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Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Shooting QATV Series 1500


Last week, I was in Cleveland shooting “Quilting Arts TV” Series 1500. It will start airing in January 2015. We always aim for a good mix of fiber artists, contemporary and modern quilters, embellishers and surface designers. We have a great lineup of guest quilters and fiber artists in store for you! Here’s a sneak peek:

Tammie Bowser makes spectacular fiber art based on photos. She bases some of her work on photos of jazz musicians that were taken by her great uncle!





Tammie has designed software that can help you make pieces like this, too:


Patricia Bowman did one segment on how to handle different kinds of material in t-shirt memory quilts, and another segment on using ties in quilts (this segment will appear in Series 1600). Want to make a t-shirt quilt and need some advice? Trish’s book Easy Memorabilia Quilts (published by AQS) can help. And her templates make it easy to cut t-shirt blocks to the right sizes for your memory quilt. 


Jamie Fingal showed us how to collage fabric to make original creations, and how to stencil motifs onto fabric and make small art quilts. She designs fabric for Hoffman, and has a line of stencils with Stencil Girl.




Jamie has even used her fabric on her shoes!



Leslie Tucker Jenison, who is a good friend of Jamie’s, also shot some segments, and sat down on the couch to talk with me about curating. Together, Leslie and Jamie curate exhibitions for Dinner at Eight Artists



Leslie and Jamie also brought along a few friends. Here is Texas Babs coming out of the suitcase, and on set:



 … and a stuffed animal that caused a few problems on the set:


Leslie showed us how she makes her collaged “Sweet Little Somethings”:


… and a giant hexagon quilt (these are fabrics from Melanie Testa’s lovely “Meadowlark” fabric line.


Before each segment is shot, the guest runs through what she is going to cover with the producer, Kathie Stull, and Quilting Arts editor Vivika Hansen DeNegre.


I use and love Bernina sewing machines, and I love it even more that they are a show sponsor, and we have them on set! 




And best of all, we have Jeanne Cook-Delpit, Director of National Events for Bernina USA, with us all week to help guests get ready to stitch on the Berninas! 

 

I’m also over the moon that Arrow Sewing Cabinets has supplied us with these beautiful chairs, a cabinet for the Bernina, and a cutting table! This is the first time we’ve been able to sit the machine down into a cabinet, and it makes all the difference for proper ergonomics. And their designs are so darned cute! (I have that chair at home in a different finish and fabric; the lumbar support is fabulous!)



With this series, we also experimented with some different arrangements of the furniture. I had heard from one viewer that it looked awkward when I was sitting so far behind the guest while she was demonstrating on the Bernina. It made me realize that I felt awkward, too, so we tried switching things up a bit. (Let me know what you think after you see the new shows in Series 1500!)


Pearl Krush of Pearl Louise Designs created this darling owl pattern for QATV, and shows you how to make it using Lite Steam-a-Seam 2 by The Warm Company. I use and love Lite Steam-a-Seam, too! It is the perfect fusible for my fusible applique art quilts that involve hundreds or thousands of tiny pieces. After you fuse it to the wrong side of the fabrics and take off the paper, it is slightly sticky, so you can position and reposition all your pieces before you fuse them down. (Due to production issues, this product has been unavailable for a while, but it will be back in stores by the end of the year; hooray!)


The pattern for this adorable owl will be a downloadable “online extra” on the QATV website next year! (Did you know that we have a bunch of projects and techniques for free on the website here?)




Teri Tope has a new book out with American Quilter’s Society (AQS) that includes a bunch of darling projects for Home Sewn Celebrations. She demonstrated how to make a great tote that holds a two-liter bottle, and keeps it cool with insulated batting.


By now, you’ve probably noticed how often I was changing clothes. I have a different outfit and jewelry for each of the 13 episodes. After I get dressed, they take a photo of me and pin it up so that I’ll know what to wear, and so that the guests can make sure they don’t clash with me on set. 



Sue Spargo shot two segments on felted wool applique and embroidery for Series 1500 and one we will hold for Series 1600. I adore Sue’s work and share her passion for handwork. She has lots of books on embroidery and wool applique on her website here. Not to mention felted wool, patterns, beads, flosses…






The pattern for Sue’s pincushion will be an online extra on the QATV website next year!


Catherine Redford was coming in to shoot a Quilting Arts Workshop, so we had her shoot a few TV segments, too. She demonstrated how to make beautiful beaded edges with this pincushion project, and also shot a segment on modern crazy quilting embroidery for Series 1600. 



