This patchwork test was a prelude to my Polar Babies Quilt and Pillow pattern. I had sketched the living daylights out of a potential layout for this quilt, but at some point, I gotta get my feet wet and sew the darn thing. I imagined each of my appliquéd animals to sit in a square that had a sense of “landscape” and I had an idea for a technique involving curves. I used some pretty little charm squares from my friend Marisa’s “Meet The Gang” collection plus a few solids. I made a stack of 3 squares, cut 2 freehand wavy cuts, then rearranged the tops, middles, and bottoms of each square to create 3 different mini blocks. I repeated that twice, resulting in 9 mini blocks. To stand in as my polar characters, I cut out motifs from one of the prints and ironed them on with fusible webbing.
Sometimes when I am trying to decide between layouts, sashing vs. none, etc, I take photos of it with my phone. That way I can remember what each option looked like and scroll from one to the next. Also, there’s something about looking at a photo that flattens everything out and helps me to really see the composition and proportion better. You can see the final quilt here, in my post about it from this past fall.
Here’s some pleat practice that I did before making my Pleated Pillow Trio pattern. I like to explore as many options as possible. Machine stitching, hand stitching, different widths, etc.
For a while, I was in a scallop-making phase. I believe scallops are the new ruffle! I still haven’t quite landed on “the one”. I struggle to make my patterns struggle-free for the end user. If it’s too fussy or not easily achievable I keep trying or move on. I save all of my mini proto test swatchie things, even if I don’t end up using them or am not happy with how they look. There is always something to learn from them for the next idea!
How do you test out an idea or technique?
Thanks for sharing in your process. I think it is helpful to understand the work that goes into getting an idea from sketchbook to production and how many steps there are in the process- as always you have illustrated that in your clear and upbeat, fun way!
Yes, so so many steps! Always more than you think, too.
I use excel a bit to plan out pattern sizes and quilt designs … is that a bit cave man from the office? And I do a lot of scribbling on paper too. What I really struggle with is fabric choices – putting different fabrics together – so things look interesting – I always worry my choices are way too safe and a tad dull. I’d love a handbook on that!
Sounds like you like a little left brain with your right brain! Nothin’ wrong with that!