Any Color’s All Right As Long As It’s Red (for Basil), Part 1

My paternal grandfather lived to be 91.  Born in Mississippi, he and his family moved to California when he was 2.  While he spent the 89 intervening years claiming a strong Southern heritage, epitomized by a deep love of fried catfish and hush puppies, he embraced the quirkiness that is California by inventing his own word, making up his own song, and spouting personal bon mots that became fact in our family.

“Any color’s all right as long as it’s red.”  This was his response to any inquiry regarding his favorite color.  In an era when men’s suits were limited to a few dark colors – black, navy, charcoal grey – Grandpa added a splash of color with his tie.  He sometimes wore a bolo tie when he wanted to shake things up a bit, but the cloth tie with those three-piece suits was red more often than not.

Grandpa Clark passed away my 17th Spring.  No one in our family ever recorded the words to his song, but bits and piece remain in our memories.  His word, “transmugliforcandanbumshamity”, was 29 letters of nonsense and serious fun to say.  I’ve always thought of it as an inventive curse word, but please feel free to create your own definition.

When I started making quilts in the 1990s, his saying about the color red popped into my head during a visit to a fabric store.  My immediate reaction was to think, “That would make a fantastic name for a quilt!”  And so I began to collect red fabrics.  Over the years, I built up a rather impressive stash of red. The time to make his quilt is now.

This quilt only uses a small sampling of that stash.  Either way, I think Grandpa would like it.

Any Color - Basil - Fabric
A small selection of reds.
Any Color - Basil - Background
A panel of red
Any Color - Basil - Background
Background close up

I will fuse items that represent Grandpa to this panel and add a bit of embellishment before making the sandwich and quilting it together.

This is the first in a series of four, one for each of my grandparents.

How do you remember your grandparents?

Mariner’s Compass, Part 4 (Finished!)

Whew!  This art piece is finished!

It was a near thing, getting it completed before the end of the year.  I had several thoughts urging me on before the calendar rolled to 2015:

  1. I had established a SAQA Visioning Project goal of 4 new art pieces in 2014 (this is the 4th).  No way was I going to miss achieving the goal by mere days.  Not that there’s a gold star or a smiley face or a trophy for the goal meeting.  Instead, there is satisfaction in accomplishing something I set out to do in the time I set to do it.
  2. I refuse to let the busyness of a new job stop me from creating my art, and….
  3. I needed the dining room table cleared of sewing machine, cutting mats, fabric, thread, scissors, Ott lites, and art to make room for Christmas cookies, Christmas cake, and Christmas Eve dinner.  Food, drink, and fabric don’t mix.

Somewhere through the process of creating this piece, I realized its name had changed to Sunburst.  The bright, bright points of color in the compass explode across the  pale, pale yellow of a dawn sky.

What do you think?

**

Sunburst (link to poem)

Compass - Finished 01
Both the art and the duvet it is laying on have some warp. I’d love to know what I am doing that prevents the finished piece from laying flat
Compass - Finished 02
Straight(er) shot. See the sun exploding in the sky?
Compass - Poem Label
The poem label

~

Next up: “Any color’s all right as long as it’s red” –  My Grandpa Clark used to say that.  I always thought the statement would make an excellent art quilt name.  Check back in January for a progress report.

 

Mariner’s Compass, Part 3

I’m impressed with myself.  Even with out-of-town travel for the Thanksgiving holiday, I actually got some quilting done!

I added more quilting within the compass and have begun the process of stitching the rays shooting off the sunburst.  The plan is to have this finished and bound, a poem written and stitched to the back, by the Christmas holidays.

I hope you’re finding time, even if just a few moments, to get something creative done during this busy season. 🙂

Compass - Quilting 04
Additional work inside the compass, just to give the points more emphasis
Compass - Quilting 05
The “rays”

Compass - Quilting 06

Please stop back in a couple of weeks to see if this gets finished.

Do you make time during the holidays to work on your art, or do you take a small break?

Mariner’s Compass, Part 2

It’s been slow going over the last two weeks.  I forgot to mention, in my last post, that I started a new job on November 10th.  With the new job comes disruption to my regular routine.  Things aren’t so completely thrown off kilter that I fail to accomplish anything in my home life, my art quilt life; they are just new and shiny and exciting mixed with busy and longer hours at the office to learn different but similar tasks.

Coupled with a new job and increased responsibility, last weekend was spent visiting Hockey Boy at university and Lacrosse Boy, who came home for a short visit.  The opportunity to spend time with my boys is one of most favorite things to do.  Even my art takes a back seat to the pleasure of being with my family.

By the time this posts, I’ll be on my way back home from a business trip.

Honestly, it’s a wonder I made any progress at all!

Compass - Quilting 01
So far, it’s just stitch in the ditch around all the compass points
Compass - Quilting 02
A closer look but still hard to see any quilting
Compass - Quilting 03
Since the quilting isn’t visible on the front, here’s the back

Please stop back in a couple of weeks to see if I’ve made further progress.

Do you always find a way to keep working on your art, even if only in baby steps, when life gets busy?

Mariner’s Compass, Part 1

For as long as I can remember, I’ve loved the design of a Mariner’s Compass.  Maybe it reminds me of the stars or the sun, celestial orbs with radiant light.  I’m a child of the moon who loves the warmth of the sun, fascinated by the interstellar glory of a supernova deep within the cosmos.  But the Mariner’s Compass isn’t considered an easy design to stitch together so I shelved the idea in the back of my quilt artist brain and told myself, one day, when I’m a “master”, I’ll give it a try.

I’m nowhere near a master in the quilt art world, but it turns out there are tricks and treats available if one only looks.  I came across a Little Bits pattern by Cindi Edgerton at the local fabric shop.  The pattern employs the paper piecing technique.  Always up for learning new techniques and, with the added bonus of finally making my own Compass, I snatched up the pattern and took it home (after paying, of course).

Using fabric from my stash, bright, sunshiny colors each, I dove in this week and created the vibrant block below.  Turns out paper piecing is pretty simple once one gets the hang of it.  Learning this method should come in handy for future projects, using my own patterns.

I intend to ignore the rest of the purchased pattern, discarding the idea to ring this sun with a border of flying geese.  Not a big fan of geese, fabric or real.  I have to dodge real geese on my way into my office building, which is true test of one’s dedication to the day job.  Instead, I plan to offset the compass block on a 45 degree shift from one point in the lower right side of the quilt top.  The remainder of the top will be a soft yellow to pick up the tiny hint in one of the compass points, representing the first hint of light at the dawn.

In the meantime, please let me know what you think of this blast of color.

Compass - Pattern
Little Bits ~ Mariner’s Compass pattern by Cindi Edgerton
Compass - Fabric
Just because it’s a mariner’s compass doesn’t mean it needs to be made in ocean colors
Compass - A and B Blocks
Putting the blocks together
Compass - Compass
The sun shines.  See that tiny hint of yellow on the tip of the 3 o’clock compass point?  There’s the light of dawn

Please stop back in a couple of weeks to see the finished top and the quilting progress.

How open are you to trying out new things?