Cinco de Mayo – designed by Karen K. Stone

Yesterday, we talked about quilting inspiration and two unfinished projects in my stash. Here’s the first one.

Karen K. Stone Quilts

This book is Karen K. Stone Quilts and the quilt on the cover is called Cinco de Mayo. There are 36 quarter circle blocks, all with different paper piecing combinations.

Here is Karen’s website. It looks like she teaches workshops about making this quilt.

I couldn’t find a good picture of the complete quilt, so I took a picture of that page in my copy of the book.

Have a look.

Cinco de Mayo by Karen K Stone

One thing I like about the book is that she shows you each group of four blocks in detail, both with a picture of each and a line drawing of the component pieces. There are (of course) pattern templates included in the book, too.

Cinco de Mayo by Karen K Stone - book details on construction

And here are my blocks so far.

My progress on my Cinco de Mayo designed by Karen K Stone

LOL. I remembered that I worked on it for AGES, but I only have four completed blocks!

After I took this picture, I realized I had sewn them together incorrectly. I picked them apart again. I didn’t start at the top left corner – these are blocks 3E, 3F, 4E and 4F. They should be rotated and positioned like this:

My first Cinco de Mayo blocks, designed by Karen K Stone

I did this mock-up digitally, which is why the carpet shows through in some places. A couple of these blocks can be swapped with others in the design, so I didn’t sew them together again yet. I see that I’ve used a turquoise print as the outside/background on all four of these blocks, so they shouldn’t be clustered together like this.

I will need to do is reassemble my stash for the project. One thing Karen teaches in her workshop is choosing a palette, then gathering fabrics that fit in each specific colourway – like that shade of turquoise, or the black with a floral print. They have to be pretty close in tone within the group, regardless of the pattern, to make the quilt cohere. (Although I will almost certainly stray too far, since chaos is how I roll.)

For this quilt design, she chose 11 colour groups. I’m using 8. I remember having trouble finding more of the particular bright yellow I used. Once your palette is gathered, you use at least one fabric from each chosen color in each block. I even kept track of what I used where in a chart – this was her suggestion to ensure that you use the colours throughout the blocks (instead of always using the turquoise for the background. I left the background off the chart, but that’s fixed now.)

You can see the palette pulling together a bit better in the quilt I made in her workshop because it used fewer colours and because you’re seeing 30 blocks together in this image. Each block has a bit of yellow and a bit of that red purple, a bit of indigo, etc. Even though the blocks are different, the whole comes together. I chose the gradient fabric for the inner border because it had both the yellow and the red-purple.

New York Beauty quilt pieced by Deborah Cooke

I need to get that one back on the quilting frame and finished up. I started the hand quilting and have done maybe 20% of it.

I still have the index card with swatches for the colours I chose for my Cinco de Mayo quilt. I’ll go through my stash and look for matches, maybe need to shop (for more yellow) then concentrate on finishing this quilt before dispersing the stash again.

In the meantime, I found another quilt top in the UFO stash that is much closer to completion. We’ll look at that one tomorrow.

Quilting Inspiration

Last weekend, I picked up two of my quilts from the long arm quilting place. I’m binding their outer edges now and will show them to you when they’re done.

New York Beauties and Flying Geese by Carl Hentsch

In the meantime, I’m already thinking about what to quilt next. 🙂

Here’s the book that’s teasing me right now: New York Beauties and Flying Geese by Carl Hentsch.

Here’s a buy link at C&T Publishing

Here’s an Amazon.ca buy link

And here is Carl Hentsch’s website.

I particularly love this design included in the book, which is called Pandemonium.

Pandemonium by Carl Hentsch

Isn’t that gorgeous? I’m currently on the hunt for a fat quarter pack of Kaffe Fassett shot cottons, including 36 colourways. That’s what he used in the rainbow sections, but it looks like they’ll be tough to find. (I could build my own spectrum of fat quarters, but I do love KF’s shot cottons. I’ll look for them first.)

In the meantime, in the spirit of finish-itis, I revisited my unfinished projects. Actually, putting this book on my shelf reminded me of several other books I have. I found two different paper piecing projects which are incomplete.

Karen K. Stone Quilts

First up, this one. A number of years ago, I attended a workshop with Karen K. Stone. The quilt I pieced there is still being handquilted (it was New York Beauty, from her pattern sold at the workshop), but I subsequently bought this book of hers – Karen K. Stone Quilts.

The quilt on the cover is called Cinco de Mayo and it is stupendously gorgeous. There are 36 quarter circle blocks, all with different paper piecing combinations.

This book is tougher to find since it’s from 2004. The AMZ link is for used copies at crazy prices, so you might have better luck at a used bookstore.

Here is Karen’s website. It looks like she teaches workshops about making this quilt.

I started a Cinco de Mayo of my own and dug it out to see where I’m at. I’ll show you its current state progress tomorrow.

Radiant New York Beauties by Valori Wells

The other book I found on my shelf was Valori Wells’ Radiant New York Beauties.

Here’s an Amazon.ca buy link.

Here’s a buy link at C&T publishing.

And here is Valori Wells website.

What’s fun about this book is that she uses stripes and plaids (lots of Kaffe Fassett yarn dyed stripes and plaids here!), and that she sometimes changes the central circle to an oval.

Her free motion quilting patterns are also fun. Lots of swirls and leaves, all the better to inspire me to get better at free motion quilting.

The pattern I found particularly inspiring is called Carnival Beauty. It’s the one on the cover, although that only shows part of it. I can’t find a picture of the complete quilt online, so will take a pic from my book when I show you my progress.

Tomorrow, we’ll look at my progress on Cinco de Mayo…