Posts Tagged ‘Straight to the point’

Patterns in a Series: QuiltWoman.com Gone Serial

Monday, August 16th, 2010

When your customers take a class and fall in love with a technique, they generally want to make this project a couple of times since they were so successful.  Don’t you wish you had some variety to offer them, after the initial technique class?

Have you found that customers love to take a class, but wish they could have the project in a different color or slightly different style.  We can help!

QuiltWoman.com has a few pattern lines based on a series design.  Series design simply means our independent designers have worked one style into a series of patterns.  You can introduce your customer to the technique or style and then sell complimenting patterns to continue to fuel their creativity.  If you are teaching just the technique, customers will have the option of pattern styles for their specific project.   Here’s a glimpse at the series designs we offer:

Click on each photo to see more designs using each method.

Straight to the Point by Susan Mayer of Quilting Discoveries

Dreaming of Teddy Bears Quilt Pattern SM-120

Dreaming of Teddy Bears Quilt Pattern SM-120

Straight to the Point™ Quilts all feature a great technique for creating great looking On-Point quilts. All the blocks are set as straight rows. The quilt is then cut and re-sewn into an on-point setting. There are NO diagonal rows of different sizes, NO setting triangles and NO corner blocks. Our technique makes On-Point sets a snap.  See our quick demonstration page.

4 in 1 by Barb Sackel of Rose Cottage Designs

Homestead Acres Quilt Pattern BS2-216

Homestead Acres Quilt Pattern BS2-216

A “4-in-1″ Quilt Pattern is a quilt design that gives you creative spaces for different techniques. You may use machine or hand embroidery, motifs, focus fabric, applique or even machine motif quilting. This wonderful approach allows more opportunity for a full themed quilt.

Black White and Bright by Susan Mayer of Quilting Discoveries

My Colors Went Wild Quilt Pattern SM-104

My Colors Went Wild Quilt Pattern SM-104

Black, White, and Bright Quilt Patterns are ones that feature black and white fabrics paired with bright fabrics. Susan Mayer loves designing quilts using these parameters.  You can read more about her design process in a previous QuiltWoman.com Blog post.

Charming Botanicals- Reeze LaLonde Hanson of Morning Glory Designs

April Sweet Peas Quilt Pattern MGD-409

April Sweet Peas Quilt Pattern MGD-409

Charming Botanicals patterns feature a strong floral motif and mixes traditional piecing with applique.  This series, by Reeze LaLonde Hanson, focuses a flower design per month.

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QuiltWoman.com is here to help you help your customer.  Patterns in a series will give diversity to your classes as well as create strong repeat customers.  Thank you again for choosing QuiltWoman.com patterns designed by independent designers.

An interview with Susan Mayer

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Some of the more popular quilt patterns that QuiltWoman.com carries are the ones in our Straight-to-the-Point (STTP) Series.  The creative force behind these quilts is Susan Mayer.  Curious to know more about these quilts and Susan, I picked up the telephone and gave her a call.

SusanMayer

SusanMayer

I asked Susan how the STTP series started. She stated it was “quite by accident.”  Susan was teaching classes in which she used a lot of other designer’s patterns.  She thought to herself “I can do this” and proceeded to pull out the graph paper to design her own quilt.  Her intent was to create an “amazing sampler quilt”.  But when it was finished it was, to use Susan’s words, “ugly.”  She didn’t want to redo or redraw it, so she got out scissors and tape, cut the design on the graph paper apart, taped it back together, tried a few other cuts and realized the result was “on point”.  Susan then executed the design in fabric, and it worked there also!  Thus the Straight-to-the-Point concept was born.  You can read an explanation of the technique here.

But how did Susan end up publishing her patterns?  She was teaching a mystery class based on this new quilting concept.  Her students were working along and hadn’t quite noticed that what they assumed to be the finished project was an odd size.  One of the speedier students announced “I’m finished”.  But she had a puzzled look on her face, having realized her quilt was an odd size.  The student asked Susan for help with the borders.  Susan played along and “admitted” that the quilt didn’t turn out the way she thought it would.  Susan told her, “Tell you what, let’s go to the big cutting table and see what we can do.”  The student about died…“Are you going to cut my quilt?”  Susan assured her she could fix it.  The student was skeptical and reluctant until Susan offered to pay for her fabric if she ruined it.  So out they went to the cutting table and Susan made one cut.  Susan mused “Hmm, that didn’t get us anywhere.”  She made another cut, flipped the pieces around, and Viola!  A quilt on point!  At that point (pun intended), all the students got excited at seeing the end result.  Cut away, students!

After that successful class, Susan was invited by a large guild to do a trunk show and teach her new method.  A shop owner who was present stated “That should be a pattern.”  Susan had no clue how to get started publishing a pattern.  The shop owner said she would call a publisher (she knew Ann Anderson, the founder of QuiltWoman.com).  As a result, Susan talked to Ann, e-mailed her what she had, and the next day had a contract in hand!  “It was incredible the way it happened.”

Since that fortuitous meeting, Susan has published 21 STTP patterns and 13 traditional ones.  And to think this all started not that long ago in 2006.  That first quilt was Do-Si-Do.

Do-Si-Do - A Straight to the Point Quilt

Do-Si-Do - A Straight to the Point Quilt

After that, Susan collaborated with Ann to come up with Contra Dance and Dance Partners.  Below is Contra Dance.  This sample was created with the “You Go Girl” fabric line by Northcott Fabrics.

Contra Dance

Contra Dance

And this is Dance Partners.  This sample was made with the “Town & Country Flannels” fabric line by Northcott Fabrics.

