Archive for the ‘Designers’ Category

The Scrapbook Calender Quilter – Ann Dudek

Saturday, March 27th, 2010

By day, she is a mild mannered accountant. But by night, she is The Scrapbook Calendar Quilter!!! Of whom do we speak? We speak of the amazing, multi-talented Ann Dudek!

Ann Dudek

Ann Dudek

We feel qualified here at Betty’s Quilting etc. to call Ann “amazing and multi-talented” and to call her new book, The Scrapbook Calendar Quilt© a must-have. You see, Ann is one of us, an employee! You know that door in the classroom that leads over to the office area?  That is where Ann is (of course when she is NOT shopping at Betty’s during her lunch hour).

The Scrapbook Calendar Quilt

The Scrapbook Calendar Quilt

The majority of the Betty’s Quilting etc. / QuiltWoman.com employees are quilters (yours truly included) and those that aren’t, are soon converted. So when Ann came into our office one day with her Scrapbook Quilt© to show off, a new publication was born.

The book teaches its lucky owner how to create a quilt that reflects a year’s worth of memories. Consisting of 12 months in the form of blocks with each day getting it’s own square, it’s as much fun to make as it is to look at. A square can be embellished to represent the significance of that particular day. No two quilts created from this unique concept will ever the same.

Mach - In like a lion, out like a lamb

March - In like a lion, out like a lamb

This book would be great for teaching a Block of the Month. Start a class in January with the January block and move on from there. Collecting fabrics for this quilt would be a great excuse to go on a shop hop (like the one Betty’s is part of April 29 – May 1)!

The book is 72 pages and is fully illustrated in color with high quality photos of each block. It is spiral bound so it will lay flat as you use it. As a bonus, there are also instructions for making a Baby’s Charm Quilt!

Spiral bound and full of color photos!

Spiral bound and full of color photos!

One of my favorite aspects of the book (besides the how-to-do-it portion) is Ann’s sense of humor. We’ll just call it quirky. I’ll use the discussion about the July block as an example. To quote Ann, “July is my birthday month. I am one of these people who think their birthday should be a national holiday. So of course I had to put in a special fabric!” I had the pleasure of proofreading the book before publication and was laughing the whole time! This is not your ordinary, dry, how-to book. When I make one of these quilts, I think I WILL put in Ann’s birthday as a special date!

The book is available in the store now. You can even ask to have Ann autograph it for you!

Ann will also be attending the Spring International Quilt Market in Minneapolis, May 21 – 23. She will be at the QuiltWoman.com booth (where else would she be???). She’ll be having a book signing and will be sure to regale the attendees with tales of all of her blocks and special days.

So Ann, from the rest of us at the Betty’s Quilting etc. & QuiltWoman.com family, congratulations on your new book. You gave birth to it, and we’d like to think we were the labor coaches cheering you on!

Easy Sew with Lacey Hill and Ro Gregg- Home Decorating

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

Easy To Sew Now Available

Easy Sew Now Available

2 Easy to Sew Now Available

2 Easy to Sew Now Available

Betty’s Quilting Etc is proud to announce TWO new books, Easy Sew and 2 Easy to Sew in the shop.  The pair of books are authored by Lacey Hill and Ro Gregg.

From their publisher, QuiltWoman.com, website:

“Have you ever wished you could create beautiful interior designs with your quilt fabrics? Would you like to add color, timeless elegance and your personal unique style to your home? Well look no further!

Easy Sew with Lacey & Ro provides the answers to your designing questions with the help of easy to follow instructions, stunning colors, and perfectly proportioned large scale prints. Included are designs for quilts, headboards, draperies and matching accessories. Allow these two award-winning quilter/designers into your home and see what a difference beautiful, vivid florals can make to liven up your room in no time at all!

Fabric substitutions are also included for Ro’s Cotillion Fancy Fabric Collection and a second Leading Ladies colorway due out in the Spring of 2010, both for Northcott.”

2 Easy to Sew Back Cover

2 Easy to Sew Back Cover

You have no doubt heard of these authors. Lacey Hill is the owner/designer of Golden Thyme Designs and author of Sizzling Circles, which released at the International Quilt Market in Houston, 2009. Ro Gregg is an award-winning, amazing textile pattern designer for Northcott Fabrics.

