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Beautiful Botanicals: 45 Applique Flowers & 14 Quilt Projects PDF

140 Pages·2011·29.416 MB·English
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be a u t i f ul b o t a nic a l s 45 APPLIQUÉ FLOWERS & 14 QUILT PROJECTS deborah kemball Text copyright © 2011 by Deborah Kemball Cover/Book Designer: Kristen Yenche Artwork copyright © 2011 by C&T Publishing, Inc. Production Coordinator: Jenny Leicester Publisher: Amy Marson Production Editor: Alice Mace Nakanishi Creative Director: Gailen Runge Illustrator: Tim Manibusan Acquisitions Editor: Susanne Woods Photography by Christina Carty-Francis and Diane Pedersen of C&T Publishing, Inc., unless Editor: Liz Aneloski otherwise noted Technical Editors: Ann Haley and Janice Wray Published by C&T Publishing, Inc., P.O. Box 1456, Lafayette, CA 94549 All rights reserved. No part of this work covered by the copyright hereon may be used in any form or reproduced by any means—graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping, or information storage and retrieval systems—without written permission Dedication from the publisher. The copyrights on individual artworks are retained by the artists as noted in Beautiful Botanicals. These designs may be used to make items only for personal use or donation For Benj, Nick, Hugo, Max, and Gus, to nonprofit groups for sale. Each piece of finished merchandise for sale must carry a conspic- uous label with the following information: Designs copyright © 2011 by Deborah Kemball from with my love the book Beautiful Botanicals from C&T Publishing, Inc. Acknowledgments Attention Copy Shops: Please note the following exception—publisher and author give permis- sion to photocopy the template patterns on pages 14–105, and pattern pullout pages P1–P2 for Thanks to Den Haan & Wagenmakers personal use only. BV in Amsterdam for their kind dona- Attention Teachers: C&T Publishing, Inc., encourages you to use this book as a text for teaching. tions of great quantities of gorgeous Contact us at 800-284-1114 or www.ctpub.com for lesson plans and information about the C&T Creative Troupe. red tone-on-tone chintz. We take great care to ensure that the information included in our products is accurate and pre- sented in good faith, but no warranty is provided nor are results guaranteed. Having no control over the choices of materials or procedures used, neither the author nor C&T Publishing, Inc., shall have any liability to any person or entity with respect to any loss or damage caused directly or indirectly by the information contained in this book. For your convenience, we post an up- to-date listing of corrections on our website (www.ctpub.com). If a correction is not already noted, please contact our customer service department at [email protected] or at P.O. Box 1456, Lafayette, CA 94549. Trademark (™) and registered trademark (®) names are used throughout this book. Rather than use the symbols with every occurrence of a trademark or registered trademark name, we are using the names only in the editorial fashion and to the benefit of the owner, with no intention of infringement. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Kemball, Deborah. Beautiful botanicals : 45 appliqué flowers & 14 quilt projects / Deborah Kemball. p. cm. ISBN 978-1-57120-961-0 (soft cover) 1. Appliqué--Patterns. 2. Quilting--Patterns. 3. Flowers in art. I. Title. TT779.K46 2011 746.44’5--dc22 2010021402 Printed in China 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 PREFACE . . . 4 INTRODUCTION . . . 5 THE BASICS . . . 7 Part 2: THE PROJECTS . . . 52 Part 1: THE FLOWERS . . . 12 171/2˝ × 171/2˝ Pillows 52 Baltimore Beauty Flower 13 Butterfly and Berries Pillow 55 Bluebells 15 Autumn Tiger Lily with Asters Pillow 57 Chrysanthemum 16 Forget-Me-Nots and Pansies Pillow 59 Dahlia 18 Baltimore Beauty and Bluebells Pillow 61 Daisy 20 Spring Wreath Pillow 63 Forget-Me-Not 22 Harvest Wreath Pillow 66 Fuchsia (Single and Double) 23 Jacobean Tree of Life Wallhanging 69 Grapes / Wisteria / Hanging Blooms 25 Star Flower Heart Wallhanging 74 Iris 26 Mexican Heart Wallhanging 77 Lily 28 Vine Fruits Table Runner 81 Michaelmas Daisy / Coneflower 30 Floral Sampler Wallhanging 85 Mimosa / Floral Spray / Berries 32 Indian Garden Wallhanging 88 Pansy 34 Jacobean Sampler Wallhanging 91 Peony 35 Floral Fantasy Wallhanging 94 Pomegranate 37 Star Flower 39 Part 3: THE BORDERS . . . 