I feel like singing! The designs for both quilts have been given to John for his part. Now the back and forth of where colors go and how big this is and that is, where does this go and what does that mean…all starts.
Most students have no idea how the process goes. I tell about it briefly before the sewing starts but there is a great deal that happens with this. First off, I am very lucky to be working with John Flynn. He is a master at pulling a rabbit out of his hat. I can give him a design and he can make it sing. John cuts the fabric out for each of the kits. Between the two of us the kits come out better than with just one of us. I suppose I work better with a team effort. He might not feel the same way, but I sure do. Two sets of eyes are better than one. One very mathematical eye and one without a clue about the hypotenuse eye.
The way this process starts is the buying of the fabric. I attend Quilt Market in the Spring and Fall where I buy the fabric from different manufactors. It is shipped to John mostly. Some of it comes to me if it is going to be backing or used in the borders. Mostly I have no idea where it is going or what the plan is. So let’s say it all goes to John in Montana. He then cuts off some of each fabric and ships it to me. You see, by then I have totally forgotten what it looks like or what my thoughts on it were. Using those small pieces I design something with graph paper and EQ. Not that I am all that good with EQ, but it gets me to where I can then send a design to John to rework. He has to draft it for the laser cutting. Yes, laser cutting. John has two lasers set up for cutting fabrics as well as his templates. They make sewing a real joy. He has to get the design the way he wants it so that he uses the best layout for cutting the fabric.
That is where we are right now. He has the two different designs needed for Houston Quilt Festival. This year I am doing two different quilts. One of the classes will be the regular, intermediate class that has been offered since 1994. Yes, it has been that long! The quilts have been different designs each year, but there have been that many of them. This class is intermediate because each student starts a quilt with me in class, but then I am no longer with her when the class is over. When she goes home she needs to be able to continue on with the sewing as well as being able to follow the rest of the instructions for borders and any extras. She might also want to change the design using some of her own ideas and this is where the great creative juices begin to flow. But some knowledge has to be ther first for this to work.
This year I am also offering, to those who have taken a class before, a Let Me Surprise You! MORE! class. This will be a push for me. I have designed a little more challenging quilt with a real whimsy flair. It is going to be great…I will know more once John sends me my kit to piece, but I can tell I am going to like this one.
The other design is fabulous as well…if I do say so myself! One of the great things that has come about is the Add On kit feature I offer to students. Over the years it came to my attention that so many students wanted to do more than a lap size/twin size quilt that is offered. So, the Main kit has blocks and then Add Ons are offered to add on to the main kit. They are extra and not necessary to finish a quilt, but I will have the add ons in my sample quilt. With the add ons the quilt can grow from a lap/twin to a king size depending on what I have done with the extras. The Add On can run in price from a few dollars (for yardage used in borders) to hundreds of dollars (for cut out pieced blocks, borders and yardages). That is all part of the Surprise.
There is still room in many classes offered in Houston this year. If you are thinking about going to the show I would love to have you in my class. Check out all the classes by going to Quilts.com and I hope to see you there.
More to come on the process in the making of the kits.