New Colourshott Fat Eighths Picks: Metro

Helen from Archie the Wonderdog blogspot used the Metro bundle:

COTXF8P04_Colourshott_Metro_FatEighthsPack

 

“I was left with the ‘mystery’ bundle which … was revealed to be a ‘neutrals’ bundle.  Not my usual stomping ground but I decided to decline the kind offers to swap (we hadn’t yet seen a photo of this bundle so I had no idea what I was going to get!) and accept the challenge … I’m glad I did”

and so are we.2014-08city walk front

Helen designed a small quilt cum block roll …

“used to keep pieces in the right place while you’re sewing and which rolls up to keep your pieces safe when you’re not using it) as I use them a lot when I’m hand piecing, as well as when I’m machine piecing.  They’re very handy when you’ve got a block with lots of pieces which are the same shape but different colours, as you can carry it to the ironing board, press the seams you’ve just sewn and put the pieces back in the right place.  It helps eliminate that moment when, after piecing the final seam, you hold up your block and realise that you’ve got the star points on backwards or two red pieces next to each other.”

See the full and fascinating tutorial (and photos of Archie!) on http://archiethewonderdog.blogspot.co.uk/2014/07/city-walk-oakshott-metro-project.html

Modern Crosses Quilt Block Tutorial

New free pattern and step-by-step tutorial for the Modern Crosses quilt, as shown at the 2014 Festival of Quilts, is on the Without Pins website. It is shown here in its original Oakshott Air fabric (no longer available) along with a new colour-example made up as a cushion in Ruby Reds.
2014-08crossesquilt
2014-08crossescushion
Design and samples by Heather Hasthorpe; photography and tutorial by Helen Howes; fabrics by Oakshott Fabrics

New Colourshott Fat Eighths Picks: Freesia

Charlotte of Displacement Activity got all poetic about Oakshott, in this case the new fat eighths we are calling Freesia:

As always, photographs just don’t do these fabrics justice – it’s impossible to see how they glow and shimmer unless you get to see them in person. I spent absolutely ages putting them in different orders, pairing them up and generally stroking them and can absolutely and confidently assert that they are at least five gazillion times more gorgeous in real life.

COTXF8P03_Colourshott_Freesia_FatEighthsPack

Then, as part of Lily’s Quilts Bloghop, she  turned them into this:

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full instructions for making Reflections on this page of  Displacement Activity.

New Colourshott Fat Eighths Picks: Derwent

Nicky from Mrs Sew and Sow said:

“Oakshott really are among my favourite fabrics!  I love the colours, the sheen they have, the feel of them and also how they quilt but this pattern makes use of the ability to use both sides of the woven fabric to make mirror blocks.”

She chose the Derwent fat eighths pack COTXF8P02_Colourshott_Derwent_FatEighthsPackand designed a fantastic runner, using the dark blue fabric to create a lattice ‘sashing’, which gave her the name for her design, Trellis:

2014-08Trellis on tableFor full details of the pattern click on this link: http://mrsssewandsow.blogspot.co.uk/2014/07/oakshott-colourshott-bloghop.html

 

Pallet Inspired Runner

Having given us a sneak preview in July Heather Hasthorpe of Without Pins revealed all at the Festival of Quilts in August.

Of course, at Oakshott we love what she says about the materials she used for her Pallets runner

“I’ve also been playing around with some new cloth samples where there is a different colour on each side so that 6 pieces give you 12 colourways! How about that?”

Heather has now uploaded the pattern for the runner onto her website, which uses four Fat Eighths. Download the PDF pattern and then choose your own colour way:pallets-small

Designer Chatt: Lynne Goldsworthy of Lily's Quilts

Shotthrough managed to catch up with Lynne in her Derbyshire home after she’d had a successful Fat Quarterly retreat in London. This was the third retreat they’d run and they had had to pare down the numbers to ‘only’ 80.

LynneGoldsworthy

As well as full-time mothering and house-managing Lynne approaches her quilting as a full-time occupation and spends about two-thirds of her time quilting and the rest doing admin (including running the enterprising Lily’s Quilts, and some tenth of it on Fat Quarterly).

Her sewing skills were developed at the knees of her mother and both grandmothers in that wonderful art of creating new and recycling old clothes. But she has put that behind her in order to concentrate on the art of quilting quilts (not bags or clothes etc.) – and don’t we love the results?

