Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Fractured Art Quilts.....

I have been neglecting my blog as I have been furiously working on my "section" of a fractured art quilt project that is due at the next meeting of Cyberbee (a spin off group of our local Capitol Quilter's Guild.) A group of five of us are participating in a year long "fractured art quilt" project. "What is a fractured art quilt you ask?" Let me explain. Each member of our group (5 in this case) has selected a picture, print or photograph that we would like to have made into a fractured art quilt. Here is JoAnn's picture -- we drew names to see whose quilt we would work on first and JoAnn won the draw.
Before our first meeting we took our picture to Kinko's had had it blown up to the size we would like our finished piece to be. After having it enlarged, we were to cut it up into pieces (in our case the picture has been cut into 5 pieces as there are 5 participants). Each participant selected one piece of the picture to replicate putting her own artistic spin on her interpretation of the piece in "fabric." Here is the piece I picked...

As this was the first project of this nature that I have ever worked on -- I had no idea what I was in for! It is absolutely critical that the pieces are placed on your rendition "exactly" where they are on the photocopy. Why?? Because if you do not make an identical replication (as far as placement goes) then, when the owner of the pieces goes to assemble the quilt -- things won't line up. Having said that -- I put together and took apart my little "slice" of the fractured quilt at least three times -- trying to get things to line up properly. After many attempts and revisions, here is my "slice" of JoAnn's quilt....

This was truly a learning experience. Here is a picture of my interpretation and actual photocopy - side by side...

JoAnn will receive my piece, as well as all the others at our next meeting this Thursday. Eventually she will assemble the pieces, quilt, bind and complete it to her liking. Here is a picture of all five participants' pieces (the quilt's ownder did two slices). I can't wait to see it all put together. This was a really great adventure.

2 comments:

  1. You did a FANTASTIC job on this! I can't wait to see it all together. I'll be there, but I'll be there late, and will probably have Jenny with me. No rest for the weary!!! xo

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  2. This turned out unbelievable! Great job on the first slice quilt.

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“Invisible threads are the strongest ties.”
― Friedrich Nietzsche