100 Stargazer Lily 41 Simple 1˝ Sawtooth Border 100 Sunflower / Aster / Zinnia 43 Simple Sawtooth with Circles Border 102 Sweet William 44 Simple Daisy and Hearts Border 103 Whirled Flower 45 Fuchsia Border and Corner Design 104 Easy Template Flowers 47 Chrysanthemum Border 105 Butterfly 48 GALLERY . . . 106 Nosegay 49 ABOUT THE AUTHOR . . . 111 Additional Leaf Templates 50 CONTENTS PREFACE Like many other quilters, I trod a fairly intensive path of move to Canada, when I foresaw long periods in small embroidery, knitting, and tapestry before discovering hotel rooms, I would make a hand-appliquéd Baltimore quilting. While living in Eindhoven in the south of the Album–style quilt. I looked at pictures of Baltimore quilts Netherlands and being heavily pregnant with our third online; however, though I could appreciate the huge son, I passed a quilt shop and was awed by the baby amount of work that had gone into all of them, I found quilt in the window. Intrigued, I went in and was their designs very busy. So instead, I decided to alter- dazzled by the huge array of fabrics and quilts on dis- nate the wreaths and hearts with individual flowers. play. I left with a large bag of fat quarters and instruc- Completely by accident, when playing around with the tions for my first quilt. The die was cast. I dropped my individual flower designs in my Baltimore Album quilt, knitting needles, tapestry needles, and everything else I became fascinated with the new patterns made by and became addicted to fabric and quilts. repeating the flower along various axes of symmetry. I After our time in the Netherlands, my husband’s work decided to bring these designs into the quilt too. By the took us to Costa Rica, where I found a treasure trove of time I had completed the quilt, I knew that in appliqué I discount fabric shops selling quilting fabric from the had found my real love in the world of quilting. United States. Nearly all the fabric was flawed in some I discovered that I could transpose my flower design way or other, so I could buy yards of fabric for cents ideas well within this medium. Less influenced by tra- at a time. Liberated by the cheap prices, I became an ditional appliqué design and more by the chintzes of enthusiastic machine piecer, averaging one newly made the eighteenth century, I experimented with moving quilt every three weeks. But my machine, hammering outside the traditional block concept by using swirling away through triangles and squares, added the agony floral designs and borders. and frustration of mismatched seams and made me I had my big color renaissance during our first Quebec tense and dissatisfied. I decided that perhaps I wasn’t winter. Our white quilts and white sofas looked so bleak cut out for machine piecing and quilting; as a result, I against the endless winter landscape, which marks became very keen on hand quilting. I made a number Quebec for nearly half the year. Until then, I had only of self-designed white-on-white wholecloth quilts lived in the tropics and in Europe, so I had never real- and strippies that remain some of my favorites to this ized how much I needed color until it was absent for so day. Their Spartan white simplicity worked well in the long. I began working with bright reds and loved the tropics where, with so much riotous color of flowering results and the joy of combining colors. trees, bougainvillea, and hibiscus going on outside our windows, we preferred simple cool interiors. I have really found what I love to do. It has also been an unexpected pleasure to see my patterns created in such By this time, I was beginning to consider appliqué. a wide variety of fabrics by students who put their own Several years earlier, I had made five small appliqué ideas into my designs. blocks, which I had designed myself. These blocks were heavily influenced by my previous designs for tapestries I hope that you enjoy all of these designs and that you and were quite unlike any traditional appliqué normally will put yourself and your own ideas into them, so they associated with quilting. I decided that during our become unique and all the more special. 