Thursday, May 9, 2013



The Perfect Wedding Quilt:

Queen and Her Court 








Well, it was perfect for our daughter and son-in-law!  A couple of years ago, Heather spent days combing through dozens of quilting magazines to select a pattern for me to make her and her betrothed the perfect wedding quilt.  
There wasn't an abundance of time given, but really, is there ever for a wedding quilt?! To choose the right pattern and fabric takes an incredible amount of time and effort, not to mention piecing, appliquéing and quilting. 


We only had 12 weeks to get this quilt completed in time for the open house.


Queen and Her Court boasts 12 different blocks which seem to weave themselves via appliquéd  flowers and vines around a large, central block known as the 'court'.  Impeccably, Heather chose fabrics that worked well together; toiles, dusty reds, paisleys and fabric with writing - colors that blended together to spell romance.  We agreed ahead of time that I would be the one to arrange those fabrics from her palette for the blocks and appliqué.  I wanted the finished quilt to 'present itself' to the queen, as it were, without her anticipating the result.

The blocks featured here are some of my favorites.  The ones immediately above and below show a fussy-cut vignette of red toile in the center.


It needs to be said that the designs used in the blocks and center of this quilt were taken from Karen McTavish's Custom Curves, found on Karen's website at designerquilts.com/products.html, from her publisher at onwordboundbooks.com/books.html or amazon.com.  Heather and Conor's quilt seemed, to me, to exude a Celtic feel, and Karen's designs in this book were a perfect match.


I adapted Karen's designs for my blocks by enlarging them with my computer scanner, and quilted them by using my laser light at the front of the machine directly onto each block without marking.


Below is a shot of the backing which shows the quilting details of one of the blocks:




Some of the blocks served as 'building blocks'  for the twelve pieced blocks, such as this one, at left.  I quilted each of these identically for balance as well as beauty with my laser light, improvising by echoing and stippling  to fill in a similar design.




Here's a couple close-ups of  flowers appliquéd over a building block which shows the stippling I designed to match Karen McTavish's block designs.




Those of you familiar with Queen and Her Court will notice the center of the quilt has been reengineered (below)!  This is Conor's specific section of the quilt.  He wanted a fleur de lis in the center instead of the large, pieced block that was originally part of this pattern.  I found a great design, improvising it further by appliquéing a double-ring around the bouquet instead of a single one, making it a true wedding quilt!

I meandered relatively tight to 'pop' the corner designs around the fleur de lis:


This photo of the backing (kind of) shows the quilting of the fleur de lis block:



The borders were all hand traced with chalk atop a light box, an exhausting task but well worth the effort when completed.  To date, Karen McTavish hasn't made stencils of her designs found in Custom Curves.  For this project, I surely wish she had!  
In the following shots you can see the details of the border quilting as seen from the back:




Heather and Conor's quilt is definitely one of a kind...just the way we want all of our quilts! 

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