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Group One
In & Out of Studio 3D
Thursday, 7 June 2018
A Teaching Moment
Topic: Bible Journaling

This week my co-leader Ann had the lettering lesson. In response to a mention from one of the group members, Ann developed a double-line print and taught it with the focus word 'teaching'.

MONDAY

The introduction of the font/word. The straight lines get full double lines. Curves get partial double lines.


TUESDAY

Here's the alphabet. I changed some of my letter forms and where some of the double lines appear.



WEDNESDAY

The assignment was to write out words of things that teachers use to teach. I did mine on black cardstock with a Sharpie fine paint marker in white to look like a chalkboard. The marker was absorbed into the cardstock on the first pass so I had to trace all the lines a second time.


THURSDAY

This is scripture writing day in our notebooks. Once I selected my verse I knew it needed to be written out in a Bible drawing.


FRIDAY

I know from experience that we always use the font in our Bible on Friday. I was so excited about my idea that I did it back on Wednesday!

This turned out exactly like I envisioned it, too. I looked up a few references here and there on how to draw elements but the drawing itself is all mine.


What do you think?

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 11:34 PM PDT
On Angel Wings
Topic: Bible Journaling

Back when I did the vellum butterfly pop-up insert in my Bible I thought how neat it would be to do one with angel wings.

I found a wing I liked and printed it out as a set with one a reverse image. Then I set it aside to do later.

Later got here! 

I used to do a lot of parchment craft on cards and still had all the supplies to do this craft.

I used Tinta pearlescent ink and a dip pen to trace the wings onto parchment. Then I used a medium ball tool to burnish from the back - heavier at the wing tips and more streaked as they went toward the base. I used a 4-needle tool to pierce around the perimeter and tore away the background, leaving a bridge between the two wings.

I folded the wings together and used dry-line adhesive to glue them into the gutter of my bible.

I wrote out Psalm 34:7 in an art deco font.


I am so pleased with how this turned out - exactly how I had hoped.


I don't expect I will use many pop-ups in my Bible but this was a 'must have'.

Ddd

 


 

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 9:29 AM PDT
Tuesday, 5 June 2018
Listening Device
Topic: Bible Journaling

Well, I had a big surprise while teaching this lettering lesson.

Several people said it was the hardest they had tried to learn! Really??? I chose this style because I thought I'd give them a break from all the difficult ones we had been doing.

Boy, was I surprised at how hard they found it to be.

Here is the lesson - as well as some tips I shared with them to help solve their dilemma.

MONDAY

Today we’re going to learn a lettering style that is graphic – kind of cartoon-like in all caps. It is one that would be good used in sign making. But our word is still thought provoking.  We’re going to ‘LISTEN’.

I’ve shown the samples in a variety of sizes so you don’t have to feel locked into making giant letters. It is easily scalable.

Follow the steps, line by line, and you’ll be writing ‘in style’ in no time at all. I wrote the steps directly on the design page so you can print it and have them right at hand. I’ll also detail those for you here:

·          -   Even if you’re using grid dot paper, start with guidelines to keep your height consistent.

·         -   In pencil, draw base letters in a block style (elements of the letters are the same width throughout whether horizontal, vertical or diagonal, straight or curved.)

·           - Adjust the letter outline with wonkiness. The tops, bottoms, ends of letters will ‘bulge’ a little (like a dog bone)

·           -   Add a shadow line to left and bottom, using a diagonal to connect to the letter.

·          -   Ink your letters and erase the pencil (including guidelines).

·           -   Decorate the shadows if desired.

·           -   Color letters as desired.

 

TUESDAY

We’re going to use the same steps as yesterday to create our entire alphabet.

Since you won’t need to write all those instructions at the bottom of your page, you’ll have room to create a set of numbers, as well.

I didn’t decorate my shadows or color my letters as this page will be a reference sheet on letter construction in my lettering notebook.



DEBBIE'S NOTES

I encourage you all to remember that this lettering style is very casual, imprecise and totally personizable. Do not distress if your letters are skinnier or fatter than the example. No need to worry if the bulges are not consistent.

Think of these as some regular block letters that got left out in the sun and have started to melt a little. They wouldn't do that in a precise manner!

The thing that will pull them all together in your project is to have the shadow depth consistent. So, make that shadow line an even amount from the letter edge and I think you'll be happier with your results.

 

WEDNESDAY

Use your new lettering style to create a ‘sign’ with a quote on listening. I found this one to be thought provoking.

I varied the sizes of the guidelines to emphasize some words and deemphasize others.

I did not decorate the shadows on the letters and I used a rainbow order for coloring my words.

Lots of options – what will YOU do?

 

 

THURSDAY

You may choose to use a shorter verse with the word ‘listen’ when you write on your practice paper. But doing a long verse provides the practice needed to really get those letter forms into muscle memory.

Again, I did not draw or color in the shadows. But I did get to use those numbers we talked about on day two.

Look how you can use the same style for punctuation, just bulge the ends of lines and add a shadow.

Crazy coloring today!

 



DEBBIE’S NOTES

Since this lettering has a distinct shadow, look how much dimensionality you can get by using a white gel pen to add some highlights!

Highlight sparingly INSIDE the letter on the UPPER RIGHT with a single curved line. This makes the letters appear to have a rounded surface instead of lying flat.

 



FRIDAY

Today we are going to use the ‘listen’ font in our Bibles.

