Monday, May 16, 2016

FNF 2 -- pieced quilts


Is there some strange alignment of the planets this spring to make pieced quilts the favorite of quilt show jurors everywhere?  No sooner did I finish telling you about all the pieced quilts at Art Quilt Elements last month than I get to tell you about all the pieced quilts at Form, Not Function.

Probably my favorite was Maria Shell's, which also won the award of excellence given by River City Fiber Artists (full disclosure: I'm a member of that group, and we got to choose who got our award, so there's probably some cause-and-effect relationship).

Maria Shell, Wall of Sound (details below)

Maria works almost exclusively with the traditional Crossed Squares quilt block, but her treatment of it is anything but traditional.  She uses commercial prints so a lot of the action in this quilt comes from the store, but there's still lots and lots of piecing there.

The energy in this quilt is almost nuclear as it explodes in a riot of color and pattern.  (By the way, it may make you jealous to hear that each of the nine blocks in this quilt was also the subject of its very own nine-block quilt.)

Sandra Palmer Ciolino, Precaria #4: Kinetics (detail below)

Here's a classic "motif" quilt, using a simple block over and over in different shapes, sizes and configurations to make a complex overall pattern.  I liked the slightly offbeat color palette, the meticulous piecing and wonderful quilting.

More pieced quilts tomorrow for your viewing pleasure.

4 comments:

  1. So glad to see this quilt! It is not one that I would have seen otherwise and it is unique and beautiful.

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  2. Two of my favorite "piecers"......and these pieces are stunning.

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  3. Hi Kathy,
    Not being a piecer/patchworker I am not quite sure what you mean by some statements. For Maria Shell's work, "(By the way, it may make you jealous to hear that each of the nine blocks in this quilt was also the subject of its very own nine-block quilt.)"
    and for Sandra Ciolino's work, "Here's a classic "motif" quilt," Perhaps I am not really seeing the classic in this?
    Sandy

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    1. Sandy -- good questions. I think you deserve a fuller response, probably illustrated. Stay tuned...

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