Monday, June 30, 2025

Bees on Flowers - Painted art quilts - Bee on Camasia

This is a continuation of a previous post about the making of 2 bees on flowers art quilts.

I decided to paint the one with the purple Camasia flowers first.  They are a native plant to my region and when they bloom, they are such an amazing shade of purple with stark yellow stamens on long stems.  The bees just love them.   And so do I, especially when you are sitting in a field of them.  Below is a picture of my sister and mother near Yelm, WA.


After I had the sketch enlarged, I placed the image on the light box and traced it onto the PFD fabric.  When transferring the image to the fabric, I usually use an engineering pencil and use a light hand so that the lines virtually disappear after the painting is done. 


The PFD fabric was then taped to a foam core board.  I got out all of the painting supplies in the colors that I picked for this picture.  I find that trying to closely match what's in the picture yields the most realistic results.


I mixed up all of the colors and added a bit of extender and white into their own paint cells.  Coffee stir sticks come in really handing when mixing paint.  I have to admit that some of my paints were old, and even though the tops were tightly screwed on, the paint basically hardened a bit.  I have to remind myself to get newer paint next time.  So, here is the painting part all done.  I let it dry overnight and then ironed it.


Stay tuned to see how much this piece changes when the thread sketching part is done.

Monday, June 23, 2025

Five Ladies

I decided to really stretch myself and make an art quilt with 5 ladies on it.  This was a jumping off point after the series of the 10 Garden Ladies.  Every time that I've made faces and hands, there is something that just didn't look right.  So tackling 5 in one piece is going to be a knuckle biting experience.  Wish me luck.

I found an inspiration photo of 5 ladies making slightly goofy poses in an ad for Gundrun Sjogen clothing.  I traced the picture and had it enlarged 700% at my local print shop.  I'ts 38" H x 53" W. Here is the starting pattern for this piece.


As you can see, the faces all look ghoulish, and I know from previous pieces that at this stage that's OK.   I needed the relative size and placement of eyes and mouth to make the faces look realistic later.  I went searching on the internet and found 5 copyright free images of different women that would work for this piece.  I downloaded them, sized them to fit and tacked them up in place on the starting pattern.  A little more work needed to be done to get the sizes just right; one face is too small, another is too large, etc.  And, of course, they will all look very different when done in fabric.  


I hope you like following the steps so far!

Monday, June 16, 2025

Bees on Flowers - painted quilts

I made a few small art pieces with bees on flowers several years ago.  A recent sale of a couple of them led me to wanting to paint a few more.  I have hundreds of pictures of bees on flowers, and it was hard to narrow it down to the ones that I thought would look good as art pieces.  Here are 2 that I landed on:



The technique that I use for this kind of art quilt is to trace the details of the picture using a light box.  I don't draw the background, though.  That part comes with the painting of the blurry details.  Here are the tracings of the photos:



Next, I took the tracings to my favorite print shop in Portland and had the tracings enlarged so that they would be 12" on the long side.  That seems to be a size that is attractive to buyers.

I hope to show you some progress on the actual pieces in the next post.  

Monday, June 9, 2025

Mod Squad Challenge 2025 - Part 3 and Final - J.A.R.

This is a continuation of 2 previous posts about the making of the Mod Squad Challenge for 2025.

I decided to quilt the piece with 4 different colors of thread - purple to match the background, yellow, peach, and sea green.  The stitches are 1/4" apart and were randomly placed to both show and highlight the threads.  Like most quilts, it looks more interesting in person than in the picture.  

I named it J.A.R. (for Joanne Adams Roth and for the colors of Jonquil, Avid Apricot, and Retro Mint).  It measures 24" W x 36" H.


I hope you like it!

Monday, June 2, 2025

Preparing fabric for applique

I prepared some fabric for my machine applique class by following a technique using Mod Podge.  This was shown on The Quilt Show by Kestrel Michaud in episode #3303.

You  mix 1 part Mod Podge with 3 parts hot water.  So, 1/4 c. mod podge with 3/4 c. hot water makes 1 cup of dilute "glue" to bind the fabric threads to each other.  What it does is to keep the tiny thread edges from fraying as you stitch them down.  For a lot of machine applique, it doesn't really matter.  But when you're make an art piece using raw edge techniques, especially the face, it looks so much better when the threads don't ravel.  

I laid the pieces out on a Teflon sheet, then mixed the Mod Podge and painted it on the pieces.  


I let it dry overnight, peeled them off the Teflon sheet, and then cleaned up the Teflon sheet with a scratch pad.  The pieces are pretty stiff, but the color doesn't change once it's dry.  (Below is a picture of the pieces when they were still wet.)


I hope you get a chance to use this technique!  And I hope my students appreciate the extra step I've taken to ensure their success.