When the Weather is Bad…

…spend the day in the sewing room. However, I did not get done what I had planned.

I thought today would be the day I projected the abstract iceberg image up on the wall and figured out what fabrics would go in which spaces. I was completely wrong. Instead, I worked on the Tracy Arm quilt. In fact, I finished the image part of it, which was a bit of a surprise.

I used a modification of a technique that I learned in a class in April taught by Trudy, one of the members of my quilt guild. I don’t think it’s Trudy’s original technique – if I remember correctly, she learned it from someone else. But she has done a lot with it, mostly with landscape templates that she has made up. I made this piece in her class the day she taught it to us.

The technique involves cutting out what are essentially puzzle pieces and adhering them to a piece of muslin using an iron-on adhesive. The selection of fabrics is crucial, and there’s a method to it. I used the same technique on the unsuccessful Norway image in the Choosing Pictures, Part II blog entry. The technique is fairly simple – an image can easily be done in a few hours – but a lot of thinking goes into it. That’s the technique I wanted to use for the Tracy Arm iceberg quilt.

As you remember from the previous blog entry, I had most of the fabrics for this, but I wasn’t entirely sure that the sky fabric was the one I was going to use. Well, I used that sky fabric – it turns out that once I laid it out with all of the other fabrics, it was perfect.

All of the fabrics with Post-Its are part of the Tracy Arm quilt

The plan was to recreate the entire image except for that awesomely fabulous iceberg right in the middle. I had the image printed onto fabric, and I planned to use that as a template – much like Trudy’s templates – get the fabric pieces to be the right size. I also planned to cut the iceberg out of the original image and basically paste it as the focal point – rightly so – of the recreated image. 

The challenge for this particular image was that it was much larger than a sheet of tracing paper, which is necessary to get the mirror image pieces you need of both the fabric and the adhesive. Rather than attempting to draw the full image out on one sheet of paper, I ended up tracing individual pieces of the image onto paper. Fortunately, I only needed to extend the paper for one piece, and I had some smaller pieces I’d cut off of the foundation papers for the abstract iceberg quilt yesterday.

One of these days, I’ll learn that I need to go back and look at the instructions for a technique like this if I haven’t done it in a while. I completely forgot about the whole mirror image part of creating the templates, so I had to redo some stuff about halfway through. But most of the fabrics were batiks, which are thankfully reversible, so I was able to get away with screwing up…this time.

I also didn’t have a piece of muslin that was big enough to act as a foundation for all of the pieces, so I improvised. I ended up using the sky piece and the water piece as foundations for some of the pieces, so I simply had to find a foundation for the middle 3.25” of the image. The printed image had about 8” of white border around it, and once I cut it off, I was able to use one of those pieces as the foundation for the middle of the image. It took math. I am not good at math. But somehow it worked. 

Since I was using a piece of the original image in the recreated image, the scale of the recreated image had to match the original as closely as possible. Where I and my ADHD might have just fudged it for an image that was entirely a recreation, I really didn’t want to get to the end and find out that the iceberg was bigger or smaller than the space that it needed to go in. So I measured, and I marked things with chalk to show where they should go. And the iceberg fit PERFECTLY in the end. I was rather proud of myself, honestly. I was so scared of getting to the end and discovering I screwed up somehow that I really took my time to get it right.

I’m really pleased with how it came out. The iceberg is, as it should be, the absolute centerpiece of this quilt.

There are still some decisions that need to be made. In the original image, there is snow on some of the mountains in the background, which I pretty much ignored when I was choosing fabrics figuring that I could add it later if I felt I needed to. I haven’t decided yet whether or not to do so, and if I did add it in, how I would do it. (More fabric? Thread painting? Paint? Something else?) I also have not yet decided whether or not I want to sew down the applique in some way. I feel like I probably should, but I am not sure how to deal with the iceberg, which has little fiddly bits I had to cut out that would be lost if sewed over them. So. many. decisions.