4 BEAUTIFUL BOTANICALS INTROdUCTION I am known among my students for my belief that For marking fabric, the special fabric-marking pencils quilting can be achieved with minimal tools, in the always seem to break. Instead, I tend to use my chil- same way that quilting was done centuries ago. I find dren’s colored pencils in white or yellow. I need very little in terms of special equipment. In fact, I use standard white rubber erasers that I cut with scis- if you were to look at the mess of my sewing drawers, sors into fine points for hard-to-reach areas. I don’t think you would be able to guess that I am a full-time quilter. It’s not an impressive collection. I use great spools of masking tape for everything, from hanging my designs on windows to cleaning off the You would find: loose threads that cling to me endlessly. I also use it to „ standard scissors (which, contrary to the rule, I use clean my ironing board at the end of each day. for everything, paper included) My iron seems to be permanently on. I shock intrepid „ a few odd pins quilters by using it at very high heat—even pressing my „ Roxanne Between Needles No. 9 (which I use for silk quilts with a really hot, steaming iron. absolutely all my sewing) I love Hobbs wool batting because it’s like quilting „ a roll of freezer paper through butter. I also like the loft it gives with my heavy „ Mylar heatproof plastic echo quilting. „ a diverse selection of threads I have a fabric stash, but it is not as huge as one might „ several cheap basic metal thimbles (which I wear expect. I love to use the tone-on-tone chintzes from until they wear through) Den Haan & Wagenmakers in Holland. I have several of their gorgeous floral fabrics for fussy cutting. In addi- Thimble wearing is a good habit. I feel uneasy and tion to those, I have a large selection of fat quarters in cannot sew if I don’t have one on the middle finger of prints, batiks, and commercial hand dyes. my right hand when sewing or on both middle fingers when quilting. A cursory glance at the pictures in this book will give away the fact that I love red. I can’t get away from it, Only my collection of threads might give away my love nor do I want to. However, I can assure you that I have of appliqué. I sometimes use monofilament silk, but seen my designs made in every other color, and they I confess that it makes me tense and bad tempered, look equally lovely in all the colors of the rainbow. because my heavy hand frequently breaks the thread. I am fast and ruthless with my needle. Although I prefer Gutermann coarser silk thread, I have found that their color choice is limited. I am not in the least bit averse to using whatever thread I can find in my drawers if the color works. INTROdUCTION 5 How to Use This Book In Part 1: The Flowers (pages 12–51), you will find templates and detailed instructions for creating all the flowers. Although presented in sizes to fit 7˝ blocks, the flowers are actually intended purely as a reference for the projects in Part 2 (pages 52–99). The similar scale of the flowers means that they are all interchangeable and can be substituted for one another in the different projects. So if you particularly love one flower more than another, you can easily substitute it. In addition to the large number of flowers, you will find five different border options in Part 3: The Borders (pages 100–105). I hope you will want to challenge yourself and combine the flowers and borders to your delight. The possibilities are almost limitless. Palampore Tree of Life (page 109) shows how well one block can be surrounded by consecutive borders. If you aren’t feeling very ambitious, a single bloom surrounded by the simplest border of all—the Simple 1˝ Sawtooth Border (page 100)—is a lovely project to get you started. Should you feel like a challenge, both Floral Sampler (page 85) and Floral Fantasy (page 94) use almost all the flowers shown in Part 1. I am delighted with these two quilts, both of which portray the look I love most of all—a mass of trailing stems and flowers. These two quilts are reminiscent of the gorgeous chintz designs that found their way from India to Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and that remain, for me, designs of timeless beauty. 