"colour"

Quilt Bravely - Creatively Contrasting Binding

This is the first is a series of posts encouraging you to be different, quilt different, quilt bravely. To bend or even break some rules while pumping up your creative voice. You have the creative confidence, I’m just here to remind you of it.

So you need to bind a quilt? You might be one of those quilters who not only selected their binding fabric with the rest of the fabrics but also made your binding before needing it. That would be awesome! This post is for those of us looking to jazz up our quilts with binding, not just treating it as an afterthought.

Binding selection generally comes as the quilting winds down. Maybe even as the quilted quilt sits and marinates or you muster the energy to do it at all. You might have a default binding - black and white stripes, anyone? You might search for just the right shade of blue that coordinates with everything in the quilt and the quilt back. You might pick the stripe from the fabric collection that the quilt top is made from.

My challenge to you is to embrace a contrasting binding. Whether in colour, style, value, or design a contrasting binding might be exactly what your quilt needs for a stellar finish. If not contrasting, think creatively about what choice you can make. The unexpected one is often the exact right one. Here are some great ways to play with your binding selections.

Colour Wheel Contrast Binding Fabric

High Contrast

Use the colour wheel or simple preference as your guide. Pick a colour not even in the quilt top but that coordinates nicely. Using the colour on the opposite side of the colour wheel is an excellent way to do this. For example, orange and blue.

Shiver

Stripes

(yet to be shared)

Binding Fabric Selection

Highlight a Little Used Colour/Fabric

If you have just a little bit of a colour in the quilt top use the same colour binding fabric to wrap it all together. The examples above show me pulling out the green in the background print, even though there is no other green in the quilt top and using the same coral fabric that is only used sparingly in a quilt with 100 blocks.

Smooch

Lilla

Quilt Binding Options

Look to the Back

You may have picked a fabric that coordinates with the front but doesn’t necessarily use all the colours of the quilt top, go ahead and pick your binding from that fabric.

Lilla

Compose Yourself

Pale binding.jpg

Think White or Pale

Most of us shy away from a white binding, fearing a show of dirt. Let me tell you, that isn’t a fear worth having. It looks absolutely amazing on a quilt. Whether a print or a solid a light binding is an exciting frame to your work.

Morning Make I

Crossword

Pieced Bindings

Insert Highlights in Bindings

Add a pop of a different colour randomly or make intentional inserts to extend the design of your quilt top. This is the moment to really think of your binding as part of the quilt and not necessarily just the frame.

Plus Size

Pieced Bindings

Pieced Bindings

Okay, so all bindings on a not-mini quilt are technically pieced. Use different fabrics to accentuate the design of your quilt top. For example, I made a rainbow of binding to wrap around my Pride quilt. I’ve used leftover strips to create a scrappy binding. Play with it.

Pride Quilt

Binding a Scrap Quilt

Scrap Quilts Call for Anything and Everything

Probably the most commonly used binding for a scrap quilt is some form of black and white stripe. It’s nearly a cliche. Sure, it looks good, but think outside the box. Grey is a good option. As is using the scraps of binding you have stashed all pieced together. Multicolour prints also look great. Or pick one colour you feel is underrepresented in your quilt top and use that.

Values Plus

Wine Gums

Forgiveness

Funky Quilt Bindings

Embrace the Uneveness

One of the reasons people love a stripe on the bias is that there is no concern about it looking ‘off’. And when was the last time you used a plaid or check on a binding? Just run with it and let your eye move around and even be fooled. It’s quite a fun effect actually. Essentially, you are ignoring the pattern to embrace what the fabric can do on the small scale of a binding.

Sewing Machine Quilt

Pocket Squares

Snowflake Quilt Top

Winter in Calgary

Unequivocally, I am a winter girl. When it looked like this last week I texted my two best friends and said we had to get out in that fresh snow for a walk. It ended up being a slippery walk. I neglected to wear snow pants and that was a mistake as I kept wiping out on the ice under the foot of powder. I was wet through to my skin yet I couldn’t help but smile. It was just so beautiful. And I had good company. It was all too good to resist.

That’s how I felt when I saw Nicole’s Snowflake quilt. Modern, bold, and the kind of thing - if I’m being honest - I wish I had designed. I tried to resist, but it is too good. So I slid into my stash and picked fabrics to carry this love of winter year round in a quilt. Her pattern is fantastic.

The pattern provides options for a scrappy look like I did, a four colour version like the cover, and even a really bold two colour one. If you’ve seen anything I’ve ever done you know I went for scrappy. Oh, and low volume. Shocker.

