Sep 28, 2010

Putting My Feet Up


There are days that go by in slow motion. And others that go so quickly, I never cease to be amazed at how much I get done! But sometimes, I just have to take a big break, put my feet up and actually take a deep breathe and truly reeeelax.

And those days are made even better, when I get a brand new pair of hand knit socks. Paula.the quilter (who is so much more than just a quilter.... she should be named Paula.the quilter.the knitter.the artist.the friend) made and sent these to me in Oregon, where I have finally come back to ...well, put my feet up.

I lay on the floor with my feet upon...what's this?...string quilts? Yep, I have been sewing on two big string quilts for some time, now and they finally hit the pin basting stage this morning.And what do I discover?

Over at Paula,The Quilter's Place, she is offering a give-away of a nice big box of strips and strings to some lucky quilter who leaves her a comment about One Person's Trash.... so hop on over and you may end up with some lovely strips and strings, too.

If you need further inspiration, check out ....String Quilting:Tutorial and Free Patterns Once, you make your first string quilt ala Gwen Marston and her best selling early books "Liberated Quiltmaking" and "Liberated Strings", you'll never want to be less than liberated, again!

Thank you, Paula. Your gift meant the world to me and they were a perfect fit!!!! Ahhhhhh....

Sep 24, 2010

The Parasol is the Umbrella's Daughter: For the AAQI





As I designed this little quilt for donation to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative, I never dreamed that I would have the presence of mind to pack it as one of two little completed quilts into a suitcase bound for Alaska during the 24 hours period of learning of my father's death and arriving in the Juneau airport. Nor could I imagine how my artists statement would change in depth and meaning for both of them, or for me, as I reread my statements, as I mailed them from our Douglas Island home.

I had intended this little quilt to carry the energies that healing can take...the daily losses of my mother through Alzheimer's, the slower path in behavioral changes we may see in our aging family members with dementia, and the long term pain that an individual, or a nation can feel from cultural misunderstandings and separation through war or anger. But I had purposefully used it to describe the wonderful traits that I had learned about coping with my mother's challenges with Alzheimer's Disease, from my father.

As her primary caretaker, my father had been unbelievably loving, unbelievably amazing and gentle. He took over the giving of her insulin shots when her vision completely disappeared, he took over the cooking of all of their meals when she could no longer remember how to cook, he learned to do the laundry and took over their house cleaning when both of those began to pile up. He learned to pay the bills, to phone and write letters, give gifts, and send cards...things my mother had always done and now he had to learn to do, instead.

If she needed dressing, he dressed her, changing, he changed her...her life changed and with it, so did his. When their pants needed hemming, he hemmed them himself and if the stitches didn't stay put, he used duct tape. If he couldn't find a belt for either of them, he used a piece or rope, clean socks for her...he used his own. He determination to keep going and to serve his precious sweetheart was endless.

He found ways to retell stories to her from how they met and fell in love and ways to ask her questions about those stories to trigger her memories. He was always so sure that he could bring her back to him and that a cure for whatever was wrong with her would be found. He talked to her for hours and hours each day and sometimes even into the middle of the night.

He worked so hard, for so very long, only pausing for my long visits from Oregon, when I could take over, and later when it became too hard for me when I broke my wrist and too hard for both of us combined, my brothers stepped in to help, as well.

These loving acts taught us all so much about strength, about courage and about love and loyalty. They taught us just how much he was capable of, and how much we were capable of, too. But as we talked, as he retold his stories, I also learned so much about the pains and the losses that he carried, from his own lifetime, as well.

As one of five sons that his mother and father sent off to serve in the Armed Forces during World War II, all had to face only four sons, four brothers, coming back home again. My uncle, Albert, had lost his life at the age of 21 when his airplane was shot down over the Pacific Ocean. As its copilot, he had taken over the controls from the pilot who was killed instantly, and landed the plane safely in the ocean. He managed to save the lives of all of the others on board, but lost his own awaiting a sea rescue.

The pains from that loss haunted my father for decades and did not find healing until two beautiful (and dearly loved) young women of Japanese descent married into our family. Only then, was he able to see that anger or hatred can not be truly carried by a culture, a nation, or a group of people, but only within each individual. He healed that long standing pain and released it through love.... just as we all must learn to do with our own pains, our own angers, our own deep and challenging losses.

