The top is for a Queen size bed - 96" x 108". The paper-pieced block pattern is from Karen Stone's Indian Orange Peel pattern that I purchased way back in 1993 when I took a class from Karen. (Marvelous class, marvelous teacher!)
This is an illustration of how much fun it is to play with colors! You can take a pattern like Karen's and create something that looks so different just by changing colors and layout.
Every once in a while I keep track of the time it takes to make a particular project and I did it with this quilt top.
This is how long it took to finish the various parts:
- Cut out the paper templates for 296 arcs = 4.35 hours
- Paper-piece the races = 51.8 hours
- Trim the edges of the arcs = 3.5 hours
- Remove paper from the arcs = 9.87 hours
- Remaining cutting and assembly = 20.18 hours
For a total of 89.7 hours! Multiply that by your basic minimum wage and you'll begin to understand why a hand made quilt should never be sold for anything under $1000. This total doesn't even include material costs, quilting services, or binding. I also wasn't absolutely meticulous in starting my timer the minute I started work.
Granted a less complicated quilt top would probably be completed faster or one that didn't use so many different fabrics. I'll have to time the next quilt I made, just for comparison. (I've got an app for this on my iPhone, so it is more fun than watching a clock!)
For a number of the border layers I used the leftover trimmings from the arc backgrounds. This "scrap" was large enough to cut pieces that were around 1.5" x 2", which I sewed into mini 4-patches or into strips.
It is always fun, and sometimes quite a surprise, to see what my finished quilt looks like when I finally spread out the finished quilt top to take a picture because while I'm working and designing in my tiny studio, my quilt project is generally in a big lumping fabric bunch. The borders and such are designed roughly on paper because my design "wall" is only 4' x 6'.
Next on my project agenda is a 12" x 12" art quilt to donate to the Studio Art Quilt Associates auction that is held every year, usually in the Fall, but I don't have the exact dates yet. I just know the deadline for submission is this month!
2 comments:
This quilt top is gorgeous Kim! So inspiring. And be assured other artists and craftspeople understand the labor and love that go into a beautiful handmade creation that has a value all its own.
Thanks, Melissa! I don't (or haven't sold) any of my traditional quilts, mainly because the costs are not what the average person would willing to spend. Hey, I couldn't afford either except for the cheap labor source I have - me. LOL. But I love making them.
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