We convinced the talented Kristine Lundblad, Quilting Arts’ assistant editor, to shoot two segments. One is on a simple quilt for patchwork beginners, and one is on how to make a durable grocery tote bag. 



Rebekah Meier has appeared on numerous segments of QATV as a guest of show sponsor Rit. This time, she demonstrated how to use two new Rit’s products, Color Perfect and ColorStay Dye Fixative. The dye is available in 7 colors and each kit comes with 3 applicator tips - spray, dauber and drip top. They are very cool! She also shot a segment demonstrating how to make a cute zippered bag from fabric she embellished with fabric strips and programmed stitches on your sewing machine.


Amy Ellis is the author of Modern Neutrals: A fresh look at neutral quilt patterns (Martingale). One of her segments is on the basics of pins and pinning, and shows how to properly pin a small bit of patchwork, which she finishes into a pin cushion with a walnut shell filling. (Yes, it will be an online extra, too!)




Roxanne Lessa shows how she uses fabric like a painter or sculptor in her two segments. In the first, she sculpts and attaches hand-dyed fabric to a background, and in the second, she creates wonderful dimension and texture using silk fabric, a light-weight fusible and thread.




Angela Pingel works miracles with curved seams, and showed me how she machine stitches a Drunkard’s Path block using just one pin! She is the author of A Quilter’s Mixology: Shaking up Curved Piecing (Interweave). Angela also does a project with a scrappy raw-edge applique background and a single raw edge motif applique over the top. It will be an online extra on the website next year!




Here’s how I keep track of all my outfits. Each is hung in the dressing room with these little bags I use to hold my jewelry:



For this series, I got to wear some beautiful jewelry designs by Siesta Silver. They have darling new quilt-themed charms that can be worn on bracelets or their charm holder (below). And some that are made into earrings and pendants. 



This ring had a sliding section in the middle!



Martha DeLeonardis, author of T-shirt Quilts Made Easy (AQS), designs dynamic t-shirt quilts using a grid to combine 6"-, 12"- and 18"-blocks. She shows us how in her segment, and also explains how to deal with fabric grain and stabilize fabrics for these quilts.



Lesley Riley is a mixed media artist, author, and the creator of Lesley Riley’s TAP Transfer Artist Paper. In her segments, she shows how to make a fabric book, a modern memory quilt(she also shot a Quilting Arts Workshop on this topic!), and gave us “the Inside Scoop on artful use of fabric” while creating one of her fragment fabric collages.




Lesley had seen some of my family geneaology photos on Facebook, and asked me if she could use them in one of her projects. Look what she made for me! This is my great-great-grandfather Thomas Braden, and the handwriting in the background is a letter written by my great-great-grandmother Marietta when she was only 16, on the day after her sweetheart Thomas went off to fight in the Civil War. (He survived Gettysburg and several other horrible battles to come home and marry Marietta… otherwise I would not be here!)





Liz Kettle is a fiber and mixed media artist and author. Liz is always up to something new; she loves testing out new materials and techniques. She shot two segments for Series 1500, on
thread sketching blind contour drawings, and on how to make a gorgeous cuff. The third segment, on heat-shrinking thread, will appear in Series 1600. (It is so cool; you won’t want to miss it!)



I hope I’ve whet your appetite to see “Quilting Arts TV” Series 1500! Series 1400 is airing now on more than 400 public television stations across the country. Remember, you can enter your zip code here to find out what stations are carrying the show in your area. Once you know the channel, you need to check with your carrier (cable, satellite, etc.) to determine when the show will be on in your house.

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

I’m a cover girl!


I am so very honored; my work is featured on the cover of the current issue of Quilting Arts magazine! This is my third time to be a cover girl for Quilting Arts.

The fourth article in my 2014 series on thread sketching is in this issue (August/September 2014). It’s called “Light and shadow: Add depth and realism with thread.” You can see what’s inside this issue and purchase the magazine at the Interweave store. This issue is on newsstands now. 


And I’m in good company: other artists featured in this issue are Linda Friedman, Susie Krage, Kynn Krawczyk, Susan Purney Mark, Holly McLean, Rebekah Meier, Melanie Testa and Jane Davila

Here are photos of the art quilts that are featured in my article:

“October Morning”
“Heirloom Pumpkins”
“Nestled”
“Pink Coneflowers”

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Giveaway for the Quilting Arts Holiday Blog Hop


Hello, hoppers! Welcome to my stop on the Quilting Arts Holiday blog hop! My project in this issue is a Quick Cuff (above). It is easy to make, and easy to personalize and give as a gift to a friend or family member this holiday season.