Dance Partners

Dance Partners

I remarked to Susan that some of her newer samples are full of bright colors. She calls them clear colors.  Those are not to be confused with dusty colors.  Ok Susan, spill…what are you talking about?

A clear color is one where your eye doesn’t have to pick through the contrast and values to see the design.  The design just shows up!  Pair it with a black and white fabric and the colors pop.  If you are working with dusty colors, your eye had a hard time distinguishing between the pieces.  A quilt made with dusty colors can blend too much.  Kaffe Fassett’s fabric works the best.

Still confused?  Susan distilled it down to this.  A dusty color is a muted color; it has a little bit of brown or gray value to it.  Look at white versus a cream.  The white is clear, the cream is dusty.

One of her newest patterns is Floral Path.  Susan described it as a simple quilt, one that will give the quilter a “feeling of instant gratification” because it will go together so quickly.  That is something that works for Susan.  She has found that when she is working on a quilt, designing it, picking the fabric and piecing, about halfway through and her mind is already on the next design!

Floral Path

Floral Path

A couple of Susan’s other new patterns are Side Stepping and Fire and Ice.  She thinks they will appeal to quilters because of this same concept of instant gratification.

Side Stepping

Side Stepping

Fire and Ice

Fire and Ice

I always have to ask a designer how he or she generates their designs.  Knowing that Susan started this journey with a design on graph paper, I asked if she still designs that way.  “I do a combination, some graph paper and some on Electric Quilt 6 (EQ6).  If it is a totally original design or concept, she will start on graph paper.  If the design is based on a traditional block that can be found in EQ6, she will use that.

I inquired if Susan has any formal training in the arts or a similar field.  She has none whatsoever!  (There is hope for those of us who also don’t!)  She used to work with an interior designer doing store displays, so she was used to putting colors and different patterns together.  She also did custom floral designs; again she is experienced using colors.

We posted some pictures of Susan’s Quilt Room a few weeks back (see them here), and some people wanted to see what her sewing room looked like.  Well, here it is.

Very glad that Susan couldn’t see the state of my own sewing room, I asked “Is your sewing room always that clean?”  “Yes, my Studio is occasionally messy, but I do try to clean it in between projects.”  I’m envious, not only is it a studio and not a sewing room, but it’s clean.  Susan remarked that she is lucky to have the two rooms (her Quilt Room and her Studio).  The quilt room originally “was just a room.”  Susan decided she needed to have the quilts out so she and others can enjoy them.  Most of them fit into the room.

I was curious as to what sewing machine Susan uses.  It is a Bernina aurora 430.  She bought it because of the BSR (Bernina Stitch Regulator).

Bernina aurora 430

Bernina aurora 430

Susan did admit she doesn’t do any machine quilting but does her own piecing.  She just doesn’t enjoy the machine quilting (she is mortal after all!)  Susan found a quilter who does beautiful custom work, she just hands the quilt top over and doesn’t even have to tell her machine quilter what she wants.  Having seen Susan’s quilts in person, I can attest to that.

What’s ahead for Susan?  If you look in Fabric Trends Magazine on page 11, the Do-Si-Do pattern is featured for Northcott Fabrics.  She has a free pattern available from Clothworks for their Midwinter’s Garden Black and White line.

Midwinter Garden

Midwinter Garden

In addition, Susan is hoping to be at the Spring 2010 International Quilt Market in Minneapolis.

Susan does teach, present trunk shows and guild presentations. She is more than willing to travel!  You can get more information about where she’ll be and when at on her website.  Susan is located in Washington State, having relocated within the past few years from San Jose, California to be closer to her daughter and grandchildren.

A different way to set your quilt blocks “On-Point”

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009
A checkerboard!

A checkerboard!

Are you bored of the same old piecing techniques?  Have you gotten into a rut of constructing quilt tops that are a series of 12” squares, neatly pieced side by side?  Feel like you’ve been constructing nothing but checkerboards lately?  Have we got a solution for you!  Let me get straight to the point….

“Straight to the Point.”  “No”, I’m not repeating myself.  And “Yes”, pun intended.  We have a series of quilts that are constructed using our “Straight To The Point” assembly method.  This technique was developed by Ann Anderson (former owner of QuiltWoman) and Susan Mayer.  The result is a beautiful quilt with blocks set on point, and no setting of triangles involved.

So how does it work?  You start by sewing your blocks in a straight set.

Step One - Set blocks in Straight Set

Step One - Set blocks in Straight Set

Now this part requires a little fortitude.  You get out your scissors or rotary cutter and, GASP, cut the quilt into three sections!  Trust us…this works!

Step 2 - Cut quilt into sections

Step 2 - Cut quilt into sections

You then rearrange the sections.  In this image, the sections are in the same orientation as above, just rearranged.

Step 3 - Rearrange the sections

Step 3 - Rearrange the sections

Sew them back together.  The step 4 image shows the sections stitched back together.

Step 4 - Sections sewn back together

Step 4 - Sections sewn back together

Add straight borders to it and you have a beautiful quilt with a minimum of fuss.  In this particular pattern, Stars for Audrey, you get the extra added bonus of a complex border.  And notice, a checkerboard in sight!

Contra Dance

Contra Dance

Jelly Patch

Jelly Patch

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We have had the Straight to the Point series in our line-up for a number of years, with more versions being added all the time.  These patterns have proven to be some of our best sellers.

Summer Fun

Summer Fun

Barn Dance

Barn Dance

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

So, if you are looking to get out of your piecing rut, making a quilt using this technique in one of QuiltWoman.com’s Straight To The Point patterns could be just the thing.  And we won’t tell the admirers of your quilt how easy it was to assemble it.  That will be our little secret!

Accent on Charms (uses Charm Squares)

Accent on Charms (uses Charm Squares)

Hearts

Hearts