August 25, 2025

Festive Feathered Forest

Before we were married, my wife purchased a flannel Christmas quilt at a shop in Franklin, TN. This quilt is no longer in our possession, but here's an old photo showing it in the background:


For some time I've thought about making a similar quilt. I even once suggested to Robert Kaufman that they produce a set of Mammoth flannel plaids in Christmas colors. When I saw the Warp + Weft Holiday Yarn Dyes from Modern Quilt Studio, I thought I'd give this quilt a try with those fabrics.


I drafted my own design for the trees, based on a feathered star approach. The "branches" and "stars" are paper pieced; the body of the trees and the large red triangles are cut using a single acrylic template which I made using our library's laser cutter.



I learned I should make a test block or two before committing a design to acrylic. There are a couple of small adjustments I wish I could have made to the template.

I used 8 green fabrics; with 53 trees, I was able to make each tree unique with regards to the fabric pairings.


Most of these fabrics had a minimum purchase of one yard each, which is quite a bit more than I needed. I used leftover fabric to piece the back.



The border seemed a bit wonky from the start. I quilted it with a feather motif, which made it even more wonky.

I could tell this quilt would need to be blocked. I normally block after binding, but this one was so out of shape I blocked it first. I used a laser square to help guide my pinning, and straightened the inner border first.


Here's the finished border:


And finally, here's the label:




August 24, 2025

Wale of a Quilt

I visited Gee's Bend in 2022 for their inaugural Airing of the Quilts Festival. There, I learned about the history of the area's sewing cooperative which contracted with Sears Roebuck to produce corduroy pillow covers -- and how the women were allowed to take scraps of the corduroy home, which naturally ended up in quilts.

I saw several of the corduroy quilts on display during my visit, and I really liked the hefty look of them.



One particular corduroy quilt, made by Mary Lee Bendolph, really caught my eye. This quilt consisted of nothing more than vertical bars of various 1970s colors. Somehow I neglected to get a photo, but I believe that's it in Kelly Spell's Instagram post from the day (see images 1 and 6 in Kelly's post). Kelly also has a great closeup of a different corduroy quilt.

I saw lots of 9-patch blocks in various quilts on that day too.



Inspired by all this, I decided to create a corduroy quilt combining vertical bars and 9-patches.  This is Wale of a Quilt:


I also decided to play with the directionality of the corduroy fabrics. Rotating pieces by 90° gives a different look, depending on the lighting, due to the wale. The fabric has a nap too, so that rotating it by 180° can give a different look as well. The "ghost" 9-patch units in the center are created using these different rotations.


In another nod to the Gee's Bend quilts, I did not attempt to make accurate cuts; in my mind it's "intentionally imperfect."



I'm not sure how machine quilting would look on a corduroy quilt, and it seemed inappropriate for a Gee's Bend-inspired quilt anyway -- so I took a class on hand quilting with Jen Kingwell at the 2024 QuiltCon, with this quilt specifically in mind. I used several colors of 8wt Wonderfil thread in an oversized Baptist fan design. (8wt was Jen's suggestion; I had initially purchased even more colors of 12wt Aurifil.) For marking, I used a strip of template plastic with holes punched every half inch up to 18 inches to act as a beam compass.



The corduroy fabrics are from Robert Kaufman; some are 8 wale and some are 14 wale. I really like the wider 8 wale, but there are more colors available at 14 wale.



I used a Cherrywood fabric in teal for the binding.



The back is a Mammoth flannel plaid. This is a heavy, warm, and cozy quilt.


Here's a look at the label:



The Airing of the Quilts Festival in Gee's Bend is now an annual event. I highly encourage a visit sometime!