For the third quilt portrait I turned to Timna Tarr. I first encountered Timna’s map quilts back when I judged QuiltCon. Her work is creative and unique. When she starting making her mosaic quilts I, along with many others, was transfixed. She started with barnyard animals but has progressed to some very unique portraits. Without a doubt, I had to try this technique in my year of portraits.
There is a book out, Stitched Photo Mosaic Quilting. I signed up for her on demand class via Creative Spark instead. The class was great. Timna broke down the technique into simple steps with clear instructions. It was easy to watch it once then head straight to the fabric.
Once you’ve picked your starting image you go right ahead and draw a grid over it. The diagonal grid is a suggestions of Timna’s technique, but not a requirement. Each square of the grid is one 2.5” block. Some will only be one fabric, others are made up of sometimes five! I don’t want to teach the technique myself that Timna gets paid to do, but she breaks it down into a layered machine appliqué to construct each block. I will admit, this was new to me, as was using invisible thread to sew.
I can’t lie it really was not a technique I enjoyed. Sure, I love the end results and overall look, but I didn’t really enjoy making it. So, so fiddly on some of those pieces! And I can honestly say I do not like the look of invisible thread. Yes, it is not that invisible. Partway through the project I kept thinking how much more I would enjoy this if I took the grid effect and then improvised instead. Stay tuned…
The picture I used was from a ski trip this past winter. We were skiing in clouds that day and everything was covered in a layer of frost, including me. It is such a happy memory and translating it into a quilt is a great way to capture it.