TN&TN collective member.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

WIP Wednesday #80 @ TN&TN

Friday, March 1, 2013

Friday Feature: Karen @ Bungalow Bay Quilts

Hi everyone! I'm super excited to be a part of TNTN's Friday feature!

So let's get down to business. My name is Karen Black and my alter ego blog name is Bungalow Bay Quilts.You can usually find me here at www.bungalowbayquilts.com Hubby and I, along with 3 dogs and a cat, live in a small village in a part of Ontario called the Lanark Highlands, known locally as "God's Country".

We moved here just over 3 years ago and bought a stone house that was built in 1850. It's our biggest WIP! I'm retired (hubby's not) so it's up to me to take our dogs for their daily hike in the woods. It's a tough job, but somebody has to do it!

for detail shots and a dresdan tip, click
After I get them tired out, it's time to head up to my sewing room and get to work. My main passion right now is Modern Quilting and my work is heavily influenced by modern Japanese quilt design. I love the Japanese way of combining prints, their use of text prints and the intricacy of their patchwork designs. I'm using that influence as a springboard to develop my own personal design aesthetic.

I'm a self taught quilter, although I started sewing my own clothes at the age of 10. So I had a very strong sewing background when I made my first quilt back in the early 70's just prior to the birth of my first child. Over the intervening years, I've drifted in and out of the quilt world, but have always pursued a textile craft of one kind or another.

for some detail shots, here and here
Knitting, needlepoint, cross stitch, fabric dyeing,screen printing, batik, marbling, dressmaking, macrame, even dabbling in jewelry making and bookbinding...no idle hands here! In fact, the only craft I never really took to was pottery. Too dirty for this child!

But the wheel of my life has turned again to quiltmaking as my primary form of self expression. I think that the big difference this time around is that writing about and photographing my work for my blog posts has become a form of self expression as well. The two go hand in hand, each one informing and nurturing the other!

In fact, starting and growing my blog has been one of my biggest accomplishments this past year. It's been a real learning experience (yep, self taught here too!) as well as a very satisfying creative endeavour. It's been the vehicle which has opened the door to making friends from all over the world. I'm always humbled and amazed by the kind words of people I may never meet in person, but with whom I am united by the mutual love of the craft of quiltmaking.

for a closer look-> click
I've also recently discovered the world of online quilt swaps and have become totally smitten with them. I find them a fun way to stretch my creative wings , as each one will have it's own theme and/or specifications. It's so much fun to make a special something for a swap partner, and then to receive something wonderful in return!

My short list of future goals includes growing my blog readership and selling my work through my Etsy store. I would love to have a design published in a quilt magazine. Note to self: prepare submissions! I also want to try my hand at designing patterns for paper piecing. And teach myself to free motion quilt.

My biggest dream for myself isn't actually quilt related per se. In a couple of years I'll be celebrating a very significant birthday and, to celebrate it in style, I plan to do a bicycle tour of the Netherlands, solo! It's something I've had on my bucket list for awhile now, and let's just say, I'm not getting any younger! And, I hear that there's a very active Dutch Modern Quilting community. This could be very interesting!
 Proost!



Tuesday, February 26, 2013

WIP Wednsday # 79 @ TN&TN

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

WIP Wednesday #78 @ TN&TN

Friday, February 15, 2013

Friday Feature: Carli @ Good Earth Quilting


Hello and welcome to my world.

My name is Carli Heinrichs. I live in Northwestern British Columbia in a small Canadian town called Telkwa. A quote from the Telkwa.ca website:
“Although there is some debate as to the origin of our namesake, it is commonly accepted that Telkwa is a native term meaning the "meeting of the waters" and describes the picturesque joining of the Bulkley and Telkwa Rivers in the heart of the town." 
I reside in the rural areas of Bulkley Valley, right on the Bulkley River. The place I live has given me gifts of vistas, peace, and quiet. We love living in a welcoming community valley of approximately 20,000. The Buckley River is one of the many rivers impacted by the Enbridge Gateway Pipeline. I include this quote so you see the passionate relationship with water in the Northwest area of the province.

My blog name is Good Earth Quilting

I was born only 290 kms east of Telkwa in Prince George, B.C. I grew up moving around the province with my parents as one mill closed and another town's mill had the next job. My father, an IWA member, felt the boom and decline of forestry jobs as the waves of political change in technology and resource extraction in B.C. were so volatile in the 1970’s. I grew up while marches for peace happened in the streets of Vancouver. I yearned to attend, but was too young.


My Sashiko Sockeye piece
Making art gave me unique opportunities. I eagerly signed up for fashion sewing in Gr.8, where I met a Home Economics teacher who changed my life. She taught me how to hand sew a one block log cabin quilt, all of 9 inches square, I treasure this first quilt.

I have been an artist most of my life. I dabbled in acrylic/oil painting in the early teen years, but when pregnant with my first child I had a powerful urge to make a quilt. Like many other quilters, I'm sure my road started with a baby quilt.



My Stack and Whack Dresden Plate quilt called
"Canadian Birds"
I looked to frugal green ways and chose to work with the plentiful fabric from used clothing at thrift shops. My mother had taught me to hand sew as a child.  As a result I grew into an excited and creative embroidery nut, making "pin money" by hand stitching daisy chains down the seams of my peers in high school. Success was earning money to embroider, I was hooked!

Now, some 39 years later, I am still hooked. I explore political and social situations in fabric art. I've been playing with various new techniques learned from reading the blogs of some lovely artists out there like Monika Kinner-Whalen of My Sweet Prairie.

My three most successful accomplishments of the last year are the completion of the epic long king size quilt I made for my hubby, the Sashiko Sockeye piece that drew so many new followers and lovely comments, and the Smithers 2013 Centennial Quilt which I only have parts of so far. I love and continue to make crazy quilts from used materials.  I prefer the look of a crazy quilt made this way.

Beach House Crazy Quilt made in 2008
My biggest dream for myself would be to actually sell my work on a regular basis. I’d love to spend all my days working on new pieces of textile art and have shows around Canada.  You know what I mean?
Crafting quilts from used cloth is just one way to divert items from the landfill. 'Re-Crafting' has become my specialty in all my art. I think 'reuse' before I buy new fabric, even though I truly love the modern fabrics like any other quilter. My love of sharing the techniques I’ve learned at our monthly B.V. Crafters Gathering.  It is rewarding for me because I don’t have any daughters to pass this art to as I grow older, so I share with others there.

My challenge to readers is to repurpose clothing, plastics, wood and other things each week and post about it, linking up with Good Earth Quilting. I wish I knew how to make buttons for my blog because I need one to do a blog-a-thon in connection with repurposing textiles into new quilts.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

WIP Wednesday #77 @ TN&TN

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

WIP Wednesday #76 @ TN&TN