The clarity and purity of her designs seem to echo her general approach to life. She is anti-hoarding (there’s a lesson for a lot of us) and once the drawers start to get full she offers fabrics out on Instagram; she’s attempted to hand quilt but the slowness of the process has been too much and those projects were never finished.

Luckily for us though she has finished plenty of other projects with the help of her trusty Janome Horizon; a Hera marker (a few steps up from using the back of a knife); and a ‘brilliant’ Frixion pen (you know, iron off the lines after). While we were on the subject of tools Shotthrough offered her a bottomless purse and she spent it on a new Janome Horizon and was tempted to add in a Longarm machine, as long as the purse also bought her a new sewing room extension (the dining room gets cleared once a year for Christmas!).

When asked how she kept comfortable when sewing, her advice was to make sure your chair height was correct so that you sat with all those healthy right angles for good posture. Oh, and don’t turn round to talk to your daughter in the middle of using a rotary cutter, ouch.

Lynne loves re-creating traditional patterns with new fabrics and just sucks up inspiration from everything in her surroundings (nature, printed photographs, other quilters’  work), but avoids consciously going online for inspiration because that inevitably leads to a rather circular existence.

Luckily for Oakshott she loves our fabrics and describes them as: “high end, luxurious, rather like a solid Liberty lawn”.  An impulsive, late-night email one Sunday about three years ago resulted in the ongoing collaboration between Lynne and Oakshott and we’ve been the lucky recipients of her talents ever since.

Lynne uses the new Colourshott (first two) and Lipari (for Trade Winds) ranges for her three latest quilt designs for Oakshott Fabrics, which are available as kits:

 OSHQKIT_OakshottSchoolhouseKit_quilt Oakshott Schoolhouse Quilt, where she uses three shades of the same Colourshott colour on each schoolhouse to achieve a 3D effect to give  a modern look to a traditional design she loves.
 CRQHKIT_CrossRoadsKit_Quilt Crossroads is so-called because she was just pipped to the post by another quilter who used the name that was Lynne’s original inspiration, Hashtags.
 TWQHKIT_TradeWindsKit_Quilt Trade Winds,  where she wanted the feel of a traditional block by using a single Lipari colour for each one. The name came following a plea on Instagram.

Konkret I

Look at this fantastic example of how to make the most of the secret quality of the new Calluna collection. As designer Jutta Hufnagel of Quilt Around the World says:

“it shows the cool fact that you buy one length of fabric and actually have two colours at
hand”

2014-7Konkret1This cushion uses Calluna Erica for the pink/purple and Lipari in grey and black. Jutta is offering the PDF pattern for FREE during August from her website. The design was inspired by the German Bauhaus architects and artists.

Flutter your creativity

Another Kiwi connection has been having fun with Lakes, log cabins and butterflies!

I sat down with some scraps from my Lakes bundle and sewed a wonky logcabin version of my butterfly pattern. It was unlike any version of the pattern that I had sewn before and I immediately fell in love with it all over again.

Lakes, logcabin and butterfly

In fact, so much fun she’s come up with a fantastic Butterfly Challenge for everybody to participate in.

As I looked at the block, it got me thinking about how much I love playing with established patterns and giving them a new twist. I also love seeing what other people do with my patterns, so I threw the two ideas together and spontaneously decided to run The Butterfly Challenge on my blog in the month of August.

 

Full details on her Tartanwiki blog. Thanks Juliet

(who said: your awesome fabrics have yet again inspired me!)

and we look forward to featuring the results (whatever material is used!)

Sneak preview

 

 

All we know now is it is:

 

a table runner using 4 eighths … very closely quilted -matchstick quilting – a la modern style. It’s designed to use almost all the fabric, cutting two blocks from each piece, and shuffling the colours.

pallets-smallMore will be revealed at the 2014 Festival of Quilts [7–10 August] by Heather Hasthorpe of Without Pins.

 

 

A summer herringbone top

Lizzie Lenard has just become a fan of the new Calluna Herringbone (“it gives a very smart look to a garment”). Her aim was to make best use of a metre to make an adult’s garment, and she had just the tiniest amount of the Harebell material left over.

“It has been a great pleasure sewing with it. It was because I knew the cotton would hang well in gathers that I made a point of testing it with pleats.  Top marks, it holds a beautiful crease.”

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Read all about the process in detail on her vintage sewing website and see more chat about the top, and vintage sewing more generally, on the fascinating We Sew Retro blog.