You can buy a copy of  the magazine in the Quilting Daily Shop. It is chock-full of gorgeous decorations, ornaments, cards, wearable art and gifts.


I’ve listed the participating artists below. Many will be posting tutorials or doing give-aways, so make sure to check each blog on the days listed below; if you’ve missed some, you can go back and see what you’ve missed.

Quilting Arts is giving away an Easy Necklace Kit, a Beaded Snowflake Kit, 2 yards of Pellon interfacing and a copy of Holiday so you can make Village Houses (directions in the magazine). All these projects are featured in Quilting Arts Holiday. Just check out Vivika’s post, and leave a comment there. 


GIVEAWAY!
I’m giving away one of my cuffs (see photo above). Leave me a comment after this post, and tell me about one gift you’d love to give or get. At 6 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 22, I’ll draw one name at random. Make sure you leave me your e-mail address, or some way to reach you. Check back on September 22 to see if you’ve won. And be sure to visit the other bloggers listed below for more chances to win.

Note: If your comment does not show up right away, please don’t freak out. Please post only one comment. I now have to moderate/approve all comments, because I was getting a ton of Japanese porn spammers leaving comments on my blog!  


WE HAVE A WINNER…
Janarama has won the cuff!  


BLOG HOP STOPS:
Friday, September 12 – Vivika Hansen DeNegre, http://quiltingdaily.com/
Saturday, September 13 – Lyric Kinard, http://lyrickinard.com/blog/
Sunday, September 14 – Claude Larson, http://randomactsofpiece.blogspot.com/
Monday, September 15 – Linda McLaughlin, http://notesfromstudiob.blogspot.com/
and Kathy Kerstetter, http://artndl.blogspot.com

Tuesday, September 16 – Lori Miller, http://lorimillerdesigns.wordpress.com/
Wednesday, September 17 – Melanie Testa, http://melanietesta.com/blog/
and Liz Kettle, http://www.textileevolution.com/index.php/our-journey

Thursday, September 18 – Susan Brubaker Knapp, http://wwwbluemoonriver.blogspot.com/
Friday, September 19 – Lisa Chin, http://somethingcleveraboutnothing.blogspot.com/
Saturday, September 20 – Sarah Ann Smith, http://www.sarahannsmith.com/weblog
Sunday, September 21 – Catherine Redford, http://catherineredford.com/

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Quilting Arts Holiday Hop!


Quilting Arts Holiday magazine is hosting blog hop! I’ve listed the participating artists below. Many will be posting tuturials or doing give-aways, so make sure to check each blog on the days listed below. And come back and see me on Sept. 18!

Quilting Arts is giving away an Easy Necklace Kit, a Beaded Snowflake Kit, 2 yards of Pellon interfacing and a copy of Holiday so you can make Village Houses (directions in the magazine). All these projects are featured in Quilting Arts Holiday. Just check out Vivika’s post, and leave a comment there.

You can buy a copy of  the magazine in the Quilting Daily Shop.
Friday, September 12 – Vivika Hansen DeNegre, http://quiltingdaily.com/
Saturday, September 13 – Lyric Kinard, http://lyrickinard.com/blog/
Sunday, September 14 – Claude Larson, http://randomactsofpiece.blogspot.com/
Monday, September 15 – Linda McLaughlin, http://notesfromstudiob.blogspot.com/
and Kathy Kerstetter, http://artndl.blogspot.com

Tuesday, September 16 – Lori Miller, http://lorimillerdesigns.wordpress.com/
Wednesday, September 17 – Melanie Testa, http://melanietesta.com/blog/
and Liz Kettle, http://www.textileevolution.com/index.php/our-journey

Thursday, September 18 – Susan Brubaker Knapp, http://wwwbluemoonriver.blogspot.com/
Friday, September 19 – Lisa Chin, http://somethingcleveraboutnothing.blogspot.com/
Saturday, September 20 – Sarah Ann Smith, http://www.sarahannsmith.com/weblog
Sunday, September 21 – Catherine Redford, http://catherineredford.com/

Monday, September 8, 2014

18 great projects in “Create Handmade Gifts for All”



Fiber artist and dyeing expert Candy Glendening has a new e-book out called “Create Handmade Gifts for All.” It’s available now for $9.99 on the Quilting Daily Shop. 