Come by the shop and see them in person.

Ibiza Is Here!

Sunday, March 14th, 2010
Barb Sackel

Barb Sackel

Our very own Barb Sackel’s debut collection, Ibiza, for Blank Quilting has arrived in the shop!  It is absolutely stunning to see in person.  She has every color of the rainbow represented, so it definitely appeals to everyone.  Barb has 9 different fabrics in her line and every one of them is waiting for you here at Betty’s.  We were thrilled to recently receive the complete line.

Barb gained popularity with her 4 in 1 quilt patterns, which are distributed by QuiltWoman.com.  The pattern line focused on using those wonderful fabric panels and working them into amazing quilts.  Keeping true to her design inspirations, Ibiza also features a flower fabric panel.

Ibiza Panel

Ibiza Panel

Ibiza

Ibiza

Barb also has a line of patterns available featuring Ibiza, also distributed through QuiltWoman.com and available at Betty’s Quilting, Etc.

See these Ibiza Patterns at QuiltWoman.com

See these Ibiza Patterns at QuiltWoman.com

It looks  smashing online and it will knock your socks off in person!  To celebrate the debut of Ibiza, Barb is hosting a give away on her blog.  Of course, if you don’t win… you can always swing by Betty’s and pick up a few goodies for yourself.

An interview with Susan Mayer

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Some of the more popular QuiltWoman.com quilt patterns that Betty’s carries are the ones their Straight-to-the-Point (STTP) Series. The creative force behind these quilts is Susan Mayer. Curious to know more about these quilts and Susan, I picked up the telephone and gave her a call.

SusanMayer

SusanMayer

I asked Susan how the STTP series started. She stated it was “quite by accident.” Susan was teaching classes in which she used a lot of other designer’s patterns. She thought to herself “I can do this” and proceeded to pull out the graph paper to design her own quilt. Her intent was to create an “amazing sampler quilt”. But when it was finished it was, to use Susan’s words, “ugly.” She didn’t want to redo or redraw it, so she got out scissors and tape, cut the design on the graph paper apart, taped it back together, tried a few other cuts and realized the result was “on point”. Susan then executed the design in fabric, and it worked there also! Thus the Straight-to-the-Point concept was born. You can read an explanation of the technique here.

But how did Susan end up publishing her patterns? She was teaching a mystery class based on this new quilting concept. Her students were working along and hadn’t quite noticed that what they assumed to be the finished project was an odd size. One of the speedier students announced “I’m finished”. But she had a puzzled look on her face, having realized her quilt was an odd size. The student asked Susan for help with the borders. Susan played along and “admitted” that the quilt didn’t turn out the way she thought it would. Susan told her, “Tell you what, let’s go to the big cutting table and see what we can do.” The student about died…“Are you going to cut my quilt?” Susan assured her she could fix it. The student was skeptical and reluctant until Susan offered to pay for her fabric if she ruined it. So out they went to the cutting table and Susan made one cut. Susan mused “Hmm, that didn’t get us anywhere.” She made another cut, flipped the pieces around, and Viola! A quilt on point! At that point (pun intended), all the students got excited at seeing the end result. Cut away, students!

After that successful class, Susan was invited by a large guild to do a trunk show and teach her new method. A shop owner who was present stated “That should be a pattern.” Susan had no clue how to get started publishing a pattern. The shop owner said she would call a publisher (she knew Ann Anderson, the founder of QuiltWoman.com). As a result, Susan talked to Ann, e-mailed her what she had, and the next day had a contract in hand! “It was incredible the way it happened.”

Since that fortuitous meeting, Susan has published 21 STTP patterns and 13 traditional ones. And to think this all started not that long ago in 2006. That first quilt was Do-Si-Do.

Do-Si-Do - A Straight to the Point Quilt

Do-Si-Do - A Straight to the Point Quilt

After that, Susan collaborated with Ann to come up with Contra Dance and Dance Partners. Below is Contra Dance. This sample was created with the “You Go Girl” fabric line by Northcott Fabrics.

Contra Dance

Contra Dance

And this is Dance Partners. This sample was made with the “Town & Country Flannels” fabric line by Northcott Fabrics.

