Some time ago I subscribed to a BOM that Yoko Saito's shop was hosting in conjunction with NHK magazine.
Every month, I had the Kinokuniya in Costa Mesa California ship me not only this monthly Japanese magazine, but also a little pack of fabric that Yoko Saito's shop had picked out for you to make the blocks as a kit.
I dutifully keep these publications next to the fabric packs in their little bags for ages as my plan was to make all the blocks.
Eventually, all the blocks were actually published in a book (doh!) so I didn't actually have to collect the magazines after all.
I also finally decided to wash all the fabrics, iron them, and incorporate them in my regular fabric stash since it was unlikely that I'll be making all those blocks exactly as designed.
I would have loved to follow the exact recipe, but the creative genius in me cannot find her way to duplication of an exact quilt. I need more flexibility and I need to make my quilts take on my own asthetic.
The above fabrics are Daiwabo yarn dyed fabrics that came as part of the kit and are now ready for use in other projects. I have already started cutting into them more and I'm glad that I decided to stop waiting to use them.
Maybe this is some sort of a late spring cleaning thing for me, but having new fabrics washed and ready to go is the only way they will ever make it into a quilt.
That's the name of the game after all.
Are you out there doing a little late spring cleaning? Maybe I'm the only one that still has late-spring early-summer fever.
Showing posts with label Daiwabo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daiwabo. Show all posts
Friday, June 1, 2012
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Daiwabo Fabrics
The older boy's blocks have hand dye fabrics by Primrose Gradations, a company that no longer shows up at quilt shows I go to but looks like I can still get fabrics online.
The older versions of the previous year's blocks for 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 are of course in the collection waiting for assembly.
My son's favorite color is pink right now, at 5 years old, which is why I made his block with pinkish fabric (photo in my last post). I love that he doesn't realize that is typically a 'girl color' (why is that anyhow??) and he just digs it for the cool color it is.
Someday in the not so distant future, his friends may convince him that pink is not a 'manly' color. Until then, I love his innocence and his passion about opinions that he has uniquely formulated all by himself.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)