When I had written weeks before his death in my 'Artist's Statement' for this quilt #5256 The Parasol is the Umbrella's Daughter, I had written:

"Emily Dickinson, wrote that the parasol 'assists a siren in her serene display; But her father {the umbrella} is borne and honored, And borrowed to this day."

As I made this art quilt, I thought of my father, who faced and bore the burden of my mother's Alzheimer's with great honor, strength, and courage. I can only hope to borrow and carry those traits now as I continue to care for my mother, and honor my father, by caring for him, as well."

Little did I realize that 'caring for my father' would mean being able to lovingly go through a visitation at a funeral home, placing my hands upon his lifeless heart, rubbing his sweet little bald head, or dropping kisses upon his cheeks. I told him how much I dearly loved him, how much being his daughter had meant to me, and taught me throughout my life, and how I would remember him, his strength, and his courage for the rest of mine. It allowed me to release my own losses, my own pain at the changes in him during his final months, and to know once again, who he truly was, and always would be.... for me in my own heart.

I read to my family, as we stood in that funeral home, another beautiful poem. A poem that I had found written in a book I had also thought to bring to Alaska with me...a little poem, in the back of one of my own books, in my dad's own handwriting....a poem that I had only discovered was there....two weeks before his death. It a poem about love and loss and how the love lives on and on.

Amazingly, I later discovered that the poem actually came from a WWII novel. Synchronistically, my little art quilt now carried even deeper energies and more meaning. It had become a true vehicle for me as a little healing quilt...all on its own.

I knew from the wording of that poem, that my father probably meant his love for my mom and how he would always leave that love behind, no matter what. But was also about him, his heart, and his great love for all of us, as well.

I knew then, that these two little art quilts that I had brought up with me after his death, were not only about healing wounds, and learning about strength, and love, and courage, and learning to learn to allow grief to be set free...but about how all of those lessons, all of those traits do live on, they are healing gifts from, and to, all of our hearts.

I had received notice of my quilt registrations from AAQI on the very day that my father died, and I mailed both of them on the very day that 'he' came home to rest with us..ashes to ashes and dust to dust, just as he had always wanted and planned.

I knew then, what I had always believed deep down inside was true. That death is as many as said 'a very real illusion.' That love, and memories, and heart strings that connect us as families and loved ones forever, do indeed, live on.I knew that a father's love, a mother's love, and a daughter's love, cannot be destroyed by death and cannot be destroyed by the changes we see in our loved ones before they die.

I know now, that this little art quilt The Parasol is the Umbrella's Daughter just like its partner, The Butterfly Upon the Sky both part of my Liberated Quilting Challenge will be heading, through AAQI, to the Houston Quilt Festival, and an even greater meaning as part of a greater display through the work of Ami Simms and her wonderful organization.

And I know, really and truly know, that my love lives on through him, through his gifts, but now through my heart and my own hands, as well.

links:
My other little Alaskan 'healing' quilt:
The Butterfly Upon the Sky
Why I support AAQI, only up the number of family members to 15:
From the Heart of a Quilter
And of course, where you can donate money, donate a quilt, or buy quilts of your own:
Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative
Join us by making and entering 9"x 12"quilts or 4" x6" postcards:
Liberated Quilting Challenge
Alzheimer's Illustrated: From Heartbreak to Hope

My dad: In Loving Memory

What else can you do?
May Loss Lead to Gain

Sep 18, 2010

A Walk of Remembrance


As an act of remembrance, and in honor and ritual, my sister-in-law and I walked along the top of my beloved Douglas Island in my home state of Alaska, and remembered the life and passing of my father.

We began our journey by lighting a sage heart that she had brought along...never realizing as she had done so, that my father's given first name was Bernhart. We lit the heart and burned its sage and its fragrance and flame lit candles along our way.

She reminded me that as a young boy, he too, must have walked this ancient mountain top path along the remnants of a trail known as the "Treadwell Ditch." As his father did before him, he did in his youth, his sons did in theirs, and now his daughter-in-law and daughter did. We walked and we remembered.... the history of a land, an island, a once famous gold mine, and a family steeped in the traditions and the history of all of those energies.

The Treadwell Gold Mine was once the largest gold ore bearing mine in the world. It was the site of a town that once boasted 10,000 residents, its own opera house, the first indoor swimming pool in the Americas, and a wealth of stores, saloons, a barber shop, grocery store, a laundry, and three separate churches.

