Remember when I said I needed to calm down the mockingbird quilt I’ve been working on? The background was pretty wild. I don’t quite know what to do with deserts. so I don’t know when I’ve gone over the top.
But I do know how to put out a visual firestorm. You go for the complementary color. The eye gets excited by all that contrast, but it cools off all that flaming color blaze.
With all that red, the complement is green. Which means cactus.
I’m not a cactus person. I’m not a desert person. So I’ve spent a week looking at pictures and identifying how I want to make cactus. It’s all about the texture, so it’s all about the stitchery, which means it’s all about the angle of the stitch.
We’ve talked about stitch angles a lot. The Thread Magic Stitch Vocabulary Book has an explanation of that you might find helpful. Moving straight through the machine gets us a hard thick line. Moving out from side to side creates shading. Moving through with an angle gets us a curved line. Here is a link to the blog about Zigzag Stitching.
Straight stitching in spirals creates textures on paddle cactus. The outside is shaded with an outline on the angle, stitching side to side to shade, and some straight-through smoothing.
I used a spikey shading headed upwards to give the feel of rough texture, and used straight stitch for the spines.
Straight garnet stitch finishes off the edges of the holes in the cactus. See last week’s blog , Making Holes: New Contonstuctions.
Of course the colors of cactus flowers come into the world of color as an antipressant. Which is a good thing for the raw edge of spring.
I don’t have it quite arranged yet. But I’ve got a bevy of cactus to make the desert bloom. Next stop, sand.
Thank you very much – I went on quite a journey looking at your videos – I had been wondering about your edges. I have tried facings and they are better than regular quilt binding. I am going to play with the crochet cotton around the edge. (First I need to come up with an irregular edge) then I will play with threads. I have been thinking about bobbin work – hadn’t had the nerve to do it. I will search for a different bobbin – I use an Elna and it is a drop in bobbin so will talk to the tech people to see what I need. Have a good week – I will
Mary Carter
Your Elma should let you bypass the bobbin tension. Check with your mechanic
Thanks I will – it has served me quite well for a number of years.
Mary