6 BEAUTIFUL BOTANICALS THE BASICS Positioning Appliqués TIP on the Background When tracing, you don’t have to mark every detail of the design; just mark enough to position the appliqués and stitch the embroidery. Mark the berries, grapes, NOTE and other template circles and ovals with a cross Although Option 1 is my preferred method, it requires or dot. that you photocopy and enlarge the reduced version of the pattern to a full-size pattern and trace it onto the background fabric. This method is used in the OPTION 2: USING A DRAWING instructions presented throughout this book. For the FOR PLACEMENT larger quilts, I highly recommend that you follow this method. Refer to the template as a guide. Start in the middle of the design and position the appliqués, using the pat- If you prefer not to make a full-size pattern, however, tern for reference. This method is easier to accomplish you can follow Option 2 to position the appliqués with small projects than with large ones. and embroidery. Making Small Circles OPTION 1: TRANSFERRING THE PATTERN and Ovals 1. Photocopy the design, enlarging it to full size , if Many of my flowers are made with premade circles and necessary. Large designs can be copied in sections ovals, using Mylar or cardstock templates. Use a largish and taped together or taken to a photocopy shop and seam allowance to make the berries and petals look enlarged in one piece. stuffed and to add extra texture to the finished piece. Heavy echo quilting makes them pop out even more. 2. Use masking tape to attach a full-size paper pattern to a window. Tape the background fabric on top of the 1. Use a fine permanent marker to trace the motif onto pattern. Make sure that the fabric edges are aligned Mylar or cardstock. properly before taping the top and bottom. 2. Cut out the shapes on the line. 3. Trace the design onto the background fabric (I use a 3. Place the template on the right side of the fabric and standard white colored pencil). Trace slightly inside the cut out the shape, leaving a 1/4˝ seam allowance. lines of the paper pattern motifs to avoid erasing col- ored pencil marks after appliqué. TIP For oval shapes, place the length of the template shape on the bias of the fabric, if possible. This makes it much easier to form smooth curves during appliqué. THE BASICS 7 4. Knot a piece of thread and make Using Freezer Paper Templates a small neat running stitch 1/8˝ from the outer edge. Use freezer paper to make your templates (except the circle and oval shapes). I never leave my freezer paper on the fabric during appliqué. 5. Place the template on the reverse side of the fabric. 1. Place freezer paper, shiny side down, onto the pattern to be copied. Trace the shape. 2. Cut out the shape on the line. 3. Use a hot, dry iron to press the freezer paper, shiny side down, onto the right side of the fabric. Whenever possible, place the length of the freezer paper shape on the bias of the fabric. 4. Cut out the shape, leaving a generous 1/4˝ seam allowance. Snip inner curves if necessary, as shown in the following photo. Curves will appliqué easier and curvier this way! Trace, cut out, and baste the shape. 6. Pull the thread to gather the fabric tightly around the template. Press with a hot iron. Press, cut out, and clip. Embellishing Pull to gather the fabric around the template. WHIPSTITCH 7. When cool, remove the template, I use a whipped running stitch for stems, gather the fabric, and press again. tendrils, and stamens extensively. This stitch produces a bold, wavy line, perfect TIP for tendrils. Leave a long thread so that you 1. With embroidery floss, stitch a small can regather the shape if it has running stitch on the marked line. I lost its sharp creases. usually use all 6 strands for stems and tendrils and 3 strands for stamens Stitch a small running stitch. and other embellishments. 8 BEAUTIFUL BOTANICALS 2. With the eye of the needle, 3. Bring the needle and thread to 6. Continue in this way until you weave the thread loosely back the top of the fabric. Make a loop have blanket stitched the entire through each running stitch. around the double stitches, without length. Fasten off on the reverse of (Using the eye of the needle going through the fabric. the fabric. instead of the point will prevent snagging the fabric.) Secure the thread on the wrong side of the background fabric. Loop thread around the stitches. Finished stitch 4. Pull the thread taut, so it makes BEADS a blanket-style stitch around the 2 threads. I love to use tiny beads, seed Use the eye of the needle to weave the thread through the stitches. pearls, and crystals to embellish my flowers. I find the easiest needle DETACHED to use is a No. 10 between, which BUTTONHOLE STITCH will go through the tiniest of beads. I sew on embellishments after This stitch works well for stamen quilting and binding. heads. 1. Using all 6 strands of embroidery floss, make a 3/8˝ stitch at the stamen end of the stem. Pull the thread taut. 2. Make a second stitch in the same 5. Repeat to make a second blanket place as the first. stitch. Make 2 stitches. Make a second stitch. THE BASICS 9

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.