 To celebrate and share, she’s holding a blog hop. I’m the first stop (see the rest at the end of this post). There are giveaways at each stop, and a chance to win the spectacular messenger bag (above) that Candy made for the cover of the e-book. 



The book contains 18 projects for home decor, bags and accessories, and holiday ornaments. 18 gorgeous projects, 77 pages of detailed instructions, all for about ten bucks? When you usually pay that for one pattern? Really, you can’t lose on this deal. 



I really love Candy’s work. She makes her projects with her fabulous hand-dyed fabrics, but they would look equally good in solid-colored cottons in bright colors. Or batiks.


Candy is a scientist and teacher (she teaches biology at the University of Redlands in Southern California), and her attention to detail shows in her precise directions and diagrams. 



Look at these darling headbands! Wouldn’t they make a great birthday present for a special teenage girl in your life?



Each project is shown with easy-to-follow diagrams and how-to photos that make them easy to put together. These contemporary designs are beautiful and functional. I know I’ll be coming back to this book again and again for gift ideas.

Here’s the blog hop schedule:

Monday, 9/8 – Susan Brubaker Knapp of Blue Moon River (me!)
Tuesday, 9/9 –  Vicki Welsh of  Field Trips in Fiber
Wednesday, 9/10 –  Deborah Boschert of Deborah’s Journal
Thursday, 9/11 – Amy Ellis of Amy’s Creative Side
Monday, 9/15 – Sue Bleiweiss of Sue Bleiweiss
Tuesday, 9/16 – Natalia Bonner of Piece N Quilt
Wednesday, 9/17  – Diane Doran of Ooh! Pretty Colors
Thursday, 9/18 – Vicki Christensen of Sew Inspired
Friday, 9/19 – Candy Glendening of Candied Fabrics

GIVEAWAY!
Leave a comment after this post, telling me about a handmade gift you made. At 6 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 22, I’ll be drawing two names at random. The first person will receive a hard copy of last year’s “Quilting Arts Gifts” magazine. The second person’s name goes into a drawing for the Grand Prize, the messenger bag Candy made that is featured on the cover of the e-book. Candy will announce the Grand Prize winner the following Monday on her blog. Make sure you leave me your e-mail address, or some way to reach you. And check back on September 22 to see if you’ve won. And be sure to visit the other bloggers listed above for more chances to win.

Note: If your comment does not show up right away, please don’t freak out. Please post only one comment. I now have to moderate/approve all comments, because I was getting a ton of Japanese porn spammers leaving comments on my blog! 


Newsflash …  
Cloud 9 and JB have been selected. Candy or I will be contacting you with details. 

Friday, September 5, 2014

Still spots open in my DesMoines classes!


There are still spots in all my classes at the AQS show in Des Moines, Iowa, Oct. 1-4. And the All-Star Review, where you can learn from lots of instructors in a fun evening event. C’mon people, sign up! I'd love to have you in my class! Check out all the classes here.
workshop Oct. 1: Thread Sketching: Crayons (3 hours)

workshop Oct. 4: Thread Sketching: Snowflakes (3 hours)
workshop Oct. 3: Paint & Stitch: Peacock Feather (6 hours)
lecture Oct. 1: Lecture: Point, Click, Quilt!


workshop Oct. 2: Thread Sketching: Cripps Pink Apple (3 hours)
workshop Oct. 2: November Leaves (3 hours)

Monday, September 1, 2014

“The Source of Her Magic”


“The Source of Her Magic”
by Susan Brubaker Knapp
Copyright 2014
9.5" x 22"

Here’s a new piece I made in the past week. I’m calling it “The Source of Her Magic.” When I made “Magpie’s Hoard” last month, I had so much fun using my embellishments, and “marrying” them together with hand and machine stitching that I decided to make another, similar piece. This one features the following materials:

Mylar
Angelina fiber
Angelina film
felted wool beads
metal washer stained with alcohol inks and embossed
Tyvek
melted CD
silk sari waste
metal charm
polymer clay
hand-dyed burlap
hand-dyed cheesecloth
Lutradur
wire
glass beads
button
perle cotton
cotton thread
cotton fabric
wool/polyester batting

… pretty much everything but the kitchen sink!

Here are some detail shots:


“The Source of Her Magic” (detail)

“The Source of Her Magic” (detail)

“The Source of Her Magic” (detail)