Now, only a few building remnants and some rusty iron parts mark the original town-site and only 12 or 13 of the original miles of the ditch mark the path and source of the 18 miles of hydro powered water that created its gold mining energies more than a century before.


The Treadwell Ditch was actually a long water canal dug out by workers from 1888 to 1892 and covered with a railroad tie like structure for all of its original 18 miles along the mountain top. Collected rain and snow runoffs were added to natural creek water flows and used for an ingenious form of hydro-powered stamp milling of the gold. My grandfather worked in that foundry and milled those stamps.

Treadwell had been one of the most technologically advanced mines of its day. In 1917, The Treadwell Mine, the 700-Foot, and the Mexican Mines (which had been excavated to a depth of more than 500ft below sea level) suddenly began leaking, and had to be evacuated.

Hours later the mine collapsed. That flooding came as the Gastineau Channel tides rose to meet the incoming collapse of tunnels and as the timbered mining tunnels and shafts began to cave, the waters poured forth and into them, as well. Waters from channel and ditch became one in the cataclysmic process....and an entire mining operation lay in ruin.

1917 was the year of that collapse, and the year that not only my father, Bernhart Savikko, was born, but the very date and the year that my intuitive Finnish grandmother, Elli, refused to let my grandfather go to work.

By refusing to make his lunch in an era when no self respecting man would make his own, she managed to keep him home and safe from the huge collapse of the tunnels when water poured into and filled them. And while the records show 'no lives were lost' during this cave-in, claiming that all 1,000 workers had been evacuated in time, my saddened grandfather always said that many of the Chinese workers never were seen again after that terrible day. And that the true losses were much greater than a few mules, or horses that were claimed.

So, we had much to think about, much to remember, as we walked along the grassy pilings and saw the way nature has absorbed them into her bounty and made them simply one with the trees, the moss, the devil's club and Indian rhubarb plants along the way.

We burned our sage, lit our candles, and paused for breaks and passages of remembrance. As we sipped our little cups of wine, we toasted my father and all the memories he carried of a time now long forgotten, the stories he told of his childhood, his father and mother, his sisters and brothers, and how deeply he loved this great land of Alaska.

My heart was already full when I looked across the creek and saw this beautiful site.


Two logs had merged into one and the moss which enclosed them formed a perfect heart.

I called it to my sister-in-law's attention and pointed out how beautifully fitting it was. The past and the present forged together in time...the eternal now of love and memory.

A sage heart to burn in the beginning, and a moss covered one to fill us with its beauty near the end. My father would have been moved to tears.

I only knew that I was.



Historical Photos and links:
Alaska Treadwell Gold Mining Company - Alaska's Digital Archives

Sep 11, 2010

The Butterfly Upon the Sky: For the AAQI






 
When I created this little art quilt, I used a lovely piece of vintage fabric that I had discovered among my mother's sewing scraps. I cut through the fabric to release a wing as I loved the idea of a butterfly breaking loose from the fabric of its life....and flying out and freely through an opening window in time.


I never dreamed that the butterfly imagery would not only represent freedom from the absolute chaos, despair and grief that arises in family members and survivors of Alzheimer's Disease, but the huge grief that overwhelmed me when I received the news that my father had just died.

When I realized that this little art quilt had been officially registered by the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative on August 18th...the very day that my father had passed away, and that I would in my overwhelming grief and disbelief that followed, actually think to pack it, and another small quilt in my luggage, as I raced to Alaska within a 24 hour period to be with my mother.

I'd made the quilt in love and memory of my mother's battle with advanced Alzheimer's but found myself amazed at how both of the art quilts I'd just made, so thematically synchronized with my father's passing.

"The Butterfly Upon the Sky" was inspired by poet Emily Dickinson as she calls upon us to emulate the beauty and the grace of the butterfly and to "soar away and never sigh, And that's the way to grieve." I had thought it meant all of our losses from Alzheimer's Disease, the 'great thief' that robs its victims of their very selves, and us of our loved ones. But instead, it also represented this sharp, additional pain...this grief in the loss of my beloved father.

As I had created this art quilt, I had allowed its calming gentleness to enter and to soften my heart, and as I mailed it from my island home in Alaska, on the very day that my father's ashes came home to rest, I sought to create and manifest a moment of that same peace, knowing that my 93 year old father had, indeed, broken free and was now allowed to soar forth and manifest into creation...a new form in spirit in eternal space and time.

