Each month Stuart Hillard answers your quilty questions!
Jill from South Wales emailed me recently asking for my advice on adding appliqué to quilts. I’ve certainly noticed from visits to many quilt shows over the years that appliqué quilts always have a crowd around them. We admire the work but find it daunting – but does it need to be? Here I share my guide to all things appliqué.
Appliqué is the art of adding one fabric onto another as a decorative patch or motif. Rather than piecing the fabrics together, a shape, for example a heart, is applied to a base fabric, and others are added to create a motif. Early examples of appliqué in quilting used ‘broderie perse’, where a single motif was cut out of an expensive printed chintz fabric and appliquéd to a more inexpensive plain or solid background fabric. This was a small piece of printed fabric that could be stretched to decorate a larger quilt. Appliqué in all forms is fun to do, highly decorative and adds a different element to quilt making.
Bu hikaye Popular Patchwork dergisinin October 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Popular Patchwork dergisinin October 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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Handy Hints For Project Success
If you are new to Popular Patchwork or sewing in general, following a pattern can be confusing. We want you to enjoy making the projects in the magazine, so to help you here are some questions we regularly get asked.
Block Of The Month - Point Squares
Block Of The Month - Point Squares
Novel Stitching
This spring, Jane Austen’s House Museum will unveil a very special quilt to commemorate Jane Austin’s life at Chawton in an exhibition entitled: Piecing Together Jane Austen. Elizabeth Betts describes a year in the making.
Wedding Quilts
Diana Woolf takes a fascinating look at the history of quilt making and the designs traditionally associated with weddings.
Handy Hints For Project Success
If you are new to Popular Patchwork or sewing in general, following a pattern can be confusing. We want you to enjoy making the projects in the magazine, so to help you here are some questions we regularly get asked.
Patchwork Of My Life Ruth Singer
Ruth Singer left a much-loved job in museum curating to follow her heart and has since become known for her amazing talents in stitching and fabric manipulation. Her recent projects have ranged from being an artist in residence and honorary fellow at Leicester University Department of Genetics to extending her Criminal Quilts project, which was originally commissioned for the Shire Hall Gallery in Staffordshire. Here we find out more about this versatile and scholarly artist.
Ruaab - A Producer Company Of Women
How a group of women in India have taken their hand sewing skills into the international marketplace.
Abigail Booth of Forest + Found
Louisa Goult talks to quilter and textile artist Abigail Booth, half of the crafts partnership Forest + Found.
Down By The Riverside Competition
Back in May we launched a group design competition, in partnership with Lewis and Irene. Each group who entered was given a 10m length of the stunning ‘Down by the Riverside’ border print and the brief was to design a quilt to incorporate it. The entries were a varied and gorgeous mix of designs and choosing the winning quilts was a challenge. However, judging by the overwhelming response from visitors to the Popular Patchwork stand at The Festival of Quilts, we are confident in our final choice. Here we talk to the finalists about their experience of working as a group for this design challenge.
Stuart's Surgery
Each month Stuart Hillard answers your quilty questions!