Showing posts with label Japanese Quilt Blocks to Mix and Match. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japanese Quilt Blocks to Mix and Match. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 March 2017

A Japanese Quilt Blocks sampler


Irene Shaw made a amazing sampler quilt from 'Japanese Quilt Blocks', posted these photos on Facebook yesterday, and said I could share them on my blog.  She wrote -

This quilt I made for my son as a wedding present using your Japanese Quilt Blocks book. They loved it!

The most difficult was choosing the blocks! I love that book.



This is the back. The Batik squares are the backs of the sashiko ones on the front. I did a simple quilt as you go.

I love the ways Irene has combined the blocks, including enlarging one of the kasuri blocks for the corners. Wow!

Wednesday, 6 April 2016

Sashiko and patchwork panel


Charlotte Thun posted a photo of her lovely sashiko panel on the Sashiko group on Facebook way back in January but I only asked her if I could post it here today.  Doesn't the sashiko look great on burgundy?  The blocks are from 'Japanese Quilt Blocks to Mix and Match'.


Tuesday, 10 March 2015

Sashiko and kasuri block sampler


Cynthia Nanto, who blogs as Wabi-sabi Quilts, sent me a photo of her gorgeous version of the sashiko and kasuri sampler from 'Japanese Quilt Blocks to Mix and Match'.  She wrote -

I have really enjoyed your sashiko books as a supplement to the sashiko I learned while living in Japan 2011-2013.  I have been working on my sashiko sampler quilt from your Japanese Blocks to Mix and Match book for a year now, and finished it today.

She has included some other sashiko designs she learned at Blue and White in Azabu-juban and the gorgeous deep indigo cottons are the real thing, vintage fabrics, some from the Boroichi.  Including vintage indigo and katazome stencil dyed cloth gives the quilt real depth of colour.

There's more about the quilt here on her blog.  Love it!



Monday, 5 January 2015

Sally's Japanese Quilt Blocks quilt - finished


Sally has just sent me photos of her finished Japanese Quilt Blocks quilt.  She writes -

It needs blocking but it is done!  I hope you like!


I like it a LOT!


I love the way Sally has integrated that panel into the quilt, and picked out the colours with the vintage kimono fabrics she's used for the appliques.  Norman seems to be giving it the seal of approval as well.  Thanks very much for the photos :-)


Saturday, 3 January 2015

Sally's Japanese Quilt Blocks Quilt - part 2


I don't have anything much to report yet re further progress, but Sally's cat Norman obviously feels he needs to lend a paw today!

Monday, 29 December 2014

Sally's Japanese Quilt Blocks quilt


Sally Ann Westcott in Hobart, Tasmania, sent me some photos of her Japanese Quilt Blocks quilt she's been working on for a while now.  She wrote -

I'm attacking a UFO! How long ago did I make the top? Can't remember.

 The quilting is still being done so it looks a bit funny and wobbly.

The good news is that it can't be longer than seven years, because 'Japanese Quilt Blocks to Mix and Match' was published in 2007! If I remember correctly, we 'met' online because of that book and I started following her blog, Sally's Stuff.  We chat more on Facebook these days.  I love being able to chat with friends all over the world.




Here are the blocks from the book.  Sally has done some in sashiko and others using recycled vintage kimono fabrics - hence the subtle colour scheme. 


 Sally - The sun keep coming and going which made it really difficult (to take photos).







This panel gave me headaches.  The weave is very open and after I had quilted the crane and the turtle the background bagged horribly!  I have had to stipple it nearly to death to make it sit flat!

I had similar problems when I made the sashiko sampler quilt for 'The Ultimate Sashiko Sourcebook', because those thick, loosely woven Japanese craft fabrics have quite a lot more stretch to them than the other fabrics I used, so the blocks looked sort of baggy once the sashing was quilted.
 

 The stippling has worked well to control the panel and give it an interesting texture too.

 

 No doubt Sally has been 'helped' by Norman, her gorgeous ginger tiger cat.


Sally reckons she'll have the quilt finished soon, so I'll post another photo when I see the finished quilt.   Thanks very much for sharing the ones above.


Wednesday, 23 July 2014

Marion Werner's Japanese Quilt Blocks sampler

 

Marion sent me some photos of her Japanese sampler, which combines blocks from 'Japanese Quilt Blocks to Mix and Match' and 'Japanese Taupe Quilt Blocks'. She writes -

Tomorrow I will finish the borders and then comes the fun part - quiltingthis baby on my Juki.
But it starts looking like a quilt.


Model - Elsie, Marion's bassett hound, who obviously has good taste in quilts!

The taupe, blue and russet colour scheme is a winner.  I wonder what colours will be in the border?  It is going to be a big quilt - it must be over 80in square already.  Ganbatte kudasai! ('Work hard' in Japanese)


UPDATE - Marion sent me another e mail, with a photo showing the borders -


Here the progress - as promised.
Quiltsize: 2.6 m x 2.32 m
sashing - finished - 1.5"
inner border - finished - 2.5"
outer border - finished - 6"
Sorry, that I cannot deliver a better photo - the table is not high enough!