Dance Partners

Dance Partners

I remarked to Susan that some of her newer samples are full of bright colors. She calls them clear colors. Those are not to be confused with dusty colors. Ok Susan, spill…what are you talking about?

A clear color is one where your eye doesn’t have to pick through the contrast and values to see the design. The design just shows up! Pair it with a black and white fabric and the colors pop. If you are working with dusty colors, your eye had a hard time distinguishing between the pieces. A quilt made with dusty colors can blend too much. Kaffe Fassett’s fabric works the best.

Still confused? Susan distilled it down to this. A dusty color is a muted color; it has a little bit of brown or gray value to it. Look at white versus a cream. The white is clear, the cream is dusty.

One of her newest patterns is Floral Path. Susan described it as a simple quilt, one that will give the quilter a “feeling of instant gratification” because it will go together so quickly. That is something that works for Susan. She has found that when she is working on a quilt, designing it, picking the fabric and piecing, about halfway through and her mind is already on the next design!

Floral Path

Floral Path

A couple of Susan’s other new patterns are Side Stepping and Fire and Ice. She thinks they will appeal to quilters because of this same concept of instant gratification.

Side Stepping

Side Stepping

Fire and Ice

Fire and Ice

I always have to ask a designer how he or she generates their designs. Knowing that Susan started this journey with a design on graph paper, I asked if she still designs that way. “I do a combination, some graph paper and some on Electric Quilt 6 (EQ6). If it is a totally original design or concept, she will start on graph paper. If the design is based on a traditional block that can be found in EQ6, she will use that.

I inquired if Susan has any formal training in the arts or a similar field. She has none whatsoever! (There is hope for those of us who also don’t!) She used to work with an interior designer doing store displays, so she was used to putting colors and different patterns together. She also did custom floral designs; again she is experienced using colors.

QuiltWoman.com posted some pictures of Susan’s Quilt Room a few weeks back (see them here), and some people wanted to see what her sewing room looked like. Well, here it is.

Very glad that Susan couldn’t see the state of my own sewing room, I asked “Is your sewing room always that clean?” “Yes, my Studio is occasionally messy, but I do try to clean it in between projects.” I’m envious, not only is it a studio and not a sewing room, but it’s clean. Susan remarked that she is lucky to have the two rooms (her Quilt Room and her Studio). The quilt room originally “was just a room.” Susan decided she needed to have the quilts out so she and others can enjoy them. Most of them fit into the room.

I was curious as to what sewing machine Susan uses. It is a Bernina aurora 430. She bought it because of the BSR (Bernina Stitch Regulator).  We at Betty’s LOVE Susan’s taste in sewing machines!

Bernina aurora 430

Bernina aurora 430

Susan did admit she doesn’t do any machine quilting but does her own piecing. She just doesn’t enjoy the machine quilting (she is mortal after all!) Susan found a quilter who does beautiful custom work, she just hands the quilt top over and doesn’t even have to tell her machine quilter what she wants. Having seen Susan’s quilts in person, I can attest to that.

What’s ahead for Susan? If you look in Fabric Trends Magazine on page 11, the Do-Si-Do pattern is featured for Northcott Fabrics. She has a free pattern available from Clothworks for their Midwinter’s Garden Black and White line.

Midwinter Garden

Midwinter Garden

In addition, Susan is hoping to be at the Spring 2010 International Quilt Market in Minneapolis.

Susan does teach, present trunk shows and guild presentations. She is more than willing to travel! You can get more information about where she’ll be and when at on her website. Susan is located in Washington State, having relocated within the past few years from San Jose, California to be closer to her daughter and grandchildren.

Cascade of Quilts and Cascade of Quilting Essentials

Friday, September 18th, 2009
Barb

Barb wearing the Quiilter's Tool Belt

Betty’s Quilting Etc. is very proud to announce the publication of two new books, both by OUR OWN Barb Sackel. They are Cascade of Quilts and Cascade of Quilting Essentials.

