About this item
Become a skilled foundation piecer with New York Beauty blocks and arcs of Flying Geese that amaze! Stitch your way through 31 architectural block patterns, ideal for advanced beginners and intermediate quilters. Practice this straightforward approach to curved piecing, foundation piecing, and simple machine appliqu on 10 full-size quilts and 27 pillow projects. Lively color combinations provide movement and drama, with fabric selections from Tula Pink, in collaboration with Carl Hentsch.
About the Author
My recent quilting adventures reemerged when I moved to Missouri around 2006. However, my interest in crafting started at a very young age. I began my first craft project at the age of six. My first niece was about to be born and with my mother's help, I created a quilt for her. Now, this was not a patchwork quilt, but was hand embroidered. I carefully selected pages from many of my coloring books. My mother then transferred the images to a piece of fabric, which I then embroidered with a running stitch. I used different colored threads and filled in each area with color. My mother heat set the color and we completed with a backing and binding. My niece used that blanket until it was tattered and torn, and even then she still carried it in her pillowcase.
As my niece grew, so did my craft and design sense. By the time she was walking I was designing dresses for her (I must have been about 12 at that time) . After I designed a dress, my mother again was there to help me. Together we created a pattern, cut out the fabric and then she sewed it all together. How great it felt to have my niece wearing something that I help create!
Needless to say, my interests also grew. I remember one year sitting around while my Aunt visited from Chicago. She was knitting Christmas bells and I was totally enthralled. I asked her to show me and I learned to knit at an early age.
Well, many years went by, I graduated High School and the University and joined the Air Force. It was during my time in the Air Force, probably around 1990, that one of my friends was knitting booties and remembered "Hey, I can do that too." So, I immediately drove to the nearest yarn shop, bought a book, yarn and needles and proceeded to knit a cabled sweater. Unbelievably, the sweater was completed, AND WEARABLE! So, I continued to knit and knit and knit!
You must be thinking to yourself, "So, when did he actually start quilting? " To answer that, we would have to fast forward to the mid to late 90's. I discovered HGTV and Alex Anderson. Oh, what was that she was doing, cutting up fabric and sewing it back together and making a quilt? Oh, wait, now there was PBS and Eleanor Burns, Quilt in a Day. I watched many shows think to myself, "I wish I could do that." Well, I bought some magazines and continued to watch the programs. Then, one day, there was Eleanor's son on the show, and he was quilting! Wow, guys can do it too!
After that, I knew I had to try. So I proceeded to my nearest Hancock Fabric store and bought a pattern, fabric, and all the necessary rotary cutting tools. I proceeded to measure, cut, sew and then quilt my handiwork. After seeing that mess, I am amazed that I tried again. I tried one or two more projects with little to no success. Then, I found it! A quilt as you go log cabin book, how great, how simple! I am sure it would have been, had I not select the thickes