"improvisation"

So Many Exclamation Points!

Quilters Playcation Cheryl Arkison

A picture is worth a thousand words.

This absolutely sums up my life right now. Summer break from school does not make for easier times in these Covid days. Nor does owning your own businesses. One block, one step, one more day at home, one mask, one walk in the forest at a time.

I’ve made a lot of Exclamation Point blocks in the past few months, a good form of therapy for sure. You can make your own too.

For the record, this is not a posed photo… he came in and did a number of poses as I was trying to capture this potential lay out for a quilt.

Morning Make - May 2020

Morning Make Hand Applique Cheryl Arkison

At the end of April my son decided to learn how to sew All. By. Himself. He made 2.5 quilt blocks, they were awesome. He told me he wanted making a quilt big enough to wrap around himself. He also said he wanted to start the day with sewing, like me. So rather than have any machine work on the go in the mornings I made May Morning Make about hand stitching so I could be available for him. And he hasn’t sewn a stitch since!

I, however, got a quilt top finished in May with that hand stitching. One applique shape at a time.

Aurifil 80 W thread

The background fabric was a single piece of linen I picked up in California years ago. It was intended for a different applique project, but things change! I liked that it was a single piece of fabric, as opposed to something I had to sew together. It also constrained the project in a good way. As for the other fabric choices, I simply went into my solids bin and picked mostly based on size. And ability to match with thread I already had in the house. The green and the periwinkle came first then I chose a yellow to have some pops.

It was absolutely coincidence that I had the spool of Aurifil 80W that matched this vintage mystery fabric in periwinkle. But using it made me want this thread in ALL. THE. COLOURS. for any future applique work.

Improv Applique Cheryl Arkison Modern Quilts

Other than having a general idea of a collage, I started and progressed with no real plan. It looked quite questionable at the beginning, I won’t lie. But halfway through the month I could see the vision come to life. Every couple of days I cut a few shapes out fabrics. Some general shapes are repeated, but never measured to be the same. By cutting a few at a time I could have a bit of control over the distribution of colour. Then each morning I would pick a shape that motivated me or looked good that day and stitch it on.

While it’s been a while since I did any applique, I stuck with my tried and true basting technique. I didn’t invent it, but I will certainly sing its worth.

The original influence came from the collage and painting work of Lisa Congdon as well as the watercolour marks made through Lisa Solomon. That being said, when I was flipping through old sketchbooks I came across an image I made seven years ago that could definitely also be an influence.

Cheryl Arkison Sketchbook

One of the most difficult parts of an applique project for me is then deciding how to quilt it. A part of me worries about ruining the applique with quilting. Or questions whether I should highlight the applique or ignore the specific construction. Needless to say, this quilt top will sit for a bit while I figure it out more.

We’re halfway through June and I decided to put the needles down entirely for Morning Make. And my son still hasn’t sewn anymore himself.

Improv Applique Cheryl Arkison

Clearing Crumbs

Cheryl Arkison Scraps

Are you baking bread these days? I am. About 3-4 loaves of sourdough a week. And that doesn’t include my newfound love of making our own hamburger buns or my daughter’s obsession with pretzels. What I did not account for is the crumbs. With each fresh loaf there is a slippery coating on my kitchen floor, a Goldilocks trail throughout the living room and dining room, and a coordinating set on the butcher block counters. So. Many. Crumbs.

Suddenly the term ‘Crumb Quilt’ makes sense.

Cheryl Arkison Scraps

A few weeks ago we were talking about scraps on our weekly Virtual Trunk Show (Watch it on Instagram Live or IGTV). I shared my scrap sorting method which involves, among other things, an old bread basket filled with anything cut as I go on all projects. I did my session of the trunk show outside that day and it was a bit windy. There was fabric all over the backyard! Of course, the overflowing basket didn’t help the situation. It was time to sort.

It took about two hours to get through it, the pile was quite large on the cutting table. Strips longer than 6” here, scraps bigger than a few inches in their designated colour sorted bin, and all the little bits together there. Then I decided the little bits needed to be sorted into two more distinctions - big little bits and itty bitty little bits. Don’t ask me the sizes, it was all arbitrary.

On my birthday I was gifted the afternoon home alone - a delightful treat during Covid isolation - and took some time in the sewing room. It was glorious! For a couple of hours I sewed nearly useless scraps of fabric to other bits. Over and over again. Trim, sew, press, repeat. All to the soundtrack of Dolly Parton’s America.

Cheryl Arkison Scraps

Eventually I got myself to some random block sizes. Then I remembered that I had done the same thing at some point last year so I pulled out those blocks. That’s a bonus to working with scraps this way: they can always play together.

I’m not sure where these will end up, but it does deal with one of the messes in the sewing room. For now it is the perfect antidote to the world. And a perfect reflection of the crumbs in my life.

No Travel? No problem! Webinar Opportunities

Improv Letters/Words Cheryl Arkison

Oh! The places I went.

Working as a quilt professional has taken me to some mighty amazing places. From the small towns and big cities, quilters are the same. We just to make and create and enjoy the company of others. We are there for ourselves, we are there to make for others, we are there for the fabric. And, if you are one of my students, you are there for me. I consider it an immense privilege to be able to entertain, to teach, all of you.

I miss it.

The travel, while stressful, always came together in truly memorable experiences for me. You’ve brought me to some pretty amazing places and gave me the time to explore just a little. A few times there were language barriers, but quilts do end up being a universal language. Ultimately though, it is the people that make it all worthwhile. Quilters are pretty amazing people. And that’s a universal truth no matter where you are in the world.

Quilting locations Cheryl Arkison

As a teacher and entertainer I loved the moment in someone when they ‘got it’ best. As an improv teacher I’ve seen people struggle with the open endedness then the turn around as something comes together in a beautiful, albeit unexpected way. Or the visible relief when they don’t have to have it all figured out in order to sew. Or the joy in a simple little trick that will make all their sewing easier. Or the laugh when we all realize that we don’t need to take ourselves so seriously.

While I admit that online learning deprives me of those moments, it does nothing to diminish them for everyone else. I’ve played in the online world and always wanted to do more. So let me tell you I am working on it. You know, in between all the homeschooling and running and business and keeping everyone loved and mostly happy.

In the meantime, I’ve opened up some webinar opportunities. This way you can get me in the comfort of your own own for either some sewing/demo presentations or for a lecture/trunk show style presentation. Book with a group of friends, your guild, your store, or even just yourself! We can’t be together just yet, but I can at least show up in your sewing room.

Does this mean I will have to INTERNET to my list of places?