The inspiration for both of these books is the fabric line Shade Cascade by Karen Combs for Blank Quilting. This fabric gradates from light to dark across the bolt, with each stripe being 11″ wide. It is useful in piecing as well as appliqué. It gives a realistic look to appliqué patterns and is great for creating illusions when piecing quilts. It also solves the problem of “finding” a light, medium and dark fabric within a color family. It’s all there within one fabric!  And it is all available at Betty’s.

Shade Cascades designed by Karen Combs

Shade Cascades designed by Karen Combs in Teal

Cascade of Quilts

Cascade Chain

Cascade Chain

Barb has built upon Karen’s fabric line, with a selection of quilts that build upon these varying values. My absolute favorite is Cascade Chain, shown on the cover of the quilt. If you think it’s gorgeous in print, you should see it in person. My high school daughter has already declared that is the quilt she wants me to make for her when she goes off to college!  Maybe I can make off with Barb’s sample.  Somehow I don’t think I’d get out the door with it.

Through The Looking Glass

Through The Looking Glass

Also in the book are wall art quilts that really make use of the varying shades. To do this book justice, you really need to see all the quilts featured in the book.  Stop by the store to see is or visit the Casade of Quilts product page at QuiltWoman.com, the publisher.

Cascade of Quilting Essentials

Barb has also designed patterns for you to create quilting accessories. In Cascade of Quilting Essentials, you will find a multitude of projects to make any quilter happy. It includes a Quilter’s Tool Belt, storage bags for your rulers and cutting mat, a fabric bag (to haul your stash), and a Go Green Carry All Bag.

Projects in Cascade of Quilting Essentials

Projects in Cascade of Quilting Essentials

Just imagine what you can create for youself, picking the color pallet of your choosing.

All in all, Barb has done a great job of putting together a number of fantastic projects for a fantastic fabric line. Both books can be purchased at Betty’s or ordered on-line at QuiltWoman.com.

Susan Mayer’s Quilt Room

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Susan Mayer, designer of the Straight-to-the-Point Quilts and more, sent us these pictures of her quilt room. This is where her granddaughters stay when they visit her.

I want to be her granddaughter! I have a feeling I’d become the black sheep of the family really quick after I “accidentally” packed one of her quilts in my suitcase. But being ostracized would be so worth it.

I can pick out some of the quilts that were the cover models for her QuiltWoman.com patterns that Betty’s sells. I wonder if any of her about-to-be-published patterns are represented in the room. I’m going to have to study these images more closely. I see a couple of quilts I don’t recognize!

An Interview with Toby Lischko

Saturday, August 29th, 2009
Toby Lischko

Toby Lischko

I had the pleasure of talking to quilt designer, Toby Lischko, a couple of weeks ago. I first met Toby at the International Quilt Market in the fall of 2008. She was kind enough to help us out in the QuiltWoman.com booth (a sister company to Betty’s Quilting Etc.) for a few days (for that, my aching feet and I will forever be grateful), so I knew Toby was a wonderful person who designs beautiful quilt patterns for us. It was time to talk to her as a designer.

We started talking about how she joined the QuiltWoman.com team. Back in 2002, QuiltWoman.com was looking for new designers. Toby responded by showing us a few of her designs and she has been with us ever since. In fact, back in 2007, Toby’s pattern, Mosaic Magic was the featured quilt on the cover of a QuiltWoman.com publication.

Mosaic Magic

Mosaic Magic

It has been Toby’s best selling pattern ever since, along with Royal Gems.

Royal Gems

Royal Gems

It’s always interesting to get into the head of a designer and see what inspires them; what sparks an idea that turns into a quilt design. Toby told me, “The fabric talks to me.” I was polite enough to not ask what the fabric says. But seriously, Toby explained further that the fabric leads her to consider what kind of design would further enhance the fabric’s theme or design. For example, she just worked with some Americana fabric for RJR. This fabric “told her” it required traditional blocks and it went from there.

Her favorite activity in the quilt design/sewing process is creating the actual design. She likes to use Electric Quilt 6 and is often designing before she goes to bed. It seems her brain never turns off. She’ll go to sleep thinking about a design and in the morning the final version of it is fairly clear. She’ll get up with the finished design in her head and then work on it until she is happy with the results. Sometimes she has to drag herself away from the computer to finally sew the quilt!

