Threadbenders Quilt Shop

Threadbenders Quilt Shop
Threadbenders Quilt Shop

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Secondary Passions:Purple, Orange and Green

We've been talking about secondary colors, orange, purple and green.
Because they're mixed colors they blend much better than the primaries. They work and play well with others.They also work well with each other.



Round Robin Quilt
You'll probably find more people using two of the three, though.This round robin quilt from the Baltimore Modern Quilt Guild features purple and green.
purple and orange quilt

This quilt is from Jennifer at That Girl that Quilt. The purples and oranges are almost singing together.
It takes a little more courage to mix all three.
Lorrie Cranor, improv quilt
We love this improv quilt from Lorrie Cranor. Purple, green and orange are electric colors together. Mix them up, blend them in. You may run with scissors, but they don't. They get along great.


Friday, December 27, 2013

It Is Easy Being Green

We talk about green with envy, looking green when we're feeling unwell, green back dollars and the grass that is always greener. 

Green is a color people have a lot of mixed feelings about. Green is not a color everyone should wear. For clothing, it's marvelous or dreadful and there's nothing in between. And there are endless greens ranging from chartreuse to lodge. 

But we're in the quilter world. Remember? We don't have to wear the colors we work with. And greens give us a cool fresh feeling nothing else can match. 
Several years ago it was fashionable to say that lime is the new neutral. It really is. Green tends to set off any color near it with a beautiful background.
Here are some lovely quilts that glow with their greens.
Four Crosses by Denyse Schmidt
We love the lime next to to the yellow green in this quilt by Denyse Schmidt.
Green Not-Baby Quilt

This Green Not-baby Quilt is a neat take on a rectangular log cabin. What a neat use of strips?
Green with Envy

Heather at Bitty Bird posted this strippy version of a lightning strike. 
Green with Envy Detail
The differing greens dance together.
Go ahead and green one of your quilts. You may find yourself rolling in clover.

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Care and Feeding of Quilters: A Holiday Guide

There's a madness that comes with the holidays, but at some point like a storm settled, we quiet down, sit with our families and welcome our friends to a cup of tea, a bite of something wonderful, a taste of Christmas.


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So what do you serve your quilting friends? Do you respect their latest diet? With that in mind, I went looking for some sinless Christmas decadence. Anything worth doing is worth overdoing. And any quilter I know would melt  at the sight of these tidbits on the table.
This truly sinless fruit Christmas tree is button cute. 

Another sinless effort is this veggie "gingerbread" house by Green Giant.

But for us hard core sweet girls we'll just have to get out the frosting. These reindeer are very sweet in every way. And vanilla icing would make it into a snow man, easily.
This seems perfect for those who just drop in.
But my favorite holiday desert only got  made once. It was supposed to be a jelly roll. That didn't quite work out. 
As I was rolling the roll, there was an unholy argument between one of my cats and one of my guests. It was so unsettling that the jelly roll fell apart in my hands. It lay on the tray in  chunks.
We got out more jelly, pasted it together, covered it with powdered sugar and called it "tree bark in the snow". It won't every happen again because that cat and that person will never be allowed in the same room with each other again.
Disaster as it was, I served tree bark in the snow. No one noticed. They took seconds. They licked their forks and knives.
And that was when I realized the most important thing. That whatever we serve people with love is always perfect, just as it is.

Fill their cups with coffee, coco and tea. Stir to perfection. Drink in the warmth of  holidays, just as they are with the people you love. May yours be happy and bright!


Monday, December 23, 2013

Royal Purple: Shaded in Beauty


When we had kings and queens we dressed them in purple. There were reasons for that. Purple dye was the most expensive and exclusive.

But past that, purple has always been a royal color. The child of red and blue, it's richer and grander than either of them. 

It's stood for passion, for shadows, and beautiful spring flowers have lent their names to purple: lilac, orchid,and iris.

It also goes with anything and is pretty on almost everyone.
Here's some great quilts in purple to inspire you to purple passions of your own.
Lavender and grey baby quilt 

Erica's unexpected grey and lavender baby quilt is a nice weaving of colors.

Flying Purple People Eater

Jessica's Flying Purple People Eater is a great scrappy star quilt with a luscious range of purples.
Purple Poppy Quilt 
A white background  makes such a big difference! The purples that were so dark in the darker quilts brighter and bolder next to white.
Purple Stash Experiment
Finally there's this great purple stash experiment coming out of the North Hampton Area Modern Quilt Guild. Every purple really does go with every other purple.

Do some experimenting of your own. Grab the purple fabric and make a royal quilt!



Friday, December 20, 2013

Orange: Loving Colors You Hate


I love asking people about their favorite colors. I also love asking people if they have a color they hate.

Of course everyone's answer is different. But orange is often the color they like least.


Why is that? It's partially preference, and anyone who lived through the 70s might well be permanently put off burnt orange. I think it's simpler than that.

If you ask people what colors they like best they're likely to say either blue, or pink. Most people can wear some shade of either blue or pink and have done so their whole life. They're picking the colors they're used to wearing.
Not everyone can wear orange. Or should.

But we don't wear our quilts. We don't have to look good in them. Which means there's a world of color we've been avoiding, right outside our door.
From simplebeans.blogspot.com

But it does wake up a quilt! Orange is sort of like orange juice on a gray day. Everything after that is so much better. A mix of red and yellow, two big show offs, orange has real punch.
from trueup.net


It's great as a straight shade.
Add caption
It's electric when it's in different tones.
There is a day in every quilters life, when they look at the colors their quilting with and say, " I'm bored. I want something different. Orange might just be that for you. Grab some OJ and brighten things up.


Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Primarily Speaking

So far we've talked about red, yellow and blue. You're probably already with me. These are the primary colors. They're primary because they are really separate in themselves. They aren't made of other colors. They're just themselves.




That sounds like a metaphor, but actually that's how they work in design as well. Because they aren't blended from other colors, they are incredibly loud and bossy with other colors. Why are they featured so strongly in kid's prints? Because they really stand out and children love that kind of stimulation. Although I could see it as a reason to choose something else for the hyperactive baby's room.
Of course they're a great way to make a really bold statement.
Modern Mood Circus by Sherri Lyn Wood
This quilt, Modern Mood Circus by Sherri Lyn Wood, is exactly that bold because she worked it in primaries.

Modern Crazy Quilt
This modern crazy quilt by Caroline Heinrich shines in primaries.


Kona Fabric
This new line of Kona Cotton celebrates red, yellow and blue in darker and lighter tones.

From Custom made Quilts

And even a simple patch quilt is cheery and bold.

Don't be afraid to work with primaries. They're bold, direct, bossy and sassy. Just like you!

Monday, December 16, 2013

Playing the Blues




We all get the winter blues. But we love the blues too! Dark and stormy nights, moon shining through darkness, the deep of the ocean, the silence of the lake.






So dig into the blues! Grab your blue fabric and celebrate the richness and the blueberry goodness.



Here are some great Blues quilts.
Cascade quilt by Christina Cameli.

Get into the blues. Don't let them get you down. Move with the rhythm. It's its own Jazz in fabric.