So, today, as we take a moment of silence to honor and respect all those who lost their lives today, nine years ago on September 11th, I also take a moment to feel honor and respect for all those lives once led in one form and now... like my little butterfly upon the sky.... to soar in hearts and memory once more....for those who grieve, those who care, and all those who now fly freely.

links:My other little Alaskan 'healing' quilt:
The Paraasol is the Umbrella's Daughter
Why I support AAQI, only up the number of family members to 15:
From the Heart of a Quilter
And of course, where you can donate money, donate a quilt, or buy quilts of your own:
Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative
Join us by making small 9"x 12"quilts or 4" x6"postcards:
Liberated Quilting Challenge
Alzheimer's Illustrated: From Heartbreak to Hope

My dad: In Loving Memory
What else can you do?
May Loss Lead to Gain

Sep 5, 2010

Liberated Improvisational Quilting: Free Pieced Blocks, Letters, Patterns and Tutorials











Wonky Stars, Hearts, Letters, Houses, Crosses, Asterisks, People, Flowers, Churn dashes and More!


wonky:

adjective as originally described, published, and illustrated at

http://with-heart-and-hands.blogspot.com/2010/09/liberated-quilting-blocks-letters.html



1) rickety, shaky, wobbly, wonky; inclined to shake as from weakness or defect;

"a rickety table"; "a wobbly chair with shaky legs"; "the ladder felt a
little wobbly"; "the bridge still stands though one of the arches is
wonky"

2) askew, awry(p), cockeyed, lopsided, wonky, skew-whiffturned or twisted toward one side;


Great List of Wonky, Free-Pieced, or Liberated Quilt Block Patterns, Techniques or Ideas:

(Please note:  As quilters get book deals, some of these tutorials may end up being removed from the free realm of their blogs in order to fulfill publishing obligations)


A is For Alphabet by Lynne of the Patcherie Menagerie...learn the ABC's of piecing letters!


*All Red Letter Challenge and Learn Alphabet Letters Posts from Lynne


Asterisks by Tonya Ricucci


Baskets from Basket Full of Scraps by Sujata

How to Construct a Wonky or Liberated Basket Block

Wonky Stars

Be Still My Heart Quilt Tutorial by Jacquie Gehring of Tallgrass Prairie



Birds, Free Piecing Tutorial by Lynne of Patchery Menagerie

Broken Cogs Quilt Tutorial by Jacquie of Tallgrass Prairie

Butterflies, Wonky Free Piecing Tutorial by Lynne

Butterfly BlockTutorial by Mrs. Schmenkman Quilts

Charming Butterfly Blocks by Ferne

Chickens1

Chickens 2 Chickens3 and Rooster ideas for making them, from Joyce of J's Quilts




 


Cross Blocks, Quilts, Directions and Tutorials! From this blog With Heart and Hands!


  Cross or Plus Quilts: Free Patterns

  Designing a Liberated Cross Block and Quilt

  Making Mary Lou Weidman's Cross Quilt
















Our Dear Liberated Friend, Rosalyn Manese's Churn Dash Quilt for her Grandson Jacob. We miss you, Roz! 

Churn Dash..liberate that block!

Churn Dash by Sew JOY Creations










 
A wonky square ..cross or plus...is this easy! 
Cross or Plus...from this blog..With Heart and Hands at post:

Basics for Making a Cross, Plus, or "Arithmetic" Quilt


And Look how easy it would be to then create this!




 


Make your own wonky nine patches this easily!
(Use my cutting diagram above but cross cut that solid vertical piece!)


Crazy Nine-Patch Lattice Quilt by Oh! Fransson


Cross Blocks by Lollyquiltz

Crumb Chaos from Patti at Quilting... is Still My Passion

*Crumb Quilting from Jo with astart to finish tutorial

Crumby Heart Tutorial from Tonya

Curved strip piecing tutorial by Brenda of Strips and Strings

Disappearing 9-Patch with Pieced Hearts by Block'n Swaps



Liberated Flying Geese Tutorial



Pieced Chevron...A Tutorial by Jacquie of Tallgrass Prairie

Free Pieced Flower by Sarah (Kromama)

Free Pieced Heart by Sharon of Indigo Threads

Free Pieced Letters by Brenda of Scraps and Strings






*Free Piecing People/a girl

Fungly Challenge from Tonya Ricucci

Goats,Cows and Pigs from Joyce


Gwen Marston's Variable Star quilt block pattern:

Printer Friendly Version

Hand Quilting without a Hoop

Heart by Tonya Ricucci

Heart...Liberated and Wonky by Sharon of Indigo Threads

Heart...Another technique in piecing by Sarah, House of Krom

Houses by Tonya Ricucci, the Unruly Quilter

*Houses, wonky and liberated ideas from free web images

*Japanese x tutorial: Setsuko Inagawa quilt

*Lego Quilt Tutorial by Tonya 










How to Make a Wonky Star by Mary Quilts

*Liberated and Wonky Flying Geese by Michele With Heart and Hands


*Liberated Pineapples from Yarn, Dogs, and a Few Weirdos....see photo below for wonky pineapple


Letters. . . We've Got Letters by Sharon of Indigo Threads

Liberated Amish 2010 Get Together

Liberated Basket ..Gwen Marston idea, now in lovely baskets of all kinds!

Liberated Spiderweb block - no paper

Little House by Rachel Daisy, a version of the  s Swoon quilt designed by Camille Roskelle



Cross Blocks, Quilts, Directions and Tutorials! From this blog With Heart and Hands!


Mary Quilts Wonky Rails from Maryquilts.com


Modern Quilt Guild: Free ideas, tutorials, challenges and fun!




Modern Monday Quilt Along by Carroll...ongoing block tutes , great fun!


Modern and Other Generation X Quilt Block Patterns and Tutorials  from GenX Quilters


Monkey Wrench or Churn Dash or Shoo Fly...



Sophie's Wonky Fly Block #6Sophie's Wonky Fly Block #5Sophie's Wonky Fly Block #7







Wonky Fly Directions



 or...

 Churn Dash..liberate that block!


Orphans Blocks Tutorial by Finn, Pieces from My Scrapbag


People from Sarah House of Krom




Pocket Change Quilt Pattern download from Jacquie Gehring


Red Cross Block Tutorial by Camp Follower Bags

Scrappy Heart (6 inch) Quiltingabout.com

Scrappy Pieced Heart into a Liberated logs quilt


Shoo Fly from Simple Half Square Triangle
Then, try my wonky version!

 

 























Liberated Shoo Fly Block courtesy of
Debbie, The Traveling Quilter

(The 'Shoo Fly' is the same as the
Monkey Wrench and the Churn Dash..see how to links for them or just
wonkify this pattern above and right)



Debbie writes:
"Purposely uneven triangles, giving each block a different personality.
All Shoo Fly blocks have the same star fabric in the center, which provided the color scheme.I designed the quilt to be male-appropriate, and it turns out boys'
quilts are in need at the orphanage where the quilt is headed."





 Pick Up Sticks Quilt



From "Happy Sew Lucky ...pick up sticks, learn the pieced strip technique and how to make cross cuts over and over.
https://happysewlucky.wordpress.com/2015/05/10/pick-up-sticks-quilt-block-tutorial/


Star, Wonky or Liberated!...The Silly BooDilly: Wonky Star Tutorial thesillyboodilly.blogspot.com/2009/02/wonky-star-tutorial.htmlString Fish Aquarium by Ruthie

Strings ~ Hearts from Mary at MaryQuilts.com

Sarah London's Selvage Star tutorial is a 28 page PDF

Selvage Spider Web tutorial by Jacquie of Tallgrass Prairie



Bee Friends tutorial by Marit

Bee Friends tutorial 
 

Selvage Spools...The Tutorial! by Jacquie

Slash and Stack Wonky Blocks from Blocks n Swaps

Spinning Spirals of large flowers

Square in Square by Quilt Dad
Use the "Square in a Square and watch it get turned into those boxed up Bentos by Michele of With Heart and Hands


With Heart and Hands: Bento Box Quilt Tutorial
with-heart-and-hands.blogspot.com/.../bento-box-quilt-tutorial.html
Starry Forest Christmas Tree Skirt by Jacquie Gehring of Tallgrass Prairie

