Showing posts with label Morning Glory Designs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Morning Glory Designs. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 7, 2020

New Block of the Month for 2020


The new block of the month for 2020 is called Southwest Sunrise.  This is a real change for me from my usual floral and geometric designs.  Do I have a signature style as a designer?  If so, then this is very different than what I usually do!


The quilt is 75 x 75, and could easily be larger with the addition of another plain border.  It will be available in twelve installments, one each month, starting January 15, 2020.  A new block will be offered every month, along with its story and meaning.  The pattern will be available by Subscription for $6.00 a month for 12 months.  If you prefer printed copies, they can be obtained for $8.00 a month, and will be mailed out each month to subscribers. 

There will be fabric kits offered along with the subscription for those who prefer to purchase the pattern and the fabric.  The kits (one each month for 12 months) will include all the fabric needed to make the entire quilt top.

Those who subscribe to the program will receive a private link to a video tutorial showing how to make that month's block.  

For those who would prefer to pre-pay for the patterns or kits, that option will also be available.  It offers a discount off the cost of the whole pattern or kit.  

There is a $4.00 registration fee, a one time charge that covers the cost of credit card processing and web hosting, both of which are new and separate expenses for offering this program through my current web host.  (Like Sew, my web host, charges $50 a month to use their subscription module, and World Pay charges an extra $10 month for tokenization, a fancy word for storing your credit card securely so it can be automatically charged each month without having to re-enter it.)

I hope you will enjoy making this new block of the month along with me.  I will offer the usual half price patterns on my website each month, and an occasional surprise and give away throughout the year.  Stay tuned for the fun.   For more details, see the 2020 BOM tab at the top of this blog post.

 Remember:  Signups begin January 15!!! 

I would like to thank all of my readers and Newsletter subscribers who have supported my free block of the month quilts for the past 12 years.  I hope that you will continue to support my efforts, and the efforts of all independent women designers who work hard to bring you beautiful quilt and sewing patterns and projects all year long.  You are more than my customers, you are my friends and I deeply value the relationship we have developed over the time we have known each other.
Thank you!

Now for something completely different: 
(In the words of the iconic Monty Python)

Several people have asked why I designed this quilt, which on the surface, appears to be very out of character for me.  I thought I would tell you a bit about what went into this design, and why I felt it was time to bring out a project I had been contemplating for a long time. 

For those who are interested, here is the backstory (you can skip this part if you want). 

Prior to retiring 5 years ago I taught college at an American Indian University for 23 years.  It had a profound affect on me in many ways, but the most important was the understanding of and respect for Native Cultures and Peoples I learned while interacting with students and faculty during my tenure.  On occasion I was asked to make a quilt for a person or occasion at the college, but I felt unqualified to do that.  Native quilts, such as the Star Quilt, are sacred, and when made by the tribal community members, represent an honor and gift of great value and importance. 

I once asked another faculty member from the Delaware tribe if I could make a quilt incorporating tribal imagery and he told me I would have to ask permission of the tribe.  I understood that the images were more than just geometrical imagery.  They represented sacred ideas which guided the physical and spiritual life of the community.  To use them for commercial purposes would be disrespectful. 

One lesson I learned is that there is no distinction between spiritual and secular life in Native culture, there is just LIFE.  This is one of the reasons Native people find the use of Native symbols and images associated with sports teams so offensive.  It is because it takes the symbol out of context, stripping it of its importance and spiritual meaning.  This profane use of the spiritual is taboo in most cultures, but the brutal and cruel history of the genocide of the American Indian peoples makes this use especially hurtful to Native Americans.  They tend to see it as one more way the invading Europeans continue to strip them of their land, their languages, their customs, and spiritual beliefs.

So it was with much reluctance that I approached the design of a quilt incorporating Native imagery.  What made me change my mind and go ahead with this project?  This quilt tells a very important story.  I have to say that it is time to tell this story.  In the face of an America which is morally divided, a government which acts without honor or concern for her people, and who shows no willingness to protect the next seven generations by its indefensible actions toward our planet and her resources, it is time.  I knew the lessons I learned from my years of working with Native people could only be told by using the tools they so generously shared with me.  Designing and sharing this quilt would give me an opportunity to tell the story that so desperately needs to be heard right now in our culture and our time.

With the release of each block in this quilt, I will tell the story of what it means and the lessons we may learn from it.  These are the lessons we must learn if we are to restore harmony in our communities and in our country.  As a teacher, I have learned it is best to teach a lesson using many tools to illustrate the ideas for learners who come from many different backgrounds.  I am not so bold as to think my quilt will help the world get along better, but it is a small beginning, using the tools I have and the gifts I possess, and a voice which can no longer remain silent.  If my grandchildren, and their children are to live a life of freedom, peace and happiness, it is up to me to help make that happen.

