Were you a Black Friday shopper this year?
This has been an enjoyable weekend with family in Kansas City. I've been trying to get some Christmas shopping done -- which of course meant braving a few stores on Black Friday. I am finding that if you wait until mid-afternoon the shopping experience is much less stressful. However I have been thinking about some more crazy Black Friday experiences Back in my early-adult years, I remember getting up before the crack of dawn to stand in long lines for particularly enticing Black Friday offers. The one I remember best is the time I started with a trip to JoAnn Fabrics at 6 am. The store was a zoo. Uncle John came with me and graciously stood in the fabric cutting line for me while I scoured the store for some great buys. We were done by 7 am and hurried to Herberger's where they were handing out free cookbooks to the first few hundred customers. It is still one of my favorite cookbooks in my kitchen. The cookbooks also had coupons and I managed to score a $100 coupon with which I enjoyed a nice shopping spree. Did you participate in any Black Friday activities this year? If so, let me know your favorite find in the comments. My new EQ8 tutorial is an idea that will allow you to decompress after a busy shopping day. This new quilt design is focused on keeping things simple. Day After Black Friday Frenzy EQ8 Tutorial
With the busyness of the holiday season now upon us, I am all about easy.
See how to play the "what if" game as you start with a simple 8 pointed star drawn with EQ8, Design your own corners and then play with a variety of options on the quilt worktable. Adding pieced borders is an opportunity to to create coordinating blocks using my 3 in 1 concept -- with no additional drawing required.
I look forward to seeing what you do with the Day After Black Friday Frenzy blocks. Feel free to share in the Learning EQ Facebook post.
Turkey Celebration EQ8 Video Tutorial
Last month I challenged the Tech Know Quilter Masters members to create a harvest themed quilt. You will definitely want to scroll down and check out their designs. They are super creative.
I decided to challenge myself to complete a harvest themed quilt myself. I will walk you through my process and share with you the blocks and quilts in this weeks video tutorial.
Draft three EasyDraw blocks. These are great beginner blocks to draft.
Use Serendipity>Merge Block for new blocks for the quilt center and for the Alternate Block Spaces.
For a different quilt, consider using different foundation blocks for the merge.
Note that the triangles in lower corners of the turkey block, will actually help us create a faux flying geese patch that will extend across three blocks.
Finish off by coloring the blocks and remaining borders.
To save your work select "Add to Sketchbook".
Check out the details in the video tutorial.
I look forward to seeing your version of this quilt. Please feel free to share your designs in the Learning EQ Facebook group.
Harvest Time EQ8 Challenge Showcase
Each month, I provide a challenge to Tech Know Quilter Masters members. In October the challenge was to design a Harvest themed quilt. It is so amazing to see the creativity of this group of EQ8 users.
If you have completed twelve or more months of Tech Know Quilters, you are eligible to join Tech Know Quilters Masters. If this interests you, send me a note and I will provide you more information on the program.
I remember agonizing over my first purchase of Electric Quilt. I loved quilting and had a ton of patterns and books – more than I could ever use in my lifetime. Can you relate? I wasn’t completely convinced I needed the software. However, I also realized that those purchased patterns were not always accurate and there were quilts that I saw in magazines and at shows that did not have patterns. And I didn't necessarily want to make an exact replica of the quilts from patterns I had bought. Once I started using the software, I knew I couldn’t live without it. I quickly found that I recouped my investment in the software through significantly fewer PIGS (projects in grocery sacks). You know those quilts that you thought would be your next masterpiece. But as you got started piecing them, you realized something wasn’t quite right. I knew from my own struggles that the initial purchase of Electric Quilt 8 can be a challenging decision. As a result, I want to help you resolve whether the software will be useful for you. In this blog post I will be sharing with you:
Six Reasons to Purchase Electric Quilt 8 After purchasing Electric Quilt and working with it (and teaching others how to use it), I've come to realize that Electric Quilt 8 is hands down the best tool I have purchased for creating both blocks and quilts. Full disclosure. I use it personally, but I also teach people how to get the best use of the program. I am pretty sure you know which side of the fence I will come down on. But I want you to go into this with your eyes open. So I will also be sharing some of the objections to buying…to help you make the right decision for you. #1 - Audition Your Favorite Fabrics When is the last time you bought a pattern because you loved the quilt on the cover? And then realized that the fabric is no longer available. Or maybe it doesn't work well with the other colors in the room you are hoping to use the quilt in. If you have trouble visualizing what your favorite fabrics will look like in your quilt pattern, you are perfectly normal. Before Electric Quilt, I lost count of the number of times I purchased some fabulous fabrics, cut them up and realized (after the point of no return) they wouldn’t work with my selected quilt pattern. With Electric Quilt 8 you have the option to audition fabrics before your first cut. This can even be done before spending money on fabric.
