Sunday, July 25

turning 30 project - vol. III


so, here is the reveal of the first finished quilt. summer was here in denver over the 4th of july weekend, so i took the opportunity to give her quilt to her in person. i was really excited to get this quilt finished and very pleased with how it turned out.

summer has always liked the purple since i can remember. the fabulous fabric she chose would have been complimented nicely by purple, but i wanted to do something unexpected, so i bordered the quilt in a terrific cranberry color. i love how it turned out. i did incorporate purple into the quilt in the end though.....i put it on the back.


here is the label for the quilt. it reads:

Turning 30 Project

"Serenity"

1 of 7

Made for: Summer
September 18

Designed & Quilted by: Shawna Doering
Littleton CO USA

2010

and here is the happy recipient!


read the next installment here:
turning 30 project - vol. IV

Saturday, July 24

turning 30 project - vol. II

on with the project. here is a list of what i wanted for the quilts:
- i wanted to create the design myself
- i wanted each quilt to contain a piece of everyones fabric
- i wanted each quilt to have it's own personality; to be an expression of it's owner
- i wanted the design to be fun and modern

i took my inspiration from Freddy Moran and Gwen Marston's books "Collaborative Quilting" and "Freddy & Gwen Collaborate Again".



these books are really fun. gwen and freddy use liberated piecing techniques (gwen has written a couple of books on this technique) and they use bright fun colors. freddy says in the first book that 'ten colors don't work - 100 do'. the two of them have breathe life into the quilting tradition. a definite good read! scoot on down to your nearest independent quilt store and pick them up. just having them on your shelf make you smile a bit bigger. (i decided today that i've got to purchase the second one. i've checked it out from the library 6 times!)

here are two specific images from the books that i pulled from for inspiration.



i have plenty of sketches in my quilting design journal, probably too many to share, but here are a couple of them. the second one is the one i ended up using as my final design.



i redrew this to finalize the design and to plan out the center block. the majority of the quilt would spotlight the fabric of the person the quilt was for as well as some coordinate fabrics that i picked out. the center block would then include the remaining 6 fabrics of everyone else in the group. each quilt would have the same design but the fabrics in the center block would rotate in each quilt. it's kind of hard for me (a very visual person) to explain this in a blog post! lol. as the quilts get finished and posted, it will start to make sense. so i used this drawing to number the squares and plan for the placement of the center blocks in each quilt.


i made 7 copies of the master design (before i wrote all over it) and used it as color layout for each one of the quilts. i wanted to make sure that there was no confusion later in the process.


this proved to be extremely helpful throughout this project. having something to refer to was fabulous. i have to write everything down as i go so i remember later, as illustrated in the next picture. this was my master list for all my measurements. sometimes along the way measurements change or i have to make adjustments. when working on seven quilts at the same time that have the same design it is really important that i remember changes i make.


notice i have an urgent reminder to double all measurements! then i crossed it out....plans changed.

i also made a design and measurement layout for the back of the quilt. again, they will all be the same design. there will be boxes down one side of the back. they are a sample of each of the fabrics that people picked and they are bordered by the coordinate fabric that i picked for each of them. they will be placed in birth order (the same order we will all turn 30) in case we forget over time who's is who's. we'll just have to remember the order in which we were born.



read the next installment here:



Saturday, July 10

1st ever blog post.

so, i've been pondering for a couple of days now what should go into my very first blog post. the more i contemplate it the more confused and overwhelmed i get. so i'll give up my perfectionism for the moment and just post. welcome to my blog.


this is a picture of me and my brother when we were small ones.
i think we were adorable.

turning 30 project - the official introduction

i am approaching the big 3-0 and for the most part i am excited and empowered by it. however it has caused me to stop and take notice. the past 10 years since high school have blown by like time does whether you're having fun or not. i started to take an inventory of my life....what i've accomplished, what i haven't and what i want to. more on that later.

i grew up with six other girls my same age. our parents were friends since they were teenagers and in some cases our grandparents were friends as young people. we're long time friends, and coincidentally going to all be turning 30 (hence the title of the project). i wanted to create something that connected us all in our busy lives. since i am a quilter i naturally went in that direction.

i asked all the ladies to go to my mother-ship (the fabric store) and pick out one fabric they felt represented themselves and send it to me. getting fabulous fabric in the mail felt like it was my birthday everyday. it was awesome! everyone participated which made me super happy and it was a ton of fun seeing what everyone picked out.


Summer

Lindsey

Ranetta

Moi

Sharalyn


Jennifer


Julie

read the next installment here:
turning 30 project - vol. II