Crafts/Quilting Discover the best techniques from a decade of magazine t h e b e s t Quilting Arts magazine has been exploring the basics You’ll also fi nd tips and encouragement from top of t and beyond of art quilting for a decade, covering artists in the fi eld, including Connie Rose, Carol h machine and handstitching, embellishment, surface Watkins, Melanie Testa, Jane Dunnewold, Judy e design, and more. Celebrate the tenth anniversary Coates Perez, and many more. Whether you’re b of this groundbreaking magazine with this new making your fi rst art quilt or are a seasoned quilt e collection of the very best articles. You’ll fi nd: artist eager to enhance your designs, you’ll fi nd s Your Ultimate Resource for POK E Y BOLTON t endless instruction and inspiration in The Best of • art quilt techniques, from fabric collage and o Quilting Arts. Art Quilt Techniques & Inspiration appliqué to resist dyeing, stamping, and foiling; f • machine-stitching and thread-painting tips and POKEY BOLTON founded Quilting Arts and Cloth tutorials from award-winning art quilters; Paper Scissors magazines. Pokey is now the editorial • an array of binding and stitching techniques to director of Interweave’s Quilt and Paper Division. She make your art quilt stand out; is the author of The Quilting Arts Book: Techniques and • methods for making realistic representational art Inspiration for Creating One-of-a-Kind Quilts and 1,000 quilts, including portraits of pets and people; Artist Trading Cards: Innovative and Inspired Mixed- • ideas and advice for the professional quilt artist. Media ATCs. Pokey is also the host of Quilting Arts TV. B O $24.95 / 11QM07 L T O N t he best of POKE Y BOLTON Your Ultimate Resource for Art Quilt Techniques and Inspiration Editor Elaine Lipson Art Director Liz Quan Designer Margaret McCullough Photography Larry Stein and Korday Studios (except where noted) Production Katherine Jackson © 2011 Interweave Press LLC All rights reserved. Front cover, top: Melody Johnson, Leaf Light (detail). Front cover, bottom: Frieda Anderson, Dancing Trees (detail). Back cover, top: Jane Dunnewold, Breath (detail). Back cover, bottom: Judy Coates Perez, Untitled (detail). Interweave Press LLC 201 East Fourth Street Loveland, CO 80537 interweave.com Printed in China by C&C Offset All of the articles in this collection were previously published in Quilting Arts magazine, © Interweave Press. Some have been altered to update information or conform to space limitations. Except as otherwise noted, artwork is by the article’s author. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Bolton, Patricia. The best of Quilting arts : your ultimate resource for art quilt techniques & inspiration / Pokey Bolton. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-59668-399-0 (pbk.) ISBN 978-1-59668-971-8 (eBook) 1. Quilting. 2. Art quilts--Design. I. Quilting arts. II. Title. TT835.B51435 2011 746.46--dc23 2011021179 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Acknowledgments Quilting Arts magazine would not have come to be if it weren’t for the passion and dedication of so many people who believed in this publication. First and foremost, I’d like to extend my heartfelt thanks to my in-law family, the Boltons. Without all of their help and support over the years, Quilting Arts would never have gotten off its feet. I would also like to thank my Quilting Arts family of co-workers and talented and giving artists who have contributed over the last ten years. What a fantastic, colorful, and fun journey. Here’s to ten more! Contents introduction Pokey Bolton 6 1 starting and finishing: Art Quilt Basics 8 rELEasiNg crEaTivE BLOcKs Melody Johnson 10 aLL ThE righT MOvEs: successful free-Motion Quilting Frieda Anderson 14 ON ThE EdgE: Beautiful Binding Methods Sarah Ann Smith 22 a Big fiNish fOr sMaLL QuiLTs Terry Grant 30 cOLOr PLaY Anne Lullie 34 Professional Advice: Art Resolutions and Goals Jane Dávila 40 2 Trends in surface design: Stamping, Dyeing, Printing, and More 42 cOLLagraPhs: Monoprinting with Texture Plates Heidi Miracle-McMahill 44 fLighT Of faNTasY: a gelatin Monoprint Process Frances Holliday Alford 48 EXTrEME shiBOri: Taking stitch-resist shibori Beyond the Norm Sue Cavanaugh 52 carvuM sTaMPuM: Marks of distinction Laura Wasilowski 56 crEaTE wiTh dischargE PasTE Ana Buzzalino 60 aBsTracT digiTaL iMagErY Connie Rose 64 EXPEriMENTs wiTh ThErMOfaX PriNTiNg: Easy Methods for unconventional surface design Lynn Krawczyk 68 Professional Advice: The Effective Artist Statement Jane Dávila 72 3 People, Pets, and More: Representation in Art Quilting 74 MaKiNg facEs Bonnie McCaffery 76 crEaTiNg figurEs iN faBric Leni Levenson Wiener 82 Contents PET-TY JOurNaL POrTraiTs Pokey Bolton 88 introduction Pokey Bolton 6 1 TEXT MEssagiNg: sticker-resist fabric Painting Enid Gjelten Weichselbaum 92 starting and finishing: Art Quilt Basics 8 ThrEad PaiNTiNg: from Photo to stitched art Carol Watkins 96 rELEasiNg crEaTivE BLOcKs Melody Johnson 10 ThrEad sKETchiNg ON sTaBiLiZEr Karen Fricke 100 aLL ThE righT MOvEs: successful free-Motion Quilting Frieda Anderson 14 Professional Advice: Mount a Group Exhibition Jane Dávila 104 ON ThE EdgE: Beautiful Binding Methods Sarah Ann