Discussion of Toby’s favorite activity in the sewing process led me to ask about her least favorite (and we all have one). For her, it’s the actual quilting process. She often has to rack her brain to figure out what design to quilt on the project. Now doesn’t that make the rest of us mere quilting mortals feel better?

I just had to ask Toby about her Zen Garden pattern. I can honestly say that, in recent memory, it is the largest quilt QuiltWoman.com has ever had to photograph. This king size beauty took up most of the wall in our photography studio. Toby related how she loves Asian fabrics and this quilt is no exception. It is a large quilt and would take some time to make, but it definitely would be worth it!

Zen Garden

Zen Garden

Toby has done some designing of miniature quilts (that’s another word for “instant gratification” in my vernacular). I asked if there was anything different in that design process. Toby said, “It has to be in scale. You need to be able to look at a picture of a miniature quilt and have no idea whether the quilt is big or small.” She has designed miniature quilts that are traditionally pieced, paper-pieced, and strip pieced.

Toby admitted to not particularly liking to do appliqué quilts. However, she knows that there are other quilters out there scared to death of appliqué so she teaches a beginning machine appliqué class called “Fast Easy Appliqué circles (or what she likes to refer to it as Appliqué for Dummies”). She also teaches beginners and advanced quilters. The beginners are her favorites; she likes to teach them how to quilt correctly before they acquire bad habits. She has taught children; having taught How To Make Shorts a long time ago, but now her favorite children to teach are her grandchildren. Both (a boy and girl) have sewn their own first quilts. She had them first design the quilts on graph paper. They got to sew them on her sewing machine, and then she let them “doodle” on them with her long arm.

Toby is certainly staying busy. She continues to design patterns, both for QuiltWoman.com and for various fabric companies. Her patterns can be found in most of the major quilt magazines and as free web patterns on many of the fabric company websites. She wrote her first book St. Louis Stars, published by Kansas City Star Quilts.

St. Louis STARS by Toby Lischko

St. Louis STARS by Toby Lischko

She also loves to travel and is available for workshops and lectures. She has taught at the Houston Quilt Festival and will be teaching at Machine Quilter’s Expo in April 2010. Her QuiltWoman.com patterns can be found in the store or on-line at QuiltWoman.com. Her class list and more information can be found on her website at www.gatewayquiltsnstuff.com. Plus Toby has a Facebook Fan Page. Check it out!

Tour of Barb Sackel’s Studio!

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

Note:  All the patterns mentioned below are available in the store at Betty’s.

As a Girl Scout leader, it’s only natural that some of the activities I plan involve something I am passionate about.  Quilting is no exception.  I had a couple of girls in the troop interested in doing a quilting badge.  Lucky me!

Barb Sackel

One of the requirements was to meet with a quilting professional.  Again, lucky me!  Barb Sackel, one of the busiest designers for QuiltWoman.com, lives just 5 miles from Betty’s Quilting Etc. and was willing to talk to the girls.  In fact, she offered to give us a tour of her studio and home of her business, Rose Cottage Quilting.  I was so there!

Four of us (2 Girl Scouts and 2 leaders) visited Barb on a sunny Saturday morning.  Her studio is housed in a sun room addition on the back of her house.  Let me restate that, the majority of her studio is in the sun room.  Not unexpectedly, as with any endeavor, it has flowed over into other areas of the house.

Exterior of Barb's studio/sun room

Exterior of Barb's studio/sun room

We started with a tour of Barb’s lovely home.  Quilts were everywhere.  Some of them I recognized as being the cover models for some of Barb’s patterns, such as Trophy Case, shown below.  Others she showed are samples for upcoming patterns.  I can’t divulge much, but I can say a companion quilt to her Batik Diamonds is in the works!

Barb Sackel and her pattern, Trophy Case

Barb Sackel and her pattern, Trophy Case

Barb showed us her painting area.  Huh?  Painting?  It’s in a corner of her living room under a window with tons of natural light.  The girls were a little confused as to why Barb was painting.  It was then that we discovered she is designing a fabric line for Blank Quilting.  Wow!  I didn’t know she was up to that.  And the girls had no concept that fabric lines were designed.

