Foxy Paper Piecing Monday

Okay I could not help myself…I just had to do it…

Paper pieced fox block

I decided that my low volume quilt needed a block from No Hat’s In the House fabulous Forest quilt, as a not too subtle nod to the amazing quilt that inspired my low volume sampler.  So I bit the bullet and headed over to the Forest QAL and picked one of their FREE paper piecing  blocks.

These patterns are crazy good but complex.  How complex I hear you ask… well my fox took four colours…

fabric pull for fox

cut into 99 scraps of fabric…

fabric & paper bites 2

sewn onto 27 separate pattern pieces…

block bits and guidethat were then sewing into three sections…

piecing block

These sections were then sewn together to make one incredible block.

I was so thrilled with how this block turned out and I kept shoving it in my husbands face saying “look how fabulous this is”… “isn’t this block incredible”… “have you ever seen anything so amazing”.   He was not as excited as I had hoped about the whole thing.  Actually his response was decidedly underwhelming.  Going to have to get him to work on that.

He just keeps saying “what does the fox say“….

Adventure Time wip Wednesday

After several “low volume” projects recently I wanted to do something different, loud, bright.   I found inspiration in the pages of my husband’s Adventure Time comic for my new block.  If you know Adventure  Time at all you will see the strong influence of Princess Bubblegum in this block.  She regularly pops up in Jake & Finn’s crazy adventures.  Now if you do not know Adventure Time, this is Princess Bubblegum.

princess bubblegum

After pulling a stash of bubblegum pink fabric and aqua/blue fabric, I found a pattern I liked and started cutting.   The end result is this…

modern scrap quilt block

With this block I did not let the pattern’s unpleasant name ( “turkey giblets”) turn me off.  You can find the paper piecing pattern I used at Quilters Cache.  It is a really easy pattern to make and is made up of two triangle blocks that are joined to make the building block of the quilt.

quilt block pieces

I can not wait to see how this quilt top comes together. I think it is going to be a quilt like my “Sun & Sea” quilt where the final overall quilt pattern looks so different from the individual block pattern.

Paper Piecing Monday Scapbeelicious style

This week’s paper piecing Monday is a little different.   I recently joined my first quilting Bees – one of them is a do.Good.Stitches circle and the other is a fabulous collection of fellow bloggers who set up “Scrap-bee-licious”.  For both Bee’s I was “queen” this month, which means I am choosing the pattern/colour scheme for my fellow quilters.

The Scrap-bee-licious Bee caused me the most consternation as this quilt is not going to charity, but will be staying with me. I have only kept one quilt so far in my quilting history, so I had to think long and hard about what I really wanted.  So after much umming and ahhing, hair pulling and mind changing I settled on…

scrap modern paper pieced block

… low volume.  A couple of weeks ago Sarah at No Hats in the House posted photos of one of the most amazing quilts I have ever seen. Her “Once Upon a Forest” quilt took my breath away.    Inspired the beauty of this quilt, I have asked my fellow Bee members to make me a scrappy low volume paper pieced block or two.

I have not selected a specific pattern to be followed but have asked them to make me any 12 inch paper pieced block they want.  There are so many fabulous free paper piecing patterns on-line, including this one (called Circle of Geese) from Pieced by Numbers or Julie at 627handwork’s Block Rockn’ blocks or Quilting on the Squares Compass Collection.

As I discovered with this block there is a method to getting contrast and detail when you are working with low volume.  When I pulled fabric for this block I pulled two different type of low volume from my stash:

1.  Pastel, soft solid fabrics.

pastel fabric pull

2.  Predominantly white fabrics

white fabric pull

The importance of the contrast these two different low volume fabric selections give you was highlighted to me when I made the mistake of using two pieces of solid light grey in the background.  In the resulting block…

block mistake

..you can see how the grey pearl bracelet in particular distracts/hinders/muddies the circle of geese pattern.  A little unpicking and some re-sewing later and the block was just what I wanted.  I am now excited to try a paper pieced star or two using these colours and I can not wait to see what my fellow Bee members come up with.   This is going to be fun.

Lost Geese Quilt top finished

This week I managed to get my “Shell logo” inspired flying geese quilt top finished.  By the time I had finished laying out this quilt top it had earned the name “Lost Geese”, can you guess why?

modern scrap flying geese quilt

Yep is it a little crazy… but kind of fun.  Lots of novelty fabric and fun stuff to make the eyes really explore the madness.

lost geese quilt detail cu

I had a lot of fun making the “geese” go all over the place. I love the lack of pattern or rhythm to the piecing (though it frustrated my husband a little).  Too really throw things into disarray I added a smattering of yellow triangles on a red background.  Chaos rules!

modern flying geese scrap quilt

I paper pieced these blocks as I love to have sharp clear triangles in my flying geese and paper piecing is the only way I personally can get that precision. My original post has a paper piecing pattern you can grab if you are interested in trying some geese.

back lit quilt detail

This top has been added to the pile that need basting.  I am going to see if I can convince my hubby to help me again this weekend to baste a quilt or two.

Inspiration can come from the strangest places

I am constantly amazed by what inspires me  – where ideas and colour combinations for a quilt come from.   This week’s work in progress is a good case in point.

modern scrap flying geese quilt topThis bright scrap quilt was inspired by my local petrol/gas station logo.

shell-logo

Strange I know, but I was filling the car up one day and realized I really love these two colours together.  I promptly came home and pulled some scraps and made up this block.

stop flying dutchman

I originally posted about this flying geese pattern back in April this year.  You can find the original post, with a free paper piecing pattern here.  A couple of months later and I got the urge to finish this quilt top, so I pulled fabric from my stash as well as from my scrap pile and started work.

workspace

Now I have a stack of blocks and I am gradually putting the top together.

scrap modern flying geese blocks

My placement is random and fun and I have thrown in a couple of reverse blocks to break things up.  It is kind of fun making the arrows go all over the place.

shell geese detail

I have also been thinking of making some yellow arrows with yellow background, but I am not sure about it.  Any thoughts?