We had fresh snow again this week. I can’t wait to go out for a walk and to come home and quilt this so it is ready for snuggles all winter. It is Calgary, after all, I have many more months of winter left to enjoy both.

Modern Handcraft Snowflake Quilt
Winter in Calgary

Thank you to Nicole Daksiewicz of Modern Handcraft for generously providing me with her pattern.

Solid Scraps Make a Quilt Party

Solid Fabric Scraps

Take one bin of solid scraps, sort them by size, sew them together. See what happens.

In prepping for those doodles I pulled out my solid scrap bin. I dug through it for the first few blocks, picking any oranges or darks for the project while the rest of the fabric looked on forlornly. After the first two doodles I realized that there were going to be a lot of stops and starts and I might as well be efficient. The solid scraps stepped up and volunteered for duty.

Sorted by size they sat patiently until their turn came up. Bit by bit, pair by pair, I sewed them together. The party grew with each seam. Pairs became four, sometimes three. Then four became eight, and so on. Not so much duty as celebration.

Solid Scrap Quilt Top

Eventually, the party required a little organization. I didn’t want anyone to feel left out while, at the same time, I had to make sure they all fit together. So what start out as nothing but sewing two pieces of fabric together at the end of a seam on an entirely different project required a bit of dedicated attention. I puzzled the groups together to make the most effective shaker. This is a party to end all parties!

Well, it was supposed to be a party to end all scraps, but that never actually happened. That’s because we all know that scraps multiply when you aren’t looking! Not so much party crashers, more like the condensation rings left on the wood furniture - they never quite go away. But nearly all the scraps made it in. And the bin is much, much lighter.

Scrap Storage Bin Sunday Morning Quilts

I wasn’t intending to start another quilt. To be perfectly honest, I’m not sure I have. My original thought was to float this piece in another fabric to serve as a quilt back.

Or I could make that idea into a quilt top?

Or I could turn what it is already into a stand alone quilt, a wall hanging?

Or I could wait until the solid scrap bin fills up a bit more and add to the party?

Or this could become pillows?

Or…

So many options. Right now, however, I have no clue and need a different leader and ender project while I sew my doodles. So this party is going into the stack of quilt tops to reflect upon its awesomeness.

Solid Scrap Quilt Top Antique Sewing Machine

More on this sewing machine next week…


Plus Size - Scrap Quilt Extraordinaire

Scrap Quilt Values Plus Cheryl Arkison

Plus Size

96” x 96”

When you get the kids involved in the quilt photo shoot there will always be a Dab. There were a few other moves, if I’m being perfectly honest. Good for laughs, and fun photos.

Finished the binding on this massive quilt recently. It took me a few weeks to get it done due to that whole chronic pain thing and a desire to not sit much. And this is definitely one of those instances where I didn’t quite appreciate just how big of a quilt I was making!

Values Plus Quilt Cheryl Arkison

The entire quilt started with me walking the walk, instead of just talking. An IKEA bag full of scraps that needed to be sorted combined with a few sample blocks. An obsession with making blocks and dealing with all those scraps later and I have a finished quilt. Well, a few more steps in there. But funny how as soon as you finish the quilt your forget all the steps that got you there!

Of course, it helped that I had someone else quilt it for me! When I finished the top my local friend asked if she could work on it. Um, yes! I made up a back with some multicolour prints in my stash and dropped it off. The good thing about a scrappy quilt like this is that an all over design is absolutely perfect. With so much going on in piecing and prints you won’t see the quilting. Well, unless the sun is directly shining on it! Lee picked this great modified paisley. I’m a girl who likes contrast so I really like it against the angular piecing.

All over long arm quilting Quilting By Lee
Pieced Binding Cheryl Arkison

Initially I was going to do a black binding. Too harsh in this case against all the prints. Then I was going to do a black and white stripe but I after tearing apart my stash for the one I had in mind I remembered that I used it on the back! In the end I went with a grey from my Tag fabric collection. The text is written on the bias so it makes a perfect binding. To keep it from being too boring I pieced in other colours where there was grey on the edge of the quilt.

The name - like many of my quilts - has a double meaning. Triple, actually. 1. The blocks are based on a class I teach called Values Plus. 2. I like the double pluses - using the plus blocks to make colour block pluses. 3. Today was a fat day. Hey, we all have them. And when I was lamenting my plus size body I saw the quilt and it made me smile. My body is real, and this quilt is Plus Size.

Plus Size Quilt