Exploring Volume

Quilting makes the quilt, they say. When I began exploring the Volume chapter of Carolyn Friedlander’s Savor Each Stitch, I thought I had been thinking about volume all along. I had made five quilts, one for each of the chapters: Line, Contrast, Scale, Color and Emphasis (this one isn’t quilted yet).  I haven’t blogged about all of these — soon, I promise.

BUT, I learned I could use VOLUME to create a unique design.

Solitude! full view2

Solitude!

Susan, a member of our Savor Each Stitch Bee, posted photos of ideas for playing with Volume. I began to think about trapunto. When I think of trapunto, I think of traditional quilts with feathers. Tim Latimer has a good tutorial on how to trapunto the traditional way. He has an amazing Snowflake using trapunto.

I wanted easy and modern trapunto. I searched YouTube and saw this video by Lynn Witzenburg.

 

 

 

How do you easy trapunto?

First, you need water soluble thread.

vanish thread extra

Superior’s Vanish Extra Water Soluble Thread

Second, you use the water soluble thread on top and a matching cotton thread in the bobbin.

Third, layer two pieces of batting under one piece of fabric and stitch where you want the trapunto using your sewing machine.

Fourth, cut away the batting along the edge of the stitching with applique scissors.

Fifth, add batting and backing as you normally would.

Sixth, quilt along the water soluble stitching.

Seventh, bind it and wash it.

trapunto back of quilt top

The white sections are where the layers of batting have been cut away, leaving the two layers of batting; they stay put with the water soluble thread and cotton bobbin thread. 

I applied these skills to my Solitude quilt top. The bottom section of the quilt is trapunto. I made each batting section progressively larger to give it an horizon. I filled in with matchstick stitching.

As Lynn explains in the video, it is easy to snip the top when cutting away the batting. I used applique scissors but they were too sharp on the end, and I cut my quilt top multiple times. If I do this again, I will try a different pair of applique scissors.

Solitude! detail view

I did not trapunto the whole quilt. I experimented with matchstick quilting to get a similar effect. That is the quilting on the top left. I used my walking foot and stitched lines every half inch then filled in with the matchsticks, every other one.

After it was quilted, I realized my “black pencil” looked like an exclamation point, so I added the a trapunto “point” to it. It’s appliqued by hand to the finished quilt. I hand quilted the trapunto sections. It gives it more Volume, and I hope something different to the quilt.

This chapter made me whine the most. I thought I understood Volume and I didn’t need to make an entire quilt using this technique. I was wrong. In Solitude!, I found a design tool I will apply to future projects.

The next and last chapter is Texture. Carolyn’s project is called, “Crazy.” I do like the idea of being inspired by Crazy quilts and their decorative embroidery stitches.

Stay tuned,

Wanda 

How to sew quarter circles

I’m experimenting with quarter circles as part of a quilt I’m making for Savor Each Stitch Book Bee chapter on Emphasis. Quarter circles can be sewn in many ways: (1) pin it; (2) glue it; (3) wing it.

PIN IT

I use silk pins. I pin the larger piece (L looking shape) on top of the smaller piece (pie piece).

  • Stitch it slowly, guiding it along the quarter-inch mark;
  • Press toward the large piece unless you want the pie piece to take center stage.

GLUE BASTE IT

I use applique glue. It’s very thin and washes out. You don’t need very much glue.

  • Glue one side of the pie piece, easing it to the middle
  • Glue the other side of the pie, easing it to the outside edge
  • Sew it, using a quarter-inch seam allowance.

WING IT IMPROV STYLE

  • Layer one piece of fabric on top of another piece of fabric.
  • Cut a curve.
  • Take one of the concave and one of the convex pieces and pin them.
  • Sew just like with the perfect pieces (the first method above).
  • Trim to the size you want.

I like the glue basting method because I can glue a group of them, then chain sew them. With the Pin It method, I am limited by the number of silk pins I have — which isn’t many.

By the way, I used a template from All Things Acrylic which I recently received in a Quilty Box: quarter circle templates

More quarter circles to make,

Wanda