For the last five years, I have been exploring the tuning fork motif. I love to interlock them, elongate them, scrunch them up, flip them around, explode them....OK, I admit, I'm obsessed. The latest finished product of my obsession is "The Salt Marsh Near First Encounter Beach," which will be on display in the Art:Abstract - Large category at International Quilt Festival in Houston, Texas.
The Salt Marsh at First Encounter Beach (Tuning Fork #29), 54"w x 64"h) |
I started by searching through my stash and pulling out fabrics for the sand, the grasses, the trees, the clouds and the sky. I cut narrow strips, cut the strips into rectangles, and started making small "tuning fork" units.
Each tuning fork is crafted individually. No strip piecing involved. Here is the basic unit.
I make literally thousands of these tiny little buggers, each approximately 2" x 4". No exact measurements -- I don't use a ruler and I don't care if they are the same size. And then I start placing them on the design wall. Below, you can see the lower right hand corner of the photo coming together:I added some darker greens along the top edge of the dune:
And started adding lighter, limier greens:
And then a few golds and rusts:
It grew and became the monster that took over my design wall:
I added the tree line on the other side of the marsh. And it needed some sky. It had to be moody -- it was a very gray day when I took the picture:
And then I started sewing it together. I don't necessarily sew it together in straight lines. I usually choose a section and start making it all fit together. Like a jigsaw puzzle. It's the part of quilt making that I like the best. In this photo, I've put the lower right together:I always have to make more tuning fork units as I go along. And I do move things around a bit as I sew. Creative editing. Here it is almost together:
I quilted it in long vertical lines, less than 1/8" apart. And I used lime green thread. Here's a closeup of the quilting:
A closeup of the quilting |
I've very proud to tell you all that this quilt has won a prize at Houston International Quilt Festival this year. I won't know what I've won until the awards ceremony on November 1.
I'm sharing this post in the Blogger's Quilt Festival Art Quilt category. Click HERE to see all the quilts and to vote for your favorite quilt!
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LeeAnna