Pictured in this post is a quilt I made just as I was attempting to cross the bridge of traditional quilting to more modern quilting. I had so many "traditional" and restrictive quilting rules in my head that I thought I had to follow: always use a pattern, use fabrics only from the same line/designer, have a border, back the quilt with a print, etc. And here is the result: I have a love/hate relationship with this quilt. I am proud of it because I love the fabrics it showcases (Park Slope by Erin McMorris for Free Spirit), it is well made, it is HUGE, and I stitched the last stitch on the binding maybe 2 days before my son was born (October 2009).
I hate it because it is way too busy - I guess that is the main thing that bugs me about it. It needs a neutral or two!
Even the long-arm quilter who quilted it for me had to make several derisive comments about it's craziness (she did lack tact, I have to say). But that leads me to another thing that bugs me: it really was expensive to have someone else long arm quilt it - which is partly why I have 7 unquilted tops sitting in a box (I have had a fear of doing my own machine quilting and thought that I would always have to send quilt tops out in order to be quilted but I haven't been in a position to pay someone to complete all those quilts for me!)
11 comments:
The fabric on the back is one of my all-time favorite fabrics of all time. I have about a yard and a half of it that I just save... I hear you about having love/hate relationships with quilts - I mean the time it takes to make one is longer than some relationships last! :)
Proprio bello!
Ciao Domenica
quelle audace dans le choix des couleurs pour un résultat impressionnant,félicitation
I love your quilt! It's not too busy and the colors are beautiful. I can't send quilts off to the longarm quilter all the time either, so have started making smaller quilts and/or quilt them myself even if they are not perfect.
I love this quilt! I don't think it is too busy at all. I love all the colors.
I only send out my really big quilts to the long armer. And not that often either. You should jump right in and try quilting one of those tops yourself. You'll be happy to be using those quilts, even if they aren't exactly the way you want. Some of my earliest quilts are not quilted well, but they are well loved.
I totally LOVE this quilt! The colors are wonderful. You did a great job!
I told you it wasn't too busy!!! I'm glad that others agree. I LOVE this quilt and I think it's my most favorite of any you've done! Love, love, love it! I'm so glad you posted it on here.
Beautiful quilt. Not too busy at all, or maybe that's just coming from the queen of busy quilts. Regardless, I think it looks great.
All those fabrics that you chose are wonderful! Great work and that was a great choice in the pattern, too!
This is a GREAT YBR quilt! I don't think it's busy at all; in fact, find yourself another long arm quilter, should you decide to ever go back to one. If you have a flickr account, there is a YBR group there, and you can put your picture in that group.
I feel your pain on the whole quilting issue. Paying a long arm quilter to quilt tops for you IS expensive. Yet forcing a large quilt thru your own home domestic machine can be difficult to impossible. Can you rent time on one? I found 2 long arm machines in my area that rent out time.
Best of luck!
I think that is one of the prettiest yellow brick roads that I have seen. I have made some myself, and I like the pattern. I bit the bullet and started quilting my own quilts. I got a Juki TL98Q so I'd have a couple extra inches and have done probably about 30 now. It's more than paid for itself. I'm still not a great quilter, but the people who have received them like them, and I am getting a bit better. So far I just do meandering, I wasn't blessed with artistic talent. I got a dvd from Patsy Thompson Designs to help with the mechanics and have done ok with it. Basting was my mountain to climb, DH had pneumonia, no spray, I run over the safety pins, and so I do Sharon Schamber's board basting method and it works well. The thread basting takes awhile, but again I bit the bullet made myself a little kit and I don't really mind it now. I have almost finished my UFO's. Good luck with it.
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