Barb's Painting Station

Barb's Painting Station

Barb showed us some of proofs and let me say, they were stunning.  Sorry, we can’t show you pictures.  But Barb is hoping the fabric line will be out in 3 – 4 months if all goes well with the processing. It is bright whimsical flowers with black, (14 flowers to be exact that you have never seen before) and it includes a panel showcasing the flowers. She will also have 3 new patterns ready that are designed just for this collection. A second colorway will also be available, (spice colors with mahogany).

Barb then showed us her embroidery workstation.  Yes, this too wouldn’t fit in her large studio.  It was in her dining room.  She has a Bernina Artista 730. Barb has been sewing on Berninas her entire quilting journey (NOTE:  Betty’s Quilting Etc. now carries Bernina Sewing Machines!)  She relies on it for all decorative stitching, quilting, and embroidery. Not to mention the walking foot is killer!  This machine gets a real workout when Barb makes one of the quilts from her 4 in 1 series (read a blog post about that series).  Next to it, she has her AccuQuilt GO! That’s another product she has designed patterns for.  We did say she was a busy lady, didn’t we?

Bernina and the AccuQuilt GO!  An unbeatable combination!

Bernina and the AccuQuilt GO! An unbeatable combination!

We then moved on to the studio itself.  The first thing that strikes you is the view.  All those windows look over Barb’s extensive gardens.  Gorgeous flowers surround you everywhere.

A studio with a view

A studio with a view

Entertaining us was a squirrel getting into the bird feeder with the birds watching!

Squirrel raiding the bird feeder

Squirrel raiding the bird feeder

As for the studio itself, Barb uses a Commercial Juki sewing machine. This machine only has a straight stitch, but it is set up to go extremely fast.  Barb stated “I use this machine as my workhorse.”  She has it set up centrally in the studio with a view of the gardens.  What a great environment to work in.

Barb at her sewing machine

Barb at her sewing machine

Taking up one wall was a 14 foot Gamill Long Arm Sewing Machine for her machine quilting.  She also has a design wall she couldn’t live without, cabinets full of fabric, and a futon.  I understood the reasons for everything but the futon.  It turns out her husband, Grant, likes to takes naps in her studio.  Awwww, isn’t that cute?

The Girl Scouts had never seen a long arm before.  Barb didn’t have a project on it at the time, but she turned on the laser and let the girls try following a design from a panagram.  They discovered it is s not as easy as it looks.

Barb demonstrating how to use a longarm

Barb demonstrating how to use a longarm

Barb sat down with the girls and explained what goes into designing a pattern.  She explained coordinating colors, defining shapes and incorporating texture. Barb pulled out a sample from Blank fabric and explained how fabrics inspire the design of the quilt.  Barb also readily admitted that she does not use a computer to design her patterns.  She uses graph paper.

I always imagined a quilt designer’s studio would be full to the rafters with fabric.  But Barb’s wasn’t.  All she had where two cabinets like this.

One of two cabinets of fabric

One of two cabinets of fabric

Why Barb?  Where is all the fabric???  I called her back after our visit to ask.

“Other than the 2 cupboards in my studio that houses fabric for my basic needs, I do have a bedroom upstairs that houses all my quilts and fabric that I don’t use on a regular basis, like my collections of 30’s prints, civil war prints, batiks, flannels and all my backing fabric.  I really don’t have an extensive collection of fabric because of the number of quilts I make. Between the quilt patterns and quilt books I have made 70 to 80 quilts, bags, wall hangings etc. in the past two years.  That took a big bite out of my stash. Oh well, guess I have to go shopping!!!!”

Can we come and help?

We ended the studio tour Barb giving each scout a quilting kit and challenging them to design a quilt around it.  Then we had a tour of the gardens.  One of the Girl Scout’s other interest is gardening.  Barb and the scout started cooking up ideas on how the scout could use some of Barb’s gardening skills and excess plants on an upcoming service project.  What a perfect ending.  This Girl Scout Leader says “Thanks Barb!”…for the studio tour and the promise of plants!

Ending the tour in the gardens

Ending the tour in the gardens

Fabric Dyeing is to dye for!

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

I’ve been playing with dyeing my own fabrics for the past couple of years. Some yardage turns out better than others. Regardless, I have found that ALL the resulting fabric is usable. You just have to find the right project.

