Perhaps because I had a quilt displayed in QuiltCon's Modern Traditionalism category, I was interested in others' interpretation of that modern tenet. These are a few of my favorites.
Pep by Carolyn Hadley @geometricquilt, of Australia literally hurt my eyes. In person, the jarring contrast between these two complimentary colors made every viewer take notice.
I appreciate how Carolyn constructed these simple HST blocks in different sizes so as to create dissonance in the design too. It was longarm quilted.
Soft Resistance is another Jen Broemel design.
Again, the patchwork design is achieve with thread.
Double Decker Checker, Sarah Ruiz @bysarahruiz, Texas needs a closer look. There's a low volume checkerboard behind the colorful on-point patches.
Big Slice, Tara Faughnan @tarafaughnan, California
Her colorful version of a Double Wedding ring design is just gorgeous! She hand quilted it.
Tara points out her mistake by encircling them with embroidery! She states: "This is me embracing the discomfort that can come from putting your artwork on display."
Sharp, Catherine Sparacino @catlucia, California
Her hand quilting is marvelous. It looks like #12 perle cotton to me.
QuiltCon Raleigh, Part 4 is up next. Linda
Another from... you guessed it.
Crosswalk by Tara Faughnan
Again, this is hand quilted.
While the quilt below didn't attract my attention from a distance, I certainly got a chuckle from it.
Look Close Judge Me, Tara Evans @taraleequiltery, Canada.
This design does feel sharp, and I appreciate how she achieved it with foundation paper pieced triangles. She says, "Proportions, symmetry, angles, and lines create order and chaos in the same work."





















I love to see the hand quilting!
ReplyDeleteInteresting!
ReplyDeleteKillifish here....
ReplyDeleteI love looking at quilts and trying to figure out how the maker made it...I don't know how S Ruiz made her quilt.... Also T. Evan's piece....the letters appear to be pieced into the quilt but I can't fathom how she did it. So for me looking at quilts are like looking at a puzzles and trying to figure out how the maker did it. Kane
Sharp and Big Slice are my top favorites. Hurt your eyes… yes it really does. It makes me wonder how it was while working with those pieces! -Nancy (even though I signed in, I’m still unable to comment as me. 🤔)
ReplyDeleteI am especially fascinated by Double Decker Checker and Sharp. A quilter I know from Boulder asked the question on his IG about whether anyone had ever had a visceral reaction to viewing a quilt. Not due to political reactions but rather how the quilt looked. Don't recall how people commented but I thought of it when you said it hurt your eyes to see the red/green quilt.
ReplyDelete