Monday, 3 February 2014

Yuza-machi visit part 3 - out and about in Sakata etc.


I used to go to Sakata city a lot when I lived in Yuza.  Some parts of it have changed a lot - there are big retail parks on the outskirts and some of the big shops I used to go to (like the Jusco and Daiei department stores, which had good craft/sewing departments) have been demolished - but there are always new things to discover.  During my trip in November, we went to Sakata several times, including to the city museum, where we saw a display of Shonai sashiko by the Hirata Sashiko group.  When I began stitching Shonai sashiko, the only reference materials I had were samplers stitched by Chie Ikeda and Hirata Sashiko's book (published, I think, by Hirata town council and not easy to get hold of).


Shonai sashiko includes stitches which are popular throughout the region - Yuza sashiko is a sub group of Shonai, as some stitches were only worked in the area around Yuza and would have been invented by sashiko stitchers who lived there.  The same is true of other areas.  For example, the horizontal band pattern on the bag below is a stitch pattern from Hirata, where it is just called 'our stitch'.  The Hirata pattterns are all hitomezashi (one stitch sashiko) too.


When the museum staff spotted that there was an English speaking visitor in the group, they got their English language sashiko book from the office to show me.  We were very amused because it was my book, 'The Ultimate Sashiko Sourcebook'!  Here I am with Reiko Domon and Chie Ikeda, in front of more Hirata sashiko.  There were many more pieces in the exhibition than I have shown here, so it would be worth a visit.




The museum has many other interesting items illustrating the long history of the area, including some wonderful model boats (above).  These are the kitamaebune (north front ships), which traded between Shonai and other parts of Japan, notably the Kobe/Osaka area and Kyoto.  Shonai and Yamagata were prosperous areas even in Edo times, because they produced high quality goods for trade - rice, safflower, and various handmade goods, like the famous Sakata tansu chests.  Some of the items in the museum are much older than that, as the area has been inhabited since prehistoric times.  The pots below are Jōmon
era.

I also needed to do some shopping in Sakata - buying the special dark blue 'koniro' (very dark indigo) cotton cloth used for Yuza sashiko.  We went to a small kimono shop in the northern suburbs of the city, I think near Hikarigaoka Park (I don't know Sakata very well these days, especially as parts of it have changed a lot, so I loose my sense of orientation quite quickly!)  As well as the Yuza sashiko cotton, I bought four bolts of wool kimono fabrics - the colours and patterns were irresistable.


We visited the great Buddha of Sakata.  This is the second great Buddha that was created there and is made of bronze - the first one was iron, and was melted down during WWII.  Munenori Otaki, the priest at the temple, told me the story of how the Buddha was made, first by his great (?) grandfather and then remade by his grandfather. There is an information panel next to the statue which I thought I'd photographed, but I don't seem to have a picture of it.  I can't find any information on the internet either, which seems rather strange, as it is a well-known statue.  I hope the photos will give a sense of scale.




We also visited the 'Sanno Club'.  This interesting building was a restaurant in Meiji and Taisho times, where the local geisha entertained.  In the gift shop, there were some koginzashi displays.  Kogin is the counted sashiko from Aomori prefecture, which takes its name from koginu, a kind of work jacket.





Yumeji Takehisa, a Japanese artist of the Taisho era, visited the Sanno Club many times.  You will probably know some of his works, as he is popular today.  The cartoons below must have been sketched at the Sanno Club.

Some of the rooms are set out just as they would have been in the Taisho and early Showa eras, giving an impression of how the club must have looked.  I imagine it would have been a very lively place.


Throughout the building, there are very good quality shoji screens.  The overall decoration feels very tasteful.


The tea green colour in this tokonuma alcove is lovely and refreshing.


Upstairs there was an exhibition of Kabuki and Noh costumes.  Most were hung from the ceiling, so we could see them from both sides.  As these textiles are designed for the stage, the patterns tend to be bold and not so finely detailed as normal kimono.  Many are re-creations of very old patterns too.


Our main reason for going was to see the exhibition of kasafuku - I guess the best translation of that would be 'lucky umberellas'.  These are Japanese umberellas with lots of hanging charms, all made from fabric.  What a fabulous way to use up tiny pieces of treasured fabrics (and an umberella, if you happen to have one and don't know what to do with it!)



This guide shows you all the different items on the umberellas - flowers, fish, the 'collection of treasures' etc.


The edge of the umberella has a red fabric trim an the individual charms hang on strings.


Here's a detail -


I liked the takarazukushi (collection of treasures) themed kasafuku best, but that's a collection of motifs I like.  The shapes are interesting and something a bit different, while the symbols have good meanings - the lucky mallet (shake for good luck), the never ending money bag, the hat and coak of invisibility, treasure house key etc.  I suggested to Reiko that she should make a sashiko version - or maybe I will.


I use some of the takarazukushi as block designs in 'Japanese Quilt Blocks to Mix and Match'.


This is the foyer at the Sanno Club.  What an amazing place!