If you haven’t ever tried fabric dyeing, give it a shot. There is a bit of an initial investment (dyes, chemicals, cheap measuring cups and spoons), but the results are well worth it.

The first ingredient necessary for dyeing is the recipe. By far my favorite source for recipes is Color by Accident: Lower-Water Immersion Dyeing by Ann Johnston. I have so much fun making the recipes in this book. Ann provides material lists, explanations, everything you need to get started. Just make sure you have room to store all the resulting fabric!

I like to buy my fiber reactive dyes from Dharma Trading. Go this route only if you think you want to get into dyeing big time, the amounts of dyes you have to buy are more than what one initial project needs. You can get supplies to do a smaller single project by buying your supplies at an art store in your area. I easily found smaller quantities of dyeing supplies at The Art Store in South Town Plaza and at Hyatt’s on Jefferson Road in Henrietta.

Fiber Reactive Dyes

Fiber Reactive Dyes

You also need fabric. You can buy PFD (prepared for dyeing) fabric from your local quilt store such as Betty’s, from a place like Dharma Trading, or you can scour your own. It’s up to you how much time, effort and money you want to put forth.

There are loads of dyeing tutorials out on the web. Just do a Google search for “fabric dyeing” and you’ll find them. Someday I’ll post the steps (with messy pictures) I take when dyeing fabric. But for now I want to surge ahead and show you some of the end results.

This wall hanging is called Northern Sunflower. The pattern is one of the first QuiltWoman.com patterns I bought from Betty’s. It is designed by Barbara Skjønberg, a resident of Norway. I’ve always loved her patterns and fell in love with this the first time I saw it. Click on the image to get a closer view of the fabrics.

Northern Sunflower BS-32

Northern Sunflower BS-32

The fabrics were all hand-dyed by myself and my 16 year old daughter (more on her involvement in fabric dyeing in the next paragraph). A lot of my fabrics in this wall hanging were dyed as experiments, especially the petals on the flowers, I really didn’t have any idea of what project to use them in. Heck, sometimes it was enough to just have dyed fabric lying around to admire. But the fabrics worked out great in this beauty, if I do say so myself!

Dyeing is pretty simple, as evidenced by the fact that my teenage daughter did some of the fabrics in the Northern Sunflowers wall hanging. She was earning her Girl Scout Gold Award by making color specific table covers for the school rooms at our church. She dyed 20 yards of fabric one VERY long weekend. The result…the church school rooms look great, my daughter got her Gold Award and I got the scraps and thus my beautiful wall hanging!

Fabric Dying for a cause

Fabric dying for a cause

This is another hand dyed wall hanging I made. I had saved the picture of the quilt from a magazine a long time ago. For this one, I attempted to hand dye the fabrics to the shades I wanted. I succeeded on 90% of the fabric. But the dark blue was not dark enough. I ended up over-dyeing that fabric with black. Phew, it worked. I love the result.

Blue Wallhanging

Blue Wall Hanging

Writing this blog has inspired me to put together another project using my hand-dyed stash. How about one of these? This first one is again by Barbara Skjønberg and is called Northern Flower Garden.

Northern Flower Garden - BS-34

Or how about this one! This is Atlantis and was conceived by Australian designer, Lisa Walton.

Atlantis Pattern - LW-11

Atlantis - LW-11

I think either of these two patterns would be great candidates for hand dyed fabrics.  You can find both on the pattern wall at Betty’s.

It’s time to wrap this blog up. My creative juices are flowing and I need to get to my sewing room! I’ve got a stash of hand dyed fabrics just waiting for me!

Barb Sackel design featured in a Ricky & Alex Video

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009
Pixie Dust Skinnie Pattern BS2-248

Pixie Dust Skinnie Pattern BS2-248

We are so excited!!! AccuQuilt did a video about the GO! Fabric Cutter. In the video, the wall hanging Pixie Dust Skinnie designed by our own buddy, teacher, and designer Barb Sackel is featured. It shows up at 2 minutes and 10 seconds into the video. That is so cool. You can watch the video below.  And you can buy the pattern in our store.

Congratulations to Barb!  If you see her in the store, be sure to tell her you saw the video.