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amy butler

work in progress

medallion quilt for charity, round-robin style.

Charity Medallion by Kim Soper/Leland Ave Studios

medallion quilt by Kim Soper/Leland Ave Studios

If you follow me on Instagram, then you are probably familiar with The Long Island Modern Quilt Guild’s medallion quilt challenge. Each member was asked to make a medallion center, which we brought to our June meeting. At the meeting, all of the medallions were thrown into a large grab-bag. We each selected from the bag (if we pulled our own, we couldn’t keep it!). And then, over the summer, we were required to add 10″ of border to the piece we selected.

This is the medallion center I pulled (this photo shows it straight from the bag!):

IMG_3481

I was immediately drawn to the pink and green tones of the Amy Butler fabrics, and knew that I wanted to stay away from the brown and orange of the Anna Maria Horner print. With that decision made, I started pulling fabric. I added in some yellow and grey, some red-orange and pinkish-purple and before I knew it, I pretty much included every color in my stash! The center blocks looked like arrow tails to me. I’m not sure if that was what they are intended to be? But that was what I saw, and so I went with it.

Thus, inspired by the arrow “theme”, I created a border using Carla at Grace & Favour’s Arrow Block combined with some colorful flying geese. If this block looks familiar to you, it should! A few years ago, I included this block in my Long Island Modern Sampler.

medallion quilt by Kim Soper/Leland Ave Studios

This first border, however, was only 4″ when finished. I still needed to add another border (or two) that totaled an additional 6″ in width. That was more of a challenge. I really loved the first border and wanted to enhance it, not distract from it.

My initial thought was to make a border of 6″ blocks that coordinated with one another, but were all different. However, it felt too busy to me.

medallion quilt by Kim Soper/Leland Ave Studios

I liked the crisp look of the small arrow tails in the upper-right hand corner, so I made a few more. And by a few? I mean, 45. But I still wasn’t sure it was quite right. I was stumped on how to pull it all together. So I put a call out to my friends on social media! Sarah (Smiles Too Loudly) suggested that the arrow tails needed room to breathe. Melanie (Mel in the Attic) agreed. Kirsty (Bonjour Quilts) suggested a strip of white between the two borders. So I auditioned not one, but all of those ideas. And some others, as well!

medallion quilt by Kim Soper/Leland Ave Studios

medallion quilt by Kim Soper/Leland Ave Studios

medallion quilt by Kim Soper/Leland Ave Studios

medallion quilt by Kim Soper/Leland Ave StudiosIn the end, Kirsty’s suggestion aligned best with my original plan. . .well, my second original plan. . . so that is the one that I went with.

medallion quilt by Kim Soper/Leland Ave Studios

And I really, truly, love it! I wanted this quilt to fall in the category of “Modern Traditionalism”. I know that this quilt is going to another member of the guild that might not be as far along on the modern spectrum as others. I feel like this medallion quilt bridges the gap between modern and traditional quilters.  I can’t wait to see what *direction* my guild friends take it next!

quilting events and conferences

quilters take manhattan: my take.

With Amy Butler Kim Soper/Leland Ave Studios

Quilters Take Manhattan

This weekend I hopped on the Long Island Railroad (or as we call in in these parts, the L.I.R.R.) with my mom, and we headed over to F.I.T. to attend The Quilt Alliance’s annual fundraiser Quilters Take Manhattan. Neither of us had attended before, and we weren’t really sure of what to expect — so we went into the day with an open mind and just enjoying the chance to hang out together and see how it went!

And now, I’m gonna give you the lowdown on the event using my scientifically-developed rating system of: “Meh” vs. “Awesome”. Lucky. You!

Quilters Take Manhattan

As we walked in the door, we were given the opportunity to buy raffle tickets (see my hand) for prizes that I can honestly say I would have loved to have won (spoiler alert: I didn’t). People won ginormous baskets of fabrics of all sorts — solids, Amy Butler prints, moda prints — there was a sewing machine, an AccuQuilt Go, every type of ruler you could imagine, a Rowenta iron. . . definitely some great loot. Alas, my mom and I left with nothing but the swag bag. But it was fun, nonetheless. The takeaway: Prizes from the event – Awesome.

Quilters Take Manhattan

Then as we made our way to our seats, I literally bumped into Amy Butler. She is every bit as amazing and lovely in person as I would have imagined her to be! She was the keynote speaker, and was seriously so inspiring! I can honestly say that my mind is still marinating all of the pieces of information that it took in from her lecture. Instead of her just telling her story of how she went from an art student named Amy Butler to being . . .AMY BUTLER household name and quilt fabric designer extraordinare, she relayed her struggles to maintain her inspiration for what she does AND gave us the tools she used to overcome our own mental blocks and fears. Her speech was very generous in the details that it gave, and her honesty in telling it made me even more of a fan. The takeaway: Keynote Speaker – Awesome.

Quilters Take Manhattan

The next speaker was Mark Dunn, the founder of Moda Fabrics. His lecture focused on the antique quilts that he collects and from which he then creates some of Moda’s reproduction fabric lines. The proceeds from these “Collections for a Cause” fabric lines are then used to support various charities. Quilters Take Manhattan

I fell in love with this quilt, which used a cheddar-colored sashing to separate the Ohio stars. What I loved most about it is the unfinished sash on either end. Whether it was intentional or not (maybe the quilter ran out of the chrome fabric?),  it seemed modern and fresh. The takeaway: I didn’t expect to enjoy this part of the show as much as I did. While not Awesome, way better than a Meh.

Quilters Take Manhattan

The afternoon was less organized than the earlier half of the program. We walked around viewing the quilts that had been made as part of a contest sponsored by Quilt Alliance and Cherrywood Fabrics (have you seen these fabrics? they’re hand-dyed and feel like suede!) and previewing the cottons and voiles in Amy Butler’s new line “Glow”. I had a hand at the City Quilter’s long arm machine – a HandiQuilter HQ Sweet Sixteen — and it was probably the best thing I’ve ever done. I am truly in love with that long arm machine. I think I had a dream about it last night. The takeaway for me: I need a long arm machine ASAP.

Quilters Take Manhattan

There was also an introduction to the Quilt Alliance’s new initiative Quilters’ S.O.S., in which hundreds of quilt-makers are interviewed in a two-minute video which is then transcribed  and uploaded with a photo of the quilt to a digital archive. The intention is to create an oral history surrounding the quilts that we make to have for future reference and research. The takeaway: we should all be doing this. I’m not particularly comfortable with myself on camera, so, You go first. I’ll follow.

(ps – I snapped this photo while Melanie Testa was giving her oral history. Unfortunately she didn’t make it into the picture. She hand-dyed all or most of those fabrics. Amazing, right??)

Quilters Take Manhattan

A few quilters then participated in a speed-quilt building contest, during which the raffle winners were announced. The takeaway: Speed Contest – Meh. I didn’t really see the point. Although Mark Lipinski’s emcee-ing of the event was Awesome.

Quilters Take Manhattan

My Conclusion: we only attended the main event at F.I.T. — though there were many add on events throughout the weekend that we could have enjoyed – if I didn’t have a house full of kids to get back to! There was a cocktail party at Victoria Findlay Wolfe’s loft (how cool is that?), tours of the fabric district with Mark Lipinski, and workshops at the City Quilter. I don’t know if the event is quite where it needs to be that I would recommend traveling from afar to attend, but it is only in its fourth year of existence, and from what I have heard, it’s getting better every year. I’d say it’s definitely worth checking out, and in a few more years, I’m sure it will be a hot ticket to get!