Two years ago, I had an exhibition at the gallery space located on the Kenai Pennisula College campus.
This is the show where my name was in lights. Okay, it was only Kenai, Alaska and not New York City, but it was still fun.
Because the gallery space is small, I decided to create as many small pieces as I could.
Last summer, I finally had almost all of the pieces photographed. A few of them were sold before I had a chance to photograph them, which is a shame, and I need to learn not to do that.
A month ago, I added a new gallery to my website to share these small quilts.
And today, I am sharing them with you on my blog.
Each Hot Crossed Square is a bit like a sketch.
Another fun word for sketch is maquette.
According to Barbara Brackman’s Encyclopedia of Pieced Quilt Patterns,
These quilts are inspired by and related to following quilt blocks—
The Red Cross Quilt, Stone Mason’s Puzzle, City Streets, Squares and Square, and my favorite Crossed Square.
Some of these sketches actually become Color Grids.
Color Grids is the same of the series I have been working on since 2011.
A Color Grid quilt is really a Hot Crossed Square multiplied.
Or to put it in quilt lingo—a Hot Crossed Square is a single quilt block.
A Color Grid has between nine and 16 blocks depending on how I grid the quilt.
I am teaching Riffing on Tradition at Hello Stitch in Berkeley, California on Saturday November 11 from 12NOON until 6PM.
In this workshop, we will be doing exactly what I have done with my Hot Crossed Squares.
We will be taking a traditional quilt block and manipulating it over and over again.
We will be examining all the variables aka Design Elements, and then manipulating those variables into small works of art OR one large composition.
It is going to be a very good time.
I hope you have enjoyed seeing these pieces.
Maybe it will inspire to make some of your own.
Thank you folks for stopping by.
Very interesting quilt blocks. Thank you for showing us.
Thank you! I am glad you enjoyed them.
Your work is wonderful!
Thank you Suzana!
Thanks for showing us these! They are BEAUTIFUL! And experimenting on this scale seems not too risky for those of us who are used to doing quilting math (not too well in my case!) and wielding a rotary cutter! I am also inspired to do a facing rather than a binding… off to find a tutorial on that 😉
Thank you! If you go to my ABOUT page there is a search bar on the top right hand side. If you type in Facing Your Quilt you will find a tutorial on how I face my quilts. Thank you for stopping by!
Thank you so much for showing these stunning little quilts, they are a delight! Your new book is on the way to me, hopefully only one week away now!
I have heard that some quilters have already gotten the book. That is good news. I hope you enjoy it!
Just fantastic! And yes, it makes me want to go out into my studio and dig through my big collection of solids and just make some quilt blocks!!
You would make some great pieces. I am sure of that. Thank you Debby!
Thanks for posting these all, they are AWESOME! They just vibrate and dance.
Alaska is every bit as valid as New York.
I’ve lived on the west coast all my life and
wouldn’t have it any other way.
I love your work.
Thank you Janie! I think the best part was that my son saw. I love the west coast too. We have own style. Thank you for stopping by!