Smith 22 4 Make it green: Recycled and Natural Materials 106 a Big fiNish fOr sMaLL QuiLTs Terry Grant 30 gOiNg grEEN! recycled wall hangings Belinda Spiwak 108 cOLOr PLaY Anne Lullie 34 BaTiK wiTh sOY waX Melanie Testa 112 Professional Advice: Art Resolutions and Goals Jane Dávila 40 2 gOiNg grEEN TO dYE BLuE: dyeing cottons with indigo Daren Pitts Redman 116 Trends in surface design: iT’s irrEsisTiBLE! flour Paste resist Jane Dunnewold 120 Stamping, Dyeing, Printing, and More 42 Professional Advice: Time Management for Artists Jane Dávila 124 cOLLagraPhs: Monoprinting with Texture Plates Heidi Miracle-McMahill 44 5 fLighT Of faNTasY: a gelatin Monoprint Process Frances Holliday Alford 48 embellishment and Mixed Media: EXTrEME shiBOri: Taking stitch-resist shibori Beyond the Norm Sue Cavanaugh 52 Too Much Is Never Enough 126 carvuM sTaMPuM: Marks of distinction Laura Wasilowski 56 OuTragEOus EMBELLishMENT Frances Holliday Alford 128 crEaTE wiTh dischargE PasTE Ana Buzzalino 60 fOiLiNg arOuNd Jane Dunnewold 134 aBsTracT digiTaL iMagErY Connie Rose 64 cOLLagEd faBric PaNELs Mary Hettmansperger 138 EXPEriMENTs wiTh ThErMOfaX PriNTiNg: Easy Methods for unconventional fLOraBuNdaNcE: Embellished Patchwork Paper collage Jill A. Kennedy 142 surface design Lynn Krawczyk 68 TEa aNd ENTOMOLOgY Judy Coates Perez 148 Professional Advice: The Effective Artist Statement Jane Dávila 72 Professional Advice: Branding for Artists Jane Dávila 152 3 People, Pets, and More: Representation in Art Quilting 74 About the Contributors 154 MaKiNg facEs Bonnie McCaffery 76 resources 158 crEaTiNg figurEs iN faBric Leni Levenson Wiener 82 index 159 Celebrate Ten Years of Quilting Arts To knit or to quilt? That was the question I asked thread. That’s when I started to research crazy myself when I walked into a craft store ten years quilts, embellishments, hand embroidery, surface ago, looking for a much-needed break from my design techniques, and eventually, art quilts. doctoral studies. I looked for a magazine on the newsstands that I perused the shelves of the store, walking briskly was dedicated to art quilting and couldn’t find past the palettes of watercolor paints, bins of one. I decided to put my doctoral degree on hold cake decorating tools, and aisle upon aisle of and start my own magazine. I named it Quilting scrapbooking gadgetry, and I ultimately paused Arts because I wanted it to celebrate all kinds of in the section that focused on fiber. As beckon- artistic styles in quilting—abstract, portraiture, ing as those luscious piled skeins of yarns were, landscapes and nature scenes, and the like—and it was the colorful patterned bolts of fabric lined I wanted to go into detail about design, art quilt up like cheerful little soldiers along the wall that construction, tips and tutorials for machine and lured me. Quilting won over knitting, and dur- handstitching, embellishment techniques, and ing a holiday break from school, I converted my quilting with mixed media. dining room into a temporary quilt studio and made my first quilt. As first efforts go, I realized I can’t believe it’s been ten years since I founded I had quite a lot to learn. My machine stitching Quilting Arts magazine. As the cliché goes, time was wonky, my piecing was terribly uneven, my has flown. I remember sitting by myself all those binding was pathetic, and my sense of color? We years ago in my in-laws’ sheep barn with a laptop won’t go there. and a folding table and just the seed of an idea for a magazine in my head. I asked a handful of Having made this first quilt, though, I realized dedicated friends and people I’d met on quilting two things: I had a passion for textiles and a message boards online—who thankfully under- desire to create something unique with fabric and stood the vision—to pitch in and write articles, 6 The BesT of QuilTing ArTs though I couldn’t afford to pay them at the time. It is my hope that this book will provide you with I consulted with a publishing guru to help form plenty of inspiration and further you on your a business plan, find a printer, and learn all of creative journey. the ins and outs of magazine publishing to get Quilting Arts on its feet. Pokey Bolton Since then, I’ve been fortunate to interview and work with some of the world’s most talented con- Founder and Editorial Director temporary quilters and fiber artists. With this Quilting Arts book you’ll find the best of the best from the last ten years of our cherished publication—every- thing from quilt design, fabric collage, and con- struction to unique surface design application and embellishment techniques. If you want to learn or improve your machine stitching, talented and award-winning quilters offer their advice and tips to make free-motion stitching and thread painting easy, fun, and beautiful. If you are at all like me and thoroughly enjoy painting, dyeing, and screen printing your fabrics (or if you’re ready to try your hand at these things), there are plenty of inspiring ideas in the pages ahead. And if you want to spice up your quilts with mixed-media techniques and applications, there are plenty of out-of-the-box ideas for you, too. inTroduCTion 7
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