Strings ~ Marys Patriotic Star from Maryquilts.com

String Quilting:Tutorial and Free Patterns

Taking the Leap Challenge from Tonya Ricucci

Teapots from Tonya


Tic-Tac-Toe BlockSophie's Tic-Tac-Toe Block #4 Sophie's Tic-Tac-Toe Block #7




Tic-Tac-Toe (8 inch) from Sophie at Sophie's Junction

Tiny Wonky (Maverick) Stars by Bonnie Hunter

Tic-Tac-Toe Quilt Block

TIc-Tac-Toe Directions

Trees - easy freestyle trees by Jean Sophie

Trees 2 - adding complexity

Twinkle, Twinkle, Wonky Star from Sew Take a Hike

Urban Chicken Block  from Michelle Freedman

Wacky Nine Patch...Allsorts uses a cutting technique like the one on Georgia Bonesteele

Wavy Nine Patch by Debbie, The Traveling Quilter

Waverunner by Victoria at Bumble Beans

Wavy Seams Log Cabin from Pink Chalk Studio

Whacky Baskets by Sara from Sara's Scraps

Wonky butterfly by Lynn at the Patcherie Menagerie


Wonky or Liberated Churn Dash Block 

Wonky Cross Block Sew-Along « Sew,Mama,Sew! Blog

Wonky Cross by Elizabeth of Oh Fransson!

Wonky Flying Geese by Michele Bilyeu 


*Wonky heart by BModern

Wonky heart by Tonya Ricucci

Wonky Shoo Fly by Sophie

Wonky Scrappy I Spy log cabin by Sarah, Kromama

  Wonky Star Tutorial

Wonky Squares by Deborah at the Pilgrim's Quilts

Wonky Drunkard's Path from Quilting About.com

Wonky Houses by Tonya, the Unruly Quilter pdf

Wonky/improvisational log cabins from Jenny at Blempgorf

Wonky log cabin by Jacquie at Tallgrass Prairie

Wonky or Maverick Star by Victoria The Silly Boo Dilly

*Wonky Stars by Beth

Wonky, Wacky Nine Patch

Wonky RWB Rails (PDF file) by Maryquilts

*Wonky Seams block from Pink Chalk Studio

Wonky Star Block from The Silly Boo Dilly

*Wonky Star Ring Tutorial by Zonnah

Wonky Shoo Fly from Sophie's Junction

Wonky Spools from Quilter's Cache

Wonky Squares-in-Squares Block from Quilt Dad

Wonkytown from Tonya Ricucci







Houses, wonky and liberated ideas from free web images


WonkyTown - UnRuly Quilter 

unrulyquilter.com/tutorials/wonkytown.pdf

 Tonya Ricucci ..the Lazy, Unruly, Liberated and Wonky Quilter's Tutorials



Liberated Links:Liberated Quilting Challenge has now ended, thanks to one and all for the donation of over 640 quilts to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative!!!
Liberated Quilting Blog

Liberated Quilters Yahoo Chat Group

Liberated Quilters Blog & Liberated Quilters Message Board Quilt for AAQI

Houses, wonky and liberated ideas from free web images



Wonky Tidbits:

Tonya Ricucci, the Unruly Quilter

Bonnie K. Hunter, Quiltville: Strings and Crumbs

HeartStrings Quilt Project

Advice from Tonya Riccuci, The Unruly Quilter:

UnRuly Piecing Basics - UnRuly Basics Pdf

Advice from Sophie's Junction:

Three Ways to Wonkify a Traditional Quilt BlockButterfly block tutorial





Dori's Alphabet is paper pieced, but the same idea can be used with free piecing. Dori posted her alphabet at the Quilter Community back in 2006 and I loved it before I even knew what wonky liberated free piecing was! Click on the her name above to link up to that series.




                     Rumi sells the patterns for this set for a small fee of less than $10
http://www.etsy.com/listing/87118587/alpabet-pdf-sewing-pattern-paper-pieced?ref=shop_home_active

I've seen a number of people copy the look above in different colors and not offer the directions or even the pattern. Be smart about what you are looking for on the internet or pinterest!!


Strip Piecing Letters:

Learn by watching the Progress:


Letters. . . We've Got Letters by Sharon of Indigo Threads

Strip Pieced Letters by Brenda of Strips and Strings

Letters by Lynne of the Patchery Menagerie

*Wonky Alphabet Letters Lynne's fabulous work...check her letters in progress

*Strip Piecing Blocks: Learn from Sarah and Molly..liberated block a month




Quilting Tips

Organic Line Quilting by Jacquie of Tallgrass Prairie


Photos and ideas:


I Have Become an Unruly Humbug!...join Tonya's challenge

Splat!
...free pieced fly swatter


Wordplay...word play

Flickr: Free Pieced Quilting Pool

Liberated Amish Challenge 2010

Tonya Riccuci's Fall/Winter Class of 2007

House, Home and Pantry - Fall 2008





Want to try some letters but not sure how to start?


