Happy Hallowe'en!

Hallowe'en was always a big deal in the Robson household. When the kids were little, we lived in a great neighbourhood with lots of other kids and Hallowe'en was one of the highlights of the year. Lots of planning and decision making with regard to costumes and makeup. No store bought costumes at our house! Come to think of it I don't think you could go out and buy much, the retailers hadn't discovered this market yet.

1984 was the year of the bathroom wall (most likely in Paris!) and the 2 sided boy - one a tramp the other rather distinguished! For Kate it was those checked tights she had to have when we saw them in a shop in Toronto. She got a lot of mileage out of those over the years. Andrew's costume came from a stash of costumes from my parents that were all based on burlap and which were a great source of inspiration for us over the years.

Then Hallowe'en began to appear in my quilt world and I couldn't resist.

This wallhanging Hallowe'en Memories came from an old issue of Miniature Quilts magazine (issue #11, Fall 1993). Orange was also a colour of cotton fabric that was hard to come by in those days.

 I love the bat with those beady eyes! The wall hanging is machine pieced and hand quilted. It was pieced the "old fashioned" way with templates and scissors, the squares are 1". Rotary cutters hadn't hit the quilt world yet when I made this one.

This wallhanging is called Pumpkin Trio and is from a pattern by The Rabbit Factory.

Now the next generation loves Hallowe'en as much as their parents. This is Evan's quilt Hallowe'en Hijinks. I took a spider web quilt class from Heather Stewart and decided not to go scrappy but to use some of the Hallowe'en fabrics I had been collecting.

Ben's quilt came next and I used the Disappearing Nine Patch pattern. There are lots of versions of this online and it was fun to make.

Hallowe'en Surprises was machine pieced and machine quilted. I made the same one, re-arranged the fabrics for Molly and soon I will have to make another one for our soon-to-arrive grandson (yes, we know Molly is going to have a brother, any day now!). Happy Hallowe'en!!

Everything Old is New Again

The new trend sweeping the quilt world today is "Modern Quilts". I am struggling with the term, with why a style has to be labelled and with why young quilters seem to be drawn to it. When I started quilting and for many, many years I bought fabric because I liked it, that is still how I buy fabric because I like it, not because of whose name was on the selvedge. There was hardly ever a name on the selvedge let alone the name of a designer or line of fabric. I was lucky if the brand was there like VIP, Cranston or RJR. I coveted what I did buy and mixed it altogether in my quilts, the more the merrier! I store it all on open shelves (I like to know if it is going to fade!) sorted by colour. And now I have sorted out the stripes, polka dots, batiks and conversation/novelty prints.

My solids are all packed away from the days when I was into Amish quilts...a great adventure thanks to Roberta Horton and her book An Amish Adventure. Roberta was a huge influence for me and her book is a great exercise in understanding and playing with colour. For someone who made quilts of many prints and no solid colours this was a real challenge, a good one! I went through the book chapter by chapter and di all the exercises. For a while a lot of family had Amish inspired pillows and wallhangings from all the squares I made. I am beginning to think it is time to revisit that era!

All Things Bright and Beautiful was inspired by an old quilt I saw in the 1979 edition of the Quilt Engagement Calendar edited by Cyril Nelson and published by Dutton. The original quilt was made of silks, satins, brocades and velvets and was heavily embellished with fancy embroidery stitches. I loved the geometric pattern behind all the stitches and rich fabrics so I drew it out on graph paper. Then I made templates for each of the pieces and carefully machine sewed them together. When I finished piecing it it reminded me of hot air balloons which is why I hand quilted it in a sort of balloon-like shape. Could this be considered a "modern quilt" today? I made it in the mid 1980's. Here is a detail of the hand quilting, it is stab stitched.

Or maybe this one, Sweet Dreams is a quilt I made for my Grandson, Evan, his first big boy quilt. It is machine pieced and hand quilted (stab stitched). I made it in 2005 before seeing any pictures of modern quilts, it just seemed like an easy way to make a simple, colourful quilt.

Penny Candy is a small wallhanging inspired by the pattern Chinese Coins, it is machine pieced and hand quilted (stab stitched). The fabrics are commercial batiks and hand dyes, some I dyed and some from others quitlers. I made this in 2000 could it be anther modern quilt? I guess I just love to be in both worlds, traditional and modern but with a twist. I think I'll stay away from labels though, make what I like and hope I can inspire others.

The Old and the New

The old...when we were in Calgary visiting Andrew, Christy and Molly I noticed that Andrew's first quilt was looking a little worse for wear. Taking a closer look I realized that the binding was disintegrating and needed replacement. I suggested I'd bring it home and replace it, wash the quilt and let it blow in the sea breeze for a while. Molly was particularly intrigued that the quilt would come back smelling of the ocean!

I made the quilt about 35 years ago, back when fabric choices were very limited here in NS. A friend and I had ordered a lot of Ely and Walker calico prints and the local Woolco had a few other cotton prints. These are a few of the Ely and Walker that I have left.

I think this is the only quilt I have ever made using just 3 colours! If I was making this quilt now it would probably have at least 30 or 40 different prints. The quilt block is called "Andrew Jackson Star", it seemed appropriate for a boy named Andrew, though his middle name is not Jackson!

I was pretty sure I still had some of the red print in my stash, I was delighted to find it and had more than enough to replace the binding. I have done repairs on old quilts before and I always felt odd taking out someone else's stitches. This is the first of my own that I have repaired. I hope it lasts at least another 35 years before I have to replace it again!

The new...I just finished basting granddaughter Molly's new quilt. She had helped me pick out many of the fabrics last year when we visited, all pinks. This had to be a pink quilt! But I couldn't use just a few pinks, I think I have used more than 30 different ones. It was fun to piece and now I am looking forward to quilting it. I am quilting it by hand so it will be a while before she gets it. I just hope she has inherited my patience!