The Importance of Backing Up: Looking before You Leap

There’s nothing like being on a roll with a piece. You’re sewing away. You have one more bit to do, or maybe three or maybe five. It’s a bit questionable but you push through because it’s so good to be done.

By now I should be prescient about that. That’s a ledge with a chasm right by it. And I should know I’m likely to fall. I did that this week.

three fish

I had that green heron quilt ready to go. Got the heron on. Looked at the fish and decided I needed an odd number. Three was a bit empty. So I decided on five.

five fish

Did I look? Actually I did. Did I think? Perhaps that’s the problem. My brain knows that odd numbers work better than even ones. My eye knew the fifth fish just didn’t fit in. I listened to my brain. Not so smart.

Theories don’t always work. If your eye tells you it’s wrong, then it’s wrong. Had I listened I would have saved myself three hours with a mustache trimmer and seam ripper. And a ruined fish.

Design is important. So is color. So is drawing. But in the end, it’s how the piece balances and flows when it’s all done. This is the part you can foul up with everything else right. And the answer is simple. You need to look at it.

Not just put it up and see. Put it where you can really analyze whether it balances and flows and whether there’s stuff.

I’m bad at this. That moment when I get that urge to finish…. it gets me every time I follow it.

So how do we look at a quilt differently?

Old school is to just back away far enough from it to see it. It’s not enough to see it laid on the table. You need to hang it to see it. I used to hang really large pieces off the porch and walked down the alley to really see it.

I’ve also used a a wide angle viewer. These let you view a big quilt in a small space. They are very valuable.

Another old school method is a ruby beholder, or a color evaluator. It’s a red or green piece of plastic where you can see the values in your quilt as opposed to the colors. It’s a huge help.

All of that steps back to a digital camera. And yes, your cell phone will probably do that.

Just get far enough back to photo the whole piece. And then, changed the photo to black and white. You can see the movement, whether something needs to be put over slightly to one side. Whether you’ve just got a hole or it’s too cluttered. Whether something disappears. It will also show you if you’ve got a value problem.

My bird is a bit subtle here. But I don’t think I mind that. He’s hunting after all, so he needs to be.

Leaves in place

It’s always better to do that before you sew things down. You would think I would learn. Experience is the best teacher, and some fools will have no other.

As You Sew So Shall You Rip: Mistake Management

On a roll Headed the wrong direction

You know that feeling. Working on a project. Almost ready for the next step. Pushing through.

And all of a sudden the process you sailed into is just wrong this time. There you are. A million stitches later with a mess.

I’ve been in process with a beetle quilt that felt like charted water. Sometimes you really have to figure out new tech to make it sing. Sometimes you do something you know you know. Sometimes it works. Sometimes…..Sigh.

This morning I woke up and realized my shaggy applique was too broad a step too far.

I’d started with cutting into an extra layer and exposing the under bark in squares. Unfortunately things don’t necessarily look the way you think they will. It looked more like a chess board for beetles.

About two hours later I had the stitching out and could re do it.

In this case less is definitely more. Much happier with this bark treatment.

When do I rip something out? Not necessarily when something isn’t perfect. I don’t happen to believe perfect is very pretty really. But when something doesn’t give the look I want, or if it spoils my enjoyment of the piece. Or if I’m embarrassed by it. Then I rip.

branches in properly

Of course no one can tell you that. You are the only one who can make you pick up a seam ripper. No one else has the credentials or the rights.

Two hours later I’m back on target and much happier.

The moral of the story is that it isn’t what you think something will look like. It’s what it actually does look like. You have to look. The best piece of equipment in my studio is a photo wall I can pin a piece into and photo it, process by process, step by step. Then I can really see if I like what I see.