And I had some helpers for taking photos yesterday.
I'm still quite happy with the quilting on this one.
I emptied several spools of orange and yellow thread.
Several people have asked how I went about the quilting. The short answer is I marked each straight line using various colors of Frixion pens and quilted with a walking foot. Lots and lots of lines.
3. I repeated Step 2 several times using progressively lighter oranges, then yellows.
4. When I got to my lightest thread color, I focused on the circles one by one, marking and then quilting lines so there were no large gaps/angles between the tangent lines. Each 2-1/2" circle has about 25 tangent lines, and each 3-1/2" circle has about 30 lines.
The final step was to add a few lines at the edges and corners where the quilting lines were farther apart than in the center of the quilt.
I was nervous about using the Frixion pens, but I'm very happy with how it turned out. My favorite color was bright pink. It was visible on the light and dark colors, but not super ugly like the dark blue and black. After quilting I washed and blocked the quilt. Most of the pen marks washed away, and the few that remained disappeared completely when ironed. And there aren't any white ghost marks on the dark fabrics, as some have experienced. Perhaps ironing before an initial wash can set the ink medium, even as the pigment disappears? I have no idea, but I'm very happy with how this particular process worked.
I've entered the quilt in the Home Machine Quilted category of Amy Ellis's Bloggers Quilt Festival.
Thanks for sharing how you quilted this - your painstaking approach paid off big time!
ReplyDeletewhat a gorgeous quilt. The time intensive marking of all those quilting lines was definitely worth the effort - spectacular results. Thanks for the tip about washing before ironing the Frixion - I have had some shadowing in the past, but this might be the answer!
ReplyDeleteIt's fabulous,Dan. Great photo shoot!!!
ReplyDeleteI would love to see this one in person. Marking each line is really dedicated, I am not sure I would have the patience but thinks for the tip on the pens - as I have been thinking of doing some marking as I quilt and was not sure how the frixon pens would work. I do love the quilt.
ReplyDeleteDan, I am completely in love with the quilting on this one. Those negative-space circles are brilliant! Thanks for sharing your technique; look forward to trying it someday -- perhaps on a small pillow, not sure I have the straight-line stamina for anything larger. :-)
ReplyDeleteWow - it's really cool. And I love how you photographed it with the art and skyscape in the background. Thanks for sharing your quilting process, too.
ReplyDeleteVery effective! Reminds me of patterns made by winding thread on pins hammered into a board-quite a Mathematical effect. I've enjoyed seeing the progress of this quilt.
ReplyDeleteWow. That quilting must have taken some time. It was worth it. Amazing!
ReplyDeleteSeriously cool quilting, it's absolute genius.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous and seriously quilt lust worthy.
ReplyDeleteSo you really drew each line... incredible.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing and telling your "secret".
Nana
It's just exquisite.
ReplyDeleteI was not overly enthused when you showed your first pictures of the yellow and orange quilted bits. But you turned it - again! - into a stunning quilt! Sensational!
ReplyDeleteI love this quilt and the quilting just lifts it so far!
ReplyDeleteI was also interested to hear about the Frixion pen experience - I must do some testing as i haven't washed anything that i have ironed the ink out of yet...
I love this. I keep showing it to people because I'm so blown away by those empty little circles in the quilting!
ReplyDeleteSpecial thanks to the lovely Quilting photo posted
ReplyDeleteGreat quilt. Thanks for sharing your quilting process.
ReplyDeleteThis quilt design is beautiful. I particularly like the borders. And the quilting amazing. It must have taken forever. I never used the Frixion pens, but I would have been so worried to mess up the quilt top. Good for your that it turned out ok. Congratulations! And BTW I really like you quilt picture with the buildings in the background.
ReplyDeleteI love the quilting on this. Very nice.
ReplyDeleteLove it.
ReplyDeleteWhat an inventive quilt stitch design---it reminds me of how the spokes of a bicycle wheel come together around the hub. Love the effect and execution!
ReplyDeleteYour quilting on this is just brilliant--I love the concept! It must have taken forever, but the results were well worth it!
ReplyDeleteThe quilt design is so cool. The quilting is so complementary as well :)
ReplyDeleteCaptivating quilt and and quilting! Love the photo shoot, too :)
ReplyDeleteWhat an original quilting concept. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteHi Dan! I'm such a fan of your quilts. You do beautiful work.
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