#2 - Never Manually Calculate Fabric Yardage Requirements Again One of my favorite features of Electric Quilt 8 is the ability to obtain fabric yardage requirements with a push of a button. If you use fabric from the Electric Quilt library, it even will provide you with a fabric reference number to assist you in purchasing the fabric at your favorite quilt shop. Bonus: A new feature in Electric Quilt 8 is the option of printing the number of Fat Quarters needed for your quilt. #3 - Modify Blocks and Quilts from Purchased Patterns Have you purchased a pattern and realized there are things you would like to change? Maybe the block needs to be tweaked to use your favorite ruler or die set. Or maybe the sizes or layout needs to be adjusted so the quilt can work for your bed -- and then of course you need to adjust the yardage requirements to accommodate the new size. Good news! Electric Quilt 8 has three different sets of tools for drawing your own blocks or redrafting a block from a picture. EasyDraw tools are similar to working with graph paper and pencil, just like you use to do. And if you want to draw a more complex design, PolyDraw tools also allows you to create pieced blocks that are not based on a standard graph paper type of grid. Think circular or kaleidoscope types of designs. If you are into hexagonal quilts, PolyDraw also provides us the ability to create interlocking blocks. And if you love applique, you will definitely be interested in the applique toolkit. I have not found an applique project that cannot be drafting using Electric Quilt 8. However, before starting to draft your own block, you may want to check if your block is in the Electric Quilt block library. With the release of EQ8, Electric Quilt added 1400 new bocks to their already extensive library. Giving us a total of 6500 blocks to choose from for starting our next quilt. But if you cannot locate your favorite block in the library, there is no need to worry. There is the option to import a picture of the block and trace it. This is probably my all time favorite feature of Electric Quilt 8. This is an area I love working with Electric Quilt users on and an area of focus in Tech Know Quilters - a paid membership program for Electric Quilt 8 users. There are also options to add more blocks to the library through collections such as as Block Base Plus based on Barbara Brackman's Encyclopedia of Pieced Quilt Patterns. Choose from collections by Judy Martin, Marsha McCloskey or even Dear Jane. And the beauty is that all of these blocks will be able to be modified by you within Electric Quilt 8. Within Electric Quilt 8, they even have added a group of Serendipity tools that provides a fast way to create entirely new blocks based on a previously drafted block. I find this is a great option for creating brand new original quilt blocks on days I am not feeling super creative. #4 - Select Your Favorite Construction MethodMany potential Electric Quilt 8 users wondering if the software will assist them in constructing their block. Electric Quilt does assume that users are familiar with basic quilt construction techniques. The software will not teach you how to applique, foundation piece or even piece together rotary cut patches. It will also not provide you step by step instructions typically found in a purchased quilt pattern. However it will provide you with a variety of tools to facilitate cutting fabric and even the foundations to paper piece your blocks. The method of construction is your choice. #5 - Save Money |
According to Wikipedia, a Hawaiian quilt is a distinctive quilting style of the Hawaiian Islands that uses large radially symmetric applique patterns. Motifs often include stylized botanical designs.
Hawaiian-style quilts typically use solid or near-solid fabrics in only two colors. These quilts were historically made from the fabrics that were most readily available (often red and white). |
Hawaiian quilt applique is made from a single cut on folded fabric. The fabric is folded in quarters or eighths -- similar to how we may have done paper snowflakes back in grade school.
You could use an Electronic cutting machine, such as a Cricut, Silhouette or Brother Scan N Cut machine to cut out your final image. Alternatively you could go low-tech. Fold a piece of freezer paper in eighths and trace top section on the freezer paper. Cut out all your layers at once. You can then iron the freezer paper to your fabric and cut out your fabric. You can choose whether you wish to add seam allowances. |
Hawaiian Quilt Font
You can download the fonts for free from Netfontes.com The fonts were designed by Pokelele.
I decided that these "letters" would make great quilt blocks, and would also be good practice for learning to use the applique tools in Electric Quilt 8.
Drafting a Hawaiian Quilt Block using EQ8
In my tutorial this week, I will share with you how to draft a Hawaiian quilt block in Electric Quilt using a "letter" from the Hawaiian font as the starting point.
Here are the pdfs with images of the Hawaiian fonts I obtained from Netfontes.com. Feel free to use my pdf to select images for tracing a Hawaiian quilt block using Electric Quilt.. |
Letter Challenge
Ready to Learn the Applique Tools in Electric Quilt 8?
My plans are to open enrollment for Tech Know Quilters at the end of December. (The membership is a more economical way to take the class.)
Send me a note if you are a current member and would like to add this to you current class for November. I will send you a discount coupon for the class. |
If you are new to Applique (or would like to learn at a slower and more methodical approach), I offer an Introduction to Applique class. It is offered in Tech Know Quilters - a membership focused on mastery of Electric Quilt 8.
I have also included a few of the beginning Tech Know Quilter classes in my store -- for those that would like to try a class before joining the membership.
Introduction to Applique Agenda
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Kari Schell
Electric Quilt Expert and Educator and Pattern Designer.
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