Wednesday 25 March 2015

A spot of Improv

I'd like to say a spot of improv piecing came upon me in the middle of the night and wouldn't let go of me but that would be rather untrue..... I have made one wall hanging in the spirit of Gee's Bend quilts last year and very much liked the process. There is something reckless about it because you have to let go of everything that you have leaned before; to hell with the ruler and rotary cutter, no exact 1/4 inch and seam allowances are ironed just where they want to lay themselves.



Liberating, yes but also a bit unnerving and with a lot of potential for frustration. When I went to Quilt Con I was particularly interested in the Gee's Bend quilts and their improv style. It just appeals to me and whenever I google Gee's Bend quilts I never tier of looking at them. Yet I find it strange that this burning desire doesn't lead me to obsessive improv piecing.

So when I attended the workshop with the lovely Gee's Bend Ladies I knew I was forced for 3 hours to improv piece. It was a strange 3 hours to say the least. All they said was "Sew!" and that was it. I was fine with that given that I have a little bit of experience with it but it lead to some frantic piecing by all participants. Hardly anybody looked right of left and I had the impression that everybody put their head down to produce as much as possible. In a way that was also creative as we worked against the clock.

I took some old denim, cotton from my father's work trousers (he is a baker and still baking at 73 in our bakery) and a whole bunch of Oakshott I had lying around plus some old linen and some text fabric. The outcome was this:



Please excuse the bad image quality as it was taken with my phone. I was ok with it but not thrilled. I liked the yellow small squares intersected with my checkered work trousers fabric best but the rest was just...well....

After that I went home and put it all away for a few weeks. I took it out the other day and started looking at it and then decided to undo most of it and cut some of the larger pieces up again only to sew them back together in a different way. If you don't like it, just cut it up ! That is the beauty of improv.

The outcome is this:


And this I like very much now. I love the dark petrol strips in between as I feel they combine the individual parts. It needs more denim for sure and I have other pieces that I created since and those that are left from the cutting up that should go into it.



It's a piece in progress that I will put away again for a few weeks and see then where it leads me to. 

6 comments:

  1. What you've made is lovely! Great colours and balance.
    I recently found a fabulous website on Gee's Bend Quiltmakers, www.soulsgrowndeep.org -- not only does it have beautiful photos of so many quilts, but there's oral history about the makers which is fascinating.

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  2. It is looking good. I am looking forward to what you do with it next.

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  3. I love the two purple sections you are adding to the mix. Those colours will be a real shot of bright colour.

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  4. The combo in your second version is wonderful. Cool that you have used part of your father's clothing. I agree improv can be fun and also weird. I have recently made an improv DWR and it was crazy fun... just go. No rulers. And if it doesn't fit, just cut or add a bit. Have fun finishing this one. And definitely keep going on it!

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  5. The combo in your second version is wonderful. Cool that you have used part of your father's clothing. I agree improv can be fun and also weird. I have recently made an improv DWR and it was crazy fun... just go. No rulers. And if it doesn't fit, just cut or add a bit. Have fun finishing this one. And definitely keep going on it!

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Thank you for your comments! I love reading them and will answer every question you have on my projects. But I have a very busy daytime job and am therefore not able to thank each and every comment. Please don't be offended if I won't reply.