This first piece (my personal favorite) was made with three types of handmade fabrics. The largest layer was just commercial fabric overpainted with Lumiere paints and stamped with metallics. The second layer fabric is made from soy silk fibers that I made by layering the colored fibers (warp and weft) on a screen, placed another piece of screen on top and painted the soy silk and screen sandwich with a glue/water mix -- actually saturating it and then rolling over it with a rolling pin on a towel to get out the excess water. I then took the fibers out from between the screens and hung the newly made fabric to dry. The little center square is also made from silk fiber fabric that I made the same way, however after I took the fabric out from between the screens, I quickly painted (it while still wet) with Lumiere paints. Then I hung that to dry. Once both pieces were totally dry, I cut them into squares (square within a square). The first piece I glued down on a piece of 6x6 timtex, covered the entire surface with tulle and stitched around the edges. After that I stitched the second square down, then the third square and quilted over the entire piece with a free motion quilting stitch using metallic copper thread and finished it by binding it with copper tape. Finally, I made a little copper swirlie in the middle with paint.
This piece started out as a piece of sponge painted paper that was layered with fabric, silk, stamped and covered with organza, stitched all over the place with metallic thread and then heat blasted.
This final piece was made using a base of commercial fabric that I painted with metallic paint, layered with silver lame' pieces and covered with a 6x6 piece of bronze organza. I free motion quilted with bronze metallic thread all over the entire thing, then I stitched a piece of embossed copper to the center and copper foil to the edges. The picture doesn't do this one justice as it really is very colorful.
The backs of all three pieces have a piece of texture stamped muslin on the back.
This was an interesting challenge as it made me focus on trying to come up with innovative technique/materials to provide a "twist" to a "standard" quilt block and I think overall, I was successful.
I think I'm done now for a while with the challenges as I want to focus on honing some of the quilting skills I have been learning. It's one thing to go through the motions, it's another to do it with precision and finesse - and THAT is my goal!
looks like you had another good sunday playday :)
ReplyDeleteThese are great pieces - what a fun day!
ReplyDeleteOh I wished we would have been in the same swap, they're wonderful!!!
ReplyDeleteThese are fantastic! You are so talented. Wish I could see them in person. xo
ReplyDeleteI wish I could watch you create your pieces. I love reading the descriptions and think the pieces are beautiful.
ReplyDeleteThey all turned out so pretty. Makes me want to go blast some shiny fabric...thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThese are wonderful!
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ReplyDeleteHoly cow! I just want to crawl right into these pages and grab onto that texture girl! these are awsum!!!
ReplyDeleteCathie, you have made gorgeous pieces here, I love the surfaces and will come back to decide which one is my favourite. Bravo l'artiste!
ReplyDeleteHave a great day,
Andrea
Very, very beautiful!
ReplyDeleteWow, you sure took a simple block pattern and made it look spectacular. I really favor the top two.
ReplyDeleteI love the texture in these blocks. It is so much fun to experiment. I'd love to see a "traditional" quilt done with these blocks!
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