A new year, a new Project Quilting season. And again, I haven't posted anything on the blog since the last Project Quilting challenge. But I'm not going to go down that path. It is what it is. But I do have a new project to post!
PQ13.1 started last Sunday with the announcement of the first challenge. It is called "All the Colors". The question that was asked is "what can you make that is very, very colorful?"
I was thrilled to see that topic! Lately, I have been really loving bright colors. I don't know if it is my way of coping with the uncertainty of the pandemic, or if I'm just bored with muted shades, since I just finished a quilt using my Thimbleberries prints from the mid 2000's. Either way, this challenge is right up my alley.
I started thinking about what to make and was quickly overwhelmed with uncertainty. Did I want to start a theme, and try to make each challenge related to each other? I already have way too many mug rugs, so I really don't want to go that route. Pincushions? Baby Quilts? Knitting project bags? The problem with that approach is that, based on my past experience with PQ, the challenge could be anything! It could be to use up scraps or to use only one fabric. Or to make to something tiny, or make something big. Use a specific block, use a specific color, Make something to wear, or three dimensional, or, or...! I didn't want to come up with a theme only to have it be shot to heck with the very next challenge!
OK, a theme is out the window and I decided to just focus on one challenge at a time. For this first one, I had no idea what the end result was going to be, but I had lots of ideas about what to do. I considered using up a lot of half full spools of thread by playing with the special stitches on my sewing machine, then make something out of the resulting fabric. Then I thought about the colorful zippers that I had purchased in bulk a few years ago, with the intention to make a bunch of small bags to sell at a craft fair. That never happened, so maybe I could sew them all together, or applique them to something? These ideas, of course, all came about 2 o'clock in the morning when I was lying in bed trying to get back to sleep.
The next day, I decided to go poking around in my bin of left over blocks and pieces thereof to see if there was anything inspiring there. I discovered some 'waste triangles' that were left from a quilt that I made from brights and solid black and knew that I had my fabrics for this challenge. The fabrics are bright, bright, bright! I learned about waste triangles in the book 'Nickel Quilts' by Pat Speth. It fascinated me that something could be made from such small triangles. And working with them is so much easier because they are already sewn together into half square triangles.
I sewed the half square triangles together into flying geese, added some solid black strips to even it out and ended up with an 8 inch square. Some of the geese are wonky, and some of the points are cut off, but since it is intended to be a potholder which will get used and dirty, I am happy with it!
Lovely!
ReplyDeleteColorful and useful. PQ13.1 for the win!!
ReplyDeletefantastic! I call those "bonus triangles" because I get to make more with them :)
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