Showing posts with label Meri Henriques Vahl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meri Henriques Vahl. Show all posts

Sunday, October 11, 2015

Quilts at the Mancuso Oasis Quilt Festival 10-11-15

I'll show quilts through out the week as I am able to edit and resize them. 
The missing quilts did not turn up at this exhibit.  I hope they are found before Pacific International Quilt Festival opens in Santa Clara next weekend.  

 One thing I didn't get a photo of was a sign in one of the booths selling fabric.  They were selling new fabric and "Pre-owned Fabric"!  I couldn't find the booth, but was told the pre-owned fabric was sold individually in Baggies. 
 
 
This is the quilt that won the "Best of the World" prize.





This quilt won first prize - Traditional of the World contest.
This is a pure white quilt, but I have darkened it a bit so you can see the design.



This is the first prize winner in the non-traditional category.
Thom C. Atkins is an expert at beading his quilts.
 


 
This quilt won Best Machine Workmanship.

I was impressed with the dimensionality of this trolley.


This quilt was the Best of Country for Japan.  It is spectacular and one of my favorites.




 

There was quite a bit of talk about this little guy, a bichon.




 

This starts the story in the lower left hand corner and goes around the quilt.
#   #   #

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

PiQF 2011 10-18-11

The theme of PIQF this year was "Time", which explains why so many of the labels have references to time.  I've always found the themes rather ambiguous and I know people who use an existing quilt and weave the theme into the statement with some pretty vague language.  Personally, I would rather know why they chose the particular design or color or technique or.........! 

Zena Thorpe makes exquisite hand appliqued,h and embroidered and hand quilted quilts.  Each is a special treasure to which she devotes a great deal of time. 



Perhaps it was twenty years ago that Nancy Crow switched to her "free cutting" technique.  At that time I thought Ruth McDowell's piecing techniques were the "new bold" leader.  It took me to the end of the 90s to try out "free cutting" with any seriousness.  I like what Sylvia has done on this quilt - even the heavy border seems to work. 

I lightened this image to show the quilting lines better. 


This is quite a large piece and the winner of the Best of Show in the World Quilt Competition XV.   


 
Another machine quilting tour de force.  But at least the quilting is not at odds with the basic quilt design.

 
 

I don't know how much money I have spent on raffle quilt tickets and I have never won one.  So, five or six years ago I pretty much just gave up.  But this one really appeals to me.  And again, the quilting relates beautifully to the design of the piecing - it was quilted by Holly Casey of King City, CA.  The pattern is very much like Ruth McDowell's "Painted Daisy" design in her 1994 book "Symmetry: A Design System for Quiltmakers."   But not exactly.


Friends usually chide me for not including many traditional quilts when I take pictures at QShows, so I looked for what I think are good examples of what is being done today.  I think there were more traditional quilts this year, but Innovative Wall quilts were the largest category.

I find the quilting motif on the right side with little puffs and curls especially pleasing.

There are always lizards, geckos, iguanas, etc., in big shows, but there did seem to be an abundance at PIQF this year.  They are quite colorful and usually very nicely quilted with their warts and bumps.
 
I will continue with the PIQF pictures until I have shown them all.
Posted by Picasa