Patchwork quilts come in many genres
Sometimes it's great fun to get out there and experiment!
This is the story of such an experiment.
Beautiful = poisonous
sometimes, so beware.
One of the places we visited was Wittenoom, a former blue asbestos mining town.
It was early morning and the light was very clear. At our feet we saw a very beautiful blue brick-shaped rock, resting on the pebbles. Paul took a photo of the rock, which of course, was deadly blue asbestos.
A quilt idea was born
using that 'brick' as inspiration
The exhibition Reach for the Sky was well recieved by both male and female visitors to the galleries.
The men loved the pictures and the women loved the quilts.
Take Care When You Gouge Holes In Me!
Not all pretty stuff is beautiful

The quilt showing the burnt edge of the fabric which depicts the hole.
How I got the fabric
and the fib I told
That friend, who was an MS sufferer, and who hand-dyed wonderful fabrics, posted a package to me some time during the long months of the coma.
When Tina sold her fabrics, she packaged them in a fashion that showed a small strip of each of the colours in the set. That's what I saw when I opened the parcel. I sent her a thank you note and said I would make something special from the fabric.
After I started to feel better, about a year later, I sat on the bed to open the gift and chatted to Paul while he got ready for work. Inside was a lovely surprise.
As I opened the fabric, scraps of lots of bits and pieces fell out, each one prettier than the last. The scraps were from Tina's wonderful art quilts, and were cotton and raw silk.
I exclaimed, "Look at this one!", "And this one!", "And this!"
Paul said that only a quilter would get so worked up about some little bits of fabric, and some were quite little, too.
So then I had to phone Tina to tell her I hadn't opened the package and had only just seen what was inside.
As promised, I did make a good piece from her fabric. It's one of my all time favourite quilts.
The blocks
from Tina's scrap fabrics
Not a skerrick was wasted!
In between the rows are strips of a great Batik fabric, cut in Fibonnaci series to make a grid for the blocks, and negative space for the design.
I wanted to make irregular row heights, as I had very limited fabrics, and the quilt needed to be a pleasing shape.
That left me with a problem.
Constructive Craft Criticism
a textile artists group in Queensland
Many of these artists had come from art school backgrounds, and had skills I had not yet acquired.
Often they would show pieces with innovative techniques used in the creation.
And the one that I wanted to use for this quilt was:
Burning holes in the fabric.
Burn the fabric!!!
Are you mad?
Picture this:
A brand new house.
A brand new pale mint green bench top on cream cupboards.
A cream ceramastone sink.
Me at the sink with a glass of water (in case of fire!), some matches, and the chosen fabric.
What happened?
Fun for all
Angela cracked up!
Whoosh! Up it went.
I tried to poke it into the glass. (Why was it such a small glass?)
I couldn't put it in the brand new cream sink.
The smoke alarm started screaming.
Angela was laughing so hard, she almost fell off the stool.
Not helpful, Ange!
Eventually I got the offending fabric into the water in the glass, and said, "That went well!"
And she told anyone who would listen about her crazy firebug mother.
As I related this to my artist friends, they told me what I was supposed to do — between gales of laughter.
You wet all the edges, leaving dry the area you want to burn away.
Then you carefully hold the dry part of the fabric over a candle.
It will only burn to the wet part and no house fire will happen.
Now they tell me!
I tried again
this time with success
I wanted to put the photograph of the blue brick-shaped piece under, so it seemed to be in the ground.
A jagged hole is the only thing that would suffice.
When I managed it (the right way this time) it was perfect, just what I had seen in my mind's eye.
I attached it using raw-edged machine applique, free machining over it in a design like the sheaves of wheat style print on the background fabric.
Blue asbestos mine adit
at Wittenoom in West Australia

Easy when you know how!
like most things.
Jan T's story
some of it anyway
Lensmaster JanTUB has been a member since April 15 2009, has rated 176 lenses, favorited 155, and has created 85 lenses from scratch. Jan T (Urquhart) Baillie donates their royalties to Squidoo Charity Fund. This member's top-ranked page is "Furoshiki: beautiful, reusable wrappings". See all my lenses
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Got a funny quilt story?
I've got some more.
Why not share it the rest of us?
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Reply
- MeltedRachel MeltedRachel May 18, 2009 @ 11:28 am | in reply to JanTUB
- No, he knows what I'm like with DIY tools!
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Reply
- JanTUB JanTUB May 18, 2009 @ 11:17 am | in reply to MeltedRachel
- Did he tell you to give up smoking?
Tourquoise is my very favourite colour.
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Reply
- JanTUB JanTUB May 18, 2009 @ 11:13 am | in reply to 0ctavias0fferings
- Not about burning down your new kitchen, I hope! Thanks for the 5*
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Reply
- MeltedRachel MeltedRachel May 18, 2009 @ 11:13 am
- Eek! I'm not sure I have any funny ones- just that my Dad wasn't very impressed when I lost some of the deposit money on my student accomodation because there were "cigarette burns" on the carpet- actually they were hot air gun burns.
I share your small pieces of fabric excitement!! Beautiful blues in your quilt! :)
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Reply
- 0ctavias0fferings 0ctavias0fferings May 18, 2009 @ 10:57 am
- Hilarious story and an interesting technique ... you're giving me ideas 5*
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