2009
09.18

For a long time I have wanted to do something with a photo that I took in Thailand of a butterfly on a flower. Originally I had thought of creating a cross stitch design but never got very far with it, and then just recently I decided I would make it into an art quilt. I scanned the photo into the computer and imported it into EQ6 where I made it into an appliqué pattern.

eq6-butterfly

The pattern drawn out in EQ6

With the pattern made, my next decision was how I was going to create the design. ? My preference would have been to do it by hand or to use invisible machine appliqué, but because I had chosen to make it quite small, 12 inches by 15 inches, some of the pieces were really tiny. It might just have been possible to do it by hand, but in the end I opted to use fusible webbing and raw edge appliqué, embellished with machine thread painting.  

butterfly-wing-1

making the first butterfly wing

Fabrics and threads play such an important part in a design and for this one I had a lovely piece of hand dyed fabric which I had bought from Foltvilág Patchwork Studio at The Festival of Quilts which I knew straight away would be perfect for the background.  I didn’t even buy it with this project in mind as I’m always drawn to greens as I use them in so many of my pieces but I’m so glad I did as looking through the rest of my stash I would have had a struggle to find something that was as good. For the butterfly wings and flower I used mostly commercial batiks although again for the actual base of the wing I used another hand dyed fabric from the quilt festival which had good gradations from brown to black which again were just perfect for what I wanted.

work-in-progress

assembling the butterfly wings and flower

It took me several days to put the whole thing together and the cats didn’t help today by lounging all over my cutting table, or propping themselves up against the sewing machine.

two-assistants

Millie keeping an eye on things

Millie keeping an eye on things

Yesterday afternoon I finally finished assembling all the pieces of the design and then my next decision was how to embellish it. Whether to do the thread painting before I added the batting or after?  In the end I decided to do the thread painting first, with a stabilizer underneath as I am more familiar with that method. This method also has several advantages. The piece can be trimmed and squared up after the stitching and also it gives me a bit longer to think while I’m stitching, about what fabrics I’ll use for the outer borders.

The completed design ready for thread painting and embellishment

The completed design ready for thread painting and embellishment

 

6 comments so far

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  1. Oh my. Absolutely beautiful.

    And I love your four legged children. Are they your muse?

    SewCalGal
    http://www.sewcalgal.blogspot.com

  2. I am enjoying watching the progress of your Butterfly art piece. The details are amazing!

  3. Thank you. The four legged friends are good to have around even if they do sometimes get a tiny bit in the way and maybe the calmness that eminates from them does help to inspire (except when Millie the kitten goes mental!)

  4. Thanks Colleen, it’s coming along slowly but surely, all those little pieces were very fiddly to apply even with the help of tweezers.

  5. kitty cats, don’t they just love to be exactly where’s not helpful. I have a white fluffy cat half draped over my arm as I type. Awkward, a little numbing, yet I won’t move him!

  6. I know, it is so hard to disturb a sleeping cat. I’ve had one draped over my table and cutting mat all morning and ended up having to work around him.