Check out some liberated quilting of the alphabet from other quilters in the past: Dori Hawks created a liberated letters Alphabet Quilt

Become even more liberated with Tonya Ricucci's creative approach her new book Word Play.

Tonya sets the standard for making pieced letters, words, and quilts by
simply getting the idea on graph paper but cutting out, and free-piecing
the letters! Her books shows just how to do it!

Want to see Lynne putting her words into action as she makes the "Red Letter Alphabet"?

Check them all out at her site, or just look up the letter you're having trouble with for other ways of making them..one by one.


Red Letter Quilt Along from Lynne Tyler at:

The Patchery Menagerie



However, if you need that in between place for the concepts, you can
look at or try other 'starter' ideas to get you going. Again,
foundation or paper pieced....but try just looking at it and making it
without using any kind of pattern for the letters:

Hope Market Tote Pattern - free!

Denyse Schmidt's Hope Bag

Free download!


From Sujata Shah: The Root Connection

 Click on imagea:

Zig Zag: Tutorial 





Victorian Hexagon Quiltalong


Victorian Hexagon Quiltalong 


  Books of Interest:

Liberated String Quilts

Liberated String Quilts

Gwen Marston


Liberated Quiltmaking

Liberated Quiltmaking

Gwen Marston

Collaborative Quilting

Collaborative Quilting

Freddy Moran, Gwen Marston



Ideas and Inspirations: Abstract Quilts in Solids

https://happysewlucky.wordpress.com/2015/05/10/pick-up-sticks-quilt-block-tutorial/

MY Blog Post LINKS:

Liberated Quilting


Liberated Quilting Challenge


Liberated Quilting: Free Patterns, Blocks, and Tutorials


Word Play (Quilts)


Please update your link lists from my blogspot address to www.with-heart-and-hands.com

With Heart and Hands

My most popular links to patterns and tutorials:

shown as linking photo: my bug swatter for Tonya Ricucci:

SPLAT !



google Liberating Quilting and get:


  1. With Heart and Hands: Liberated Quilting: Free Pieced Blocks ...

    with-heart-and-hands.blogspot.com/.../liberated-quilting-blocks-letter...
    Sep 5, 2010 – See all of our quilts at: Liberated Quilting Challenge. Great List of Wonky, Free-Pieced, or Liberated Quilt Block Patterns, Techniques or Ideas: ...
  2. Wonky or Liberated Quilting..Free Patterns, Tutorials, Ideas

    with-heart-and-hands.blogspot.com/.../wonky-or-liberated-quiltingfr...
    Unlike traditional quilting where one simply followed patterns and used templates, liberated quilting is more about the free piecing of non-traditional elements ...
  3. Liberated — Fresh Lemons Modern Quilts

    www.freshlemonsquilts.com/?tag=liberated
    Jul 17, 2012 – Sarah has since developed a fantastic quilt pattern using these liberated churn dash blocks! Her pattern is 22 pages, full of color photos and ...


  4. Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns: Liberated or Improvisational ...

    freequiltpatterns.blogspot.com/.../liberated-quilting-free-ideas-pattern...
    Aug 25, 2012 – Liberated or Improvisational Quilting: Free Ideas, Patterns, and Tutorials. wonky: adjective 1) rickety, shaky, wobbly, wonky; inclined to shake as ...


  5. AAQI Liberated Quilting Challenge

    liberatedquiltingchallenge.blogspot.com/
    3 days ago – Sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join in the Liberated Quilting Challenge and make ...
  6. Liberated Quiltmaking: Gwen Marston: 9780891458784 - Amazon.com

    www.amazon.com › ... › Crafts & HobbiesQuilts & Quilting
    REVIEW: "Her 'liberated quiltmaking' is the making of utility quilts (quilts meant to be used, not just exhibited) without templates or patterns or even necessarily a ...
  7. Quilt designs - Making Scrap Quilts from Stash

    blog.maryquilts.com/category/quilt-designs/
    Nov 24, 2012 – Archive for the 'Quilt designs' Category ... Hopefully having a plan for the next quilt will motivate me to finish the log cabin top but I've also got ...

Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and 
Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska. Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!