Quilts Under Construction

Euroa Quilt - An Adventure in English Paper Piecing

Euroa Quilt English Paper Piecing Original

Behold the exciting beginnings of my first English Paper Pieced Quilt! Inspired by a tile floor I saw last year in Australia. It is a running joke among quilters that we take pictures of tiles because they are so inspiring. But I've never actually made a quilt that literal in its interpretation. I am now though.

Because I finished the Park Quilt I felt totally justified in starting this one. Despite my over 40 quilts under construction I've found that I can't have more than 2-3 in the hand work stage. It simply takes up too much time and head space to be fighting among handwork projects. But with my big applique project done I could move on to this one.

Euroa Tile Inspiration for Quilt
Maze and Vale dropcloth

While the inspiration for the pattern itself came from the tile floor, the colour scheme was lifted from another Australian influence. We visited Leslie Keating from Maze and Vale while in Melbourne. Our screen printing lesson was incredible, and her fabrics are dreamy. What I truly loved (aside from the light in her studio and her lovely presence) was the drop cloth on her work table. Periodically she has to switch it out. The old one then gets sold as bits of fabric or dropcloth art. This was the piece I got from her in the sale. Originally I thought I would stitch it up as a whole cloth piece, but once I started down this quilt's path it became integral to the entire thing. It dictated the colours and I am cutting it up, bit by bit, to be included in the quilt.

To start the quilt I drew out the single block pattern in Illustrator. Knowing that I don't work small (when it comes to the size of quilts) I wanted to be able to ensure consistency of the pattern and to make multiples in one go. I am doing English Paper Piecing with my templates, so I print out 4 little blocks at a time on a sheet of cardstock. I could have easily done this with foundation paper piecing on my machine. The pattern works either way. 

Scraps for the Euroa Quilt

The next step was actually picking the fabric. Into the stash I dove! I picked out light and medium greys, a few teals and mints, the two mustard fabrics I had, some light pinks, and various creamy low volume prints. I decided to skip the black and whites, preferring to focus on grey. After I made the first couple of blocks I decided it needed more depth in fabric choices so I did a little bit of shopping. Some more mustards and more white/grey prints. The block results in some interesting secondary patterns. Playing with value or colour can drastically change the way this looks. I decided, however, to keep with the original influence and go completely scrappy.

I have a feeling this messy stack will be sitting on my cutting table for the next year or so.

My plan/goal is to make this quilt 80'' x 80''. I just don't like small quilts. Each mini block is 4'' x 4''. That means I will need 400 of them! I make them 4 at a time. Then make 4 of those and sew them together, calling those a mega block. So I will need 400 mini blocks, or 100 blocks, or 25 mega blocks. Whew. It's scary when you write it out that way. One block at a time. Like any journey that starts with the first step.

English paper Piecing Prep for Euroa Quilt

From start to finish for one block is probably about 2 hours of work. That includes the printing, cutting of the template, picking fabric and prepping blocks, thread basting, then sewing it all together. So far I have never just sat and done that start to finish. This is my one the go/summer sitting/TV watching project so it gets done is spurts and with interruptions. That's the point of a hand sewing project like this after all. 

I am pretty much brand new to English Paper Piecing and jumped in with my own pattern. It suits me just fine. I've poked my fingers and am developing callouses. I am still searching for my favourite needle (small enough but strong enough not to bend). And so far I haven't removed any papers. I'm kind of nervous about that step for some reason. It's fine for now, I have plenty of paper and there is no rush. 

This isn't the first quilt made from this inspiration. Lori made this incredible version after I posted the tile floor while on my trip last year. I posted the photo then went out of wifi range for a few hours. When I logged back in she'd already posted a block she'd made! Her finished mini quilt is awesome! Since I started the project I've had numerous requests for the pattern so I am prepping that to go live in the next couple of weeks. Watch for it. In the meantime, slow down and sew. 

UPDATE: The Euroa Templates are now available.

Quilts Under Construction - September 2016 Update

Quilts Waiting to Be Quilted - Tag Fabric

Oy.

Things seemed a little crowded in the studio lately and my hand written Quilts Under Construction list hard to read. A lot of movement on the list! Then I added things up. Rather than go down, the number went up. So be it.

45.

Yes, 45. Still, I am totally okay with that. It sure represents a lot of making. But it is always around this time of year that I get in the mood to finish. Finish. All. The. Things. I don't know that I could actually do that without starting something new. But I can make my way through a good chunk. Starting with quilting the 5 quilts I have basted. That seems like a good place to start a finish.

Quilts Being Quilted

  1. Low Volume Circles - oh, the hand quilting. But it intimidates a lot less now so maybe this winter.
  2. A potential book quilt, if I decide to write the book.
  3. Tag Fabric quilt 1 - a future pattern.
  4. Tag Fabric quilt 2 - another future pattern.
  5. Tag Fabric quilt 3 - alternative to a pattern.
  6. Kenzie's Quilt - a baby quilt I've never shared here before.

Quilt Tops

  1.  Arkison in Australia
  2. Forgiveness
  3. Kawasaki's Theorem/Maze and Vale
  4. Scraps Go Round
  5. Inception Pillow from the Mighty Lucky Challenge in July
  6. Mod Christmas Tree II
  7. Giant Hexagons
  8. Circle Lattice
  9. Low Volume Shoeman's Puzzle
  10. Red Oh Canada
  11. Cirrus Solids Pinhweel Play
  12. Checkerboard

Blocks/Unfinished Tops

  1. Evil Genius' triangle quilt that only needs side borders to fit her bed
  2. Kids' clothes quilt started in Gee's Bend workshop
  3. Hand pieced Diamonds
  4. Neutral Values
  5. Studio Slash/Edges Improv Piece
  6. Indigo/Book of Negroes/Slaveship quilt
  7. Mid Mod Bee quilt
  8. X-Plus blocks from Creative Live Low Volume Class
  9. Respite from Bill Kerr design workshop
  10. Chandelier quilt that needs to be fixed and resewn
  11. Monster's name Quilt
  12. Park Blocks
  13. Pink Pinwheels from Creative Live Pinwheel Play class
  14. Nobody, a bias tape experiment from January Might Lucky Quilt Club
  15. Tula Stripes from July Mighty Lucky Quilt Club
  16. Summer Bloom
  17. Water
  18. Y2K
  19. March blocks
  20. Small Wonders
  21. Liberty Circles
  22. Sherbet Stars
  23. Diamonds and Logs
  24. Up, Up, and Away
  25. Beach Grass version two
  26. Splendid Sampler
  27. Lotta blocks from pattern testing

Now, as I'm writing these, I see there are a number of projects I haven't blogged about. Some I can't blog about yet, but others are long overdue. Sharing them with you here will help move them forward. And I can tell you this, I won't be sewing anything else until at least 5 of the quilts listed at the top as being quilted are bound and done. Yay for deadlines! I'm sure I will need some playtime after that, so expect to see more then for sure.

People often say that seeing a list like this of their own work is frightening or depressing. Not I! It merely represents a heck of a lot of creative action.

What's on your list?