time I use it on a piece that does not have a sky, and that idea sort of intrigues me. First, I have to figure out what the pieces will be, then I have to find the fabrics. (If I’m honest, I’ve already found a couple of them.) I think this one will be just a little smaller than the Tracy Arm quilt but larger than the boring Norway one, and of course, it’s a portrait orientation image rather than a landscape orientation. So it poses some interesting challenges.

What’s going to be a real challenge for me is recreating the waterfall. I’ve got a couple of different fabrics that I want to try out to see what works. One is a little darker but already has the vertical lines in it; I may just have to embellish those lines with some thread painting (which, by the way, I still have not yet attempted with the Norway fisherman’s cottage image). The other fabric is lighter with some muted colors on it, but has no lines on it, so those will need to be created from scratch. So the question now is – is sewing going to recreate those smooth vertical lines of the waterfall? Or am I going to have to get more creative than that? And of course, all of it has to wait until I get my sewing machine back. *sigh*

Depending on how long it takes to hear what’s wrong with my sewing machine and get it fixed, I may start collecting fabrics for other projects soon as well.

Moving On…

So now that the Tracy Arm quilt top is (nearly) finished and all I need to do is sew on the borders, I need to come up with another project to do. Because, of course I do. My ADHD would ask nothing less of me!

Seriously, though. I am headed out to an area of my state I don’t normally visit this coming weekend, so I am planning to visit a quilt store or two while I’m out there. I’ll take the abstract iceberg quilt stuff with me so that I can round out my selection of fabrics for it, but I also want to bring another project or two that I’ll start sometime soon so I can begin sourcing fabrics for it. I don’t want to be limited to what I can find in my local shops, and sometimes the local shops don’t have enough variety in what I need, so grabbing even just a couple of fabrics for the next project or two will be useful.

One of the benefits of looking through the photographs I’ve taken over the years is that I’m finding lots of images that I had forgotten about but that are really nice! I am actively not limiting myself to the tried-and-true favorites I’ve leaned on over the years (we’ve already looked at why some of those won’t work for this particular project), so I’m digging into folders I haven’t looked at in a very long time. And I’m looking at all of the images in each folder.

When I look at a photograph, my mind immediately evaluates whether or not it’s a good image. Is it pleasing to the eye? Is there something in it that catches my attention? Would I put it up on the wall in my house? For the vast majority of the images I take, the answer is “no, there’s nothing interesting about this,” or more often “this didn’t come out the way I thought it would.” Sometimes it can be fixed through post-production work, but often it’s just “nope, this just didn’t work the way I imagined it would when I took it.” And that’s fine, honestly. I have come to understand over the years that I can take several hundred photographs over the course of a weekend and be able to count the ones I really, really like on one hand. (On a recent 12-day vacation, I took just over 3200 photographs and picked about 100 of them to share with family and friends. That’s about par for the course.) And I tend to take lots of different versions of the same image with the reasoning that when I get home, one of them will stick out to me. 

It’s fun to take a look back through images I literally haven’t looked at in years and look at them through the “would this make a good quilt?” lens. The one I think I’m going to work on next is one I’ve admired before – I have it printed out somewhere, and I had it on my wall at one point although it’s since been taken down in favor of other, newer images (I like to switch things up every once in a while). This image was taken in 2014 in Oregon, on scenic route 138 somewhere between Crater Lake and Roseburg. (I think. I didn’t take good notes.)

I’m interested in putting this one into the abstract bucket as well. Immediately, what came to my mind for this is a Lone Star in the middle, where the white waterfall is, with the greens and the browns surrounding it. I’m still sort of contemplating what this might look like, but I’ll probably begin working on sourcing fabrics for it soon. I have several Lone Star patterns, so I’ll also look through those soon to see if one jumps out at me as particularly conducive to mimicking this image. I’m also fascinated with the crossed fallen tree trunks at the bottom of the image, and that would be fun to recreate as well. So that’s the plan now that the Tracy Arm quilt is done (or nearly so).