Southwest Sunrise calls upon symbols and cosmology of many of the Southwestern Tribes:  The Zuni, the Pima, the Navajo, the Hopi, the Pueblo, the Apache, the Tohono O'ohdam.  I knew many  people in these communities which were my students and colleagues, and the iconography of these tribes belief systems has become associated with this region of the country, even among the non-Indians who inhabit this region.  In addition, I lived in the Southwest for two years, while I was a graduate student, and always thought about capturing the color and warmth of those years in a quilt.

In my next post I will begin the story.  This story is about hope, it is about women, and it is about saving our world.  It is a positive story with, what I hope will be, a happy ending.   I will begin by telling  the story of the pottery vessels.  It is the first block in this quilt. 

Thanks for hanging out with me.  Be happy.

Monday, February 15, 2016

New Block of the Month in The Quilt Pattern Magazine: Starry Medallion

I am really excited to be able to offer a NEW Block of the Month called "Starry Medallion" in The Quilt Pattern Magazine starting in the March 2016 issue.

If you don't subscribe to this completely online monthly quilt pattern magazine, you can get it here for just $16.95  $13.95 (just for my subscribers!) for the entire year (12 issues)!  Enter the secret code glory.

This quilt is king sized, 104" x 104' and designed in those adorable 1930's reproduction fabrics.  Each month you will get one of six installments in the monthly issue with downloadable instructions, templates, and foundations. 

Starry Medallion Quilt Block of the Month
The really exciting part is that I am offering Fabric Kits for this incredible quilt project.  Kits are $45 a month (for six months) and include all fabric to complete the top including the binding, postage included.


Part 1 will begin shipping March 1.  You can subscribe anytime and get the 6 monthly shipments starting with Part 1 (which is a huge beautiful kit) and continue until you have all six.  This is the kit for Part 1.


And this is the huge pile of fabric you will get in kits 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6!  It really is an amazing value!


Here is how it works:

  • You purchase kits, one month at a time, and a new kit is shipped each month. 
  • The price of $45 per month, for 6 months, includes all this fabric and postage on all 6 shipments.
  • There are No added fees.  
  • The kit fee will be charged to your credit card - through PayPal - each month on the same day.  Your kit will ship the next day each month.
  • All fabric is first quality quilt cottons from Moda, Maywood Studios, and Fabri-Quilt.


I only made 20 kits so if you want one, order early!  :-)



Sunday, November 29, 2015

December Free Project

Sometimes I get carried away when I am designing with EQ7.

I wanted to do something special for all my readers and subscribers to thank you for hanging out with me this year.  So I designed a special block just for you.



So here is where I start getting carried away.  I wanted to add a border so that when I put four of the blocks together I would get a square designs.  So I added a vine to the flower block.



So  here is what it looks like with the four blocks together.


I love this 24 x 24 pillow look and thought about some other arrangements for other Christmas decorating.  Here is my idea for a table runner.


Two squares of four block. 24 x 48 Pretty simple, but still fun. However, if you are not an applique girl then you might break out in a sweat trying to do 8 blocks. Then I thought of something simpler and less square.


I really like this one.  Three 12" blocks on point and the little deco garden border blocks festooning the sides in reds and greens.  I might even make this one.  At 20 x 45 it is a great size for a holiday table.


So here is a table cloth sized quilt.  I liked the offset squares of flowers when I started rotating the blocks.  But the next one is simpler and leaves room for some pretty quilting.


So you can use these two free blocks to make any of these settings or just use the four in a square to make a pillow, candle mat, table topper, or wall hanging.

"It amazes me that a little bit of moving around changes the look of the block so much.  But wait till you see what happens when you start changing the color!"

So now I am starting to get really carried away in EQ7 and go back to the four block poinsettia arrangement and start playing with color.  I always see blue poinsettia fabric in the stores so I did a blue variation.


Wow, I loved that one, and the bit of purple really contrasted nicely with the blue.  Of course poinsettias don't really come in blue, but they do come in white and pink so I thought I would try a variation in first white, and then pink.


What do you think of the white one?  I loved this one too because it reminded me of those years as a teenager when I worked in the florist shop with my mom and sister.  There were so many gorgeous white poinsettias in the shop.  OK, so here is the pink version.


OK, so it's not really pink, but I loved the combination.  I started playing with my favorite EQ7 tool - random recolor - and it looked sorta pink, ok more red than pink. But I liked it anyway, and it was a bit less traditional for all you non traditionalists.


This is more like it.  I loved this pink version.  So romantic and victorian.  I picture it in a Country Home article on "A Victorian Christmas!"  It would fit just right in my pink and green bedroom.

Then I inverted the colors just for fun.  Peggy (www.connecttheblocks.com) this one is for you, the bling girl!  I would put crystals all over this for you.  It also matches my Easy Binding Winder!  Hohoho.


Doesn't that make you want to run for the pepto bismol?  Hahahaha  So I kept hitting the random recolor button and here is what I came up with.  Well actually this is only a small sample of what I came up with because once I started I couldn't stop.  But these were some of my faves.  Perhaps they will give you an idea about how you would like to color your blocks.


These colors looked Asian to me.  The gold behind the deep blues and purples looked so rich.  Not sure about the light blue border, but it does make a soft contrast (complement of orange is blue!) to the bold colors in the design.  Remember, these combinations are totally random!  Those of you who are especially anal and #don't do random may want to look away at this point.


This looked like ice to me.  If you are a "Frozen" fan you might like this. It  would go great in a little girl's bedroom filled with "Frozen" stuff.  The stonehenge fabrics in the background are such a cool texture, also.  Even the purple border provides a nice counterpoint.


This is another one of those warm variations with the blue violet and red against the gold.   Whooo doggy, that would light up someone's ugly brown sofa!


This one with the blues, grays and turquoise is much more "me".  I love these cool colors against a silver background.  I would so totally make this for my back porch wicker chairs and sofa.


While these muted greens and tans are not my colors I could see this in the cabin with rustic furniture and hunting decor.  My husband would call this the "camo" version.


This has a more modern look to me, especially those cool black and white print flower centers and lime green (the new neutral!) haha.  But I gotta tell you it is growing on me and I am more open to these colors than I once was.


This is for all of you K-State fans.  You know who you are and I didn't want to leave you out so when this variation popped up I save it just for you.


This one is for my friend Cara Gulati, cuz it is in her colors and style.  I think this would appeal to her.  Warm, rich, kinda kinky, but fun - always fun.

I can see you start to yawn so the show is over.  Hope you enjoyed playing along with me while I shared this project with you.  Download the free blocks (available only for 30 days) and share with me what you would do with them.

Thanks for hanging out with me in 2015.  I love each and every one of you.

PS.  Watch for my NEW block of the month coming in 2016!

Sunday, January 11, 2015

BOM Block 1 is Ready

The first block of the new FREE 2015 BOM Deco Gardens is posted on the 2015 BOM page. Click on the tab at the top, right to go to the download link.

Block 1 Columbine
This quilt is designed with a black background to make the colors glow like stained glass.

I am so excited and pleased to announce that I have partnered with Peggy at ConnectTheBlocks.com to offer fabric kits for each block!  See the 2015 BOM page for more info or you can sign up for fabric kits here.

Click Here To Order Fabric kits

 If you prefer a white background, here is what it would look like.


Yardage information for the whole quilt is available HERE.




Sunday, January 4, 2015

New Design will be featured in The Quilt Pattern Magazine

If you haven't discovered The Quilt Pattern Magazine yet you ought to take a look.  It is entirely online and publishes 12 jam packed issues a year for an incredibly modest subscription price.  I have published more than 20 EQ7 tutorials in it over the past two years and three quilt patterns.

The first one came out last year -- my Summer Iris Picnic Quilt -- and two more will be coming out this year.

This is the Summer Iris Picnic Quilt.  Don't you love my really high tech photo studio?  LOL  My driveway in front of the garage door on a windy day!  This pattern is now available on my website: Morning Glory Designs.com.  

(Oh and keep an eye out for the spring Keepsake Quilting Catalog.  You might just see laser cut kits for this quilt.)

This February the second of these quilts will appear.  It is called Candy Stars, and my absolutely wonderful niece Krista made the sample. She did an amazing job on the quilt, and my machine quilter, Brenda Weien, worked her magic on it as well.  The result is pretty fun, I think.

Candy Stars published in The Quilt Pattern Magazine
I am not really a purple kind of girl but these colors appealed to me and I wanted to do something more modern looking.  The irony of that is that the design is inspired by 2nd century roman mosaic tile floor!  LOL

The pattern will be available Feb 1 in TQPM.  If  you haven't subbed yet take a look.  You can get this whole pattern plus a whole year full of other patterns, articles and tutorials for the cost about 1 pattern!  Quite a bargain.

And I fixed a great Green Chili Chicken Enchilada casserole for dinner!  haha, just had to add that. LOL



Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Stained Glass Stars Published

Fons and Porter’s LOVE OF QUILTING Magazine published my Stained Glass Stars pattern as an online Bonus Pattern in their January/February 2013 issue on page 98.  You can get the pattern HERE!
2012-12-26_1158
They did not give credit to the Machine Quilter, Brenda Weien of Ottawa, KS, who did an amazing job on the quilting!
In the magazine they rate the pattern as Intermediate, but on their website they rate it as Challenging!  You pick!  I would rate it Intermediate for setting blocks and Advanced for the star blocks.  I paper pieced much of it, but their instructions have you rotary cut and strip-piece the whole quilt.  Not that difficult in my opinion. The star blocks do take some time because of all the pieces, but they are not difficult.  I did most of them at a retreat and had a blast watching them come together.
If you receive the Fons & Porter’s LOVE OF QUILTING Newsletter, there is a link to the quilt in the December 25. 2012 issue.
2012-12-26_1156
Scroll down a ways until you see the picture and the link.
2012-12-26_1156_001
Once you get to their website don’t forget to click on the Designers Page!  You will see my smiling mug if you scroll down far enough!
2012-12-26_1158_001
Leave a comment and one lucky winner will get a FREE Morning Glory Designs Pattern of your choice! 
Gosh I love give-aways!
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