Because this is a font that takes up a lot of horizontal room, I chose to turn my Bible and work on an edge-strip. I also saved space by mixing in a script font so the emphasis is on just two key words. You could also use a simple single-line block print with either all-caps or a mixed case font. I wouldn’t use a faux-brush style with thickened letters as it would then compete visually with the featured lettering.

I DID color my shadows for this final piece – with gold gel pen!

The addition of the flowers was to fill in some white space and balance the piece visually.


Another lettering lesson in the books.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 3:05 PM PDT
Thursday, 31 May 2018
Back So Soon?
Topic: Bible Journaling

While I was on vacation I spent a lot of time drawing and lettering and doing Bible journaling. You’ve been seeing the results of all this for several days now.

However, I had three sketches that were unfinished in my notebook when I came home. So, yesterday I worked on transferring those into my Bible and making finished pages out of them.

The first of these is Hebrews 6:19. I had found this scripture written in the shape of an anchor at https://www.pinterest.com/pin/858358010201145418/ (see photo)

But I wanted to have an actual anchor on my page. So I found a ‘how-to-draw-an-anchor’ page at http://www.supercoloring.com/drawing-tutorials/how-to-draw-an-anchor-with-rope (see photo)

Perfect! I combined the two of them in my sketch and then traced them into my Bible. After coloring, here is my result.

 

Also, on my iPhone I had a screenshot of a ‘zentangle’ feather that I wanted to use with Psalm 91:4. You can see the original at https://www.pinterest.com/pin/274930752227263469/ or see photo below.

I used the sample as a general guide to the shapes and then did all my own designs and coloring for the spaces.

 

The third page I did was inspired by this page https://www.pinterest.com/pin/7036943146432236/ (see photo)


You can see that I took it in a whole new direction by using a different scripture, writing the entire verse and reference in layers of script, and using a gradation of blues to color the water.

I did Isaiah 43:2

I am all caught up with the work I started on vacation so will have to compile a new list of things I want to work on now.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 11:44 AM PDT
Wednesday, 30 May 2018
Praying Hands
Topic: Bible Journaling

Today the Drawing Room lesson was posted for Praying Hands. You can get the free PDF for it here: http://creative-bible-journaling.com/drawing-room-214-praying-hands/

I drew this in my Bible to illustrate James 5:13 but I did it while on vacation and didn’t have the ‘notes’ that went with the lesson. That is why the fingers are longer than needed and too straight. It makes them look very wooden and flat.


The hands in the lesson are more natural-looking so don't judge the lesson by my lame results.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 12:49 PM PDT
Tuesday, 22 May 2018
Mustard Tree
Topic: Bible Journaling

I think with this posting I will be up to date with the backlog that accumulated with my vacation combined with the problems with my web/blog host!

This was another page I did on vacation. I wanted to feature some funky little birds I designed so I needed a tree for them to perch in.

I found the scripture reference for the mustard tree in Luke 13:18-19 and drew the tree with leaves similar to the burning bush. More branch, less leaves though.

Again, with a lot of text to add, I used a basic print style.


Crazy, colorful birds.

Ddd

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 12:35 PM PDT
Monday, 21 May 2018
Parable of the Weeds
Topic: Bible Journaling

The illustration for this scripture in Matthew 13:40-42 was from a 'how-to-draw-it' book. The photo I took of the page on my phone was extremely light and after the sketching, tracing and re-sketching there is a LOT of change from the original.

I couldn't isolate a particular part of the text that summed it up so I wrote out a lot more than I usually do. When doing this it is advisable to use a very basic print style to maintain readability.


The color is all 'me' as the original lesson was only black and white. This combination of green and purple reminded me of the thistles at home (which at this writing are taller than me in the garden plot).

Ddd

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 12:27 PM PDT
Sunday, 20 May 2018
Knit Me Together
Topic: Bible Journaling

I found a lovely illustration of Psalm 139:13 on Pinterest. Although I borrowed the concept in whole I did draw it myself and colored it without referencing the original.

It has been re-pinned so many times that I cannot find the original poster so I hope they will forgive my borrowing it. IF THIS IS YOURS, PLEASE LET ME KNOW SO I CAN EXTEND CREDIT TO YOU.


I used it on the page AFTER the actual appearance of the scripture as I had already journaled the full spread on the page before this.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 12:17 PM PDT
Saturday, 19 May 2018
The Narrow Gate
Topic: Bible Journaling

In a 'how-to-draw it' book I found how to make a stone stairway inside an arch. This was similar to many that we saw in Italy and Greece so I used it while on vacation there to illustrate the Narrow Gate in Matthew 7:13-14.

It was unfortunate that the lettering on the page behind it was so dark as it makes this lighter print hard to read. I think I am going to go back and add color to the letters on this page to make them more readable.


I had fun selecting colors and doing shading on the stones, using a range of five values in three sets of gray pencils (cool gray, warm gray and French gray).

Ddd

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 12:02 PM PDT
Friday, 18 May 2018
The Good Seed
Topic: Bible Journaling

When I want to have a record of something in a book or online that I want to draw later I often take a photo of the page or the screen with my phone. The only problem is that I haven't found a way to change the file name so I can search for them. I do save them in albums so all the lettering is together and all the sketch designs are together, etc.

So, in spinning past lots of pictures I came to a sketch of wheat that I liked for the kernels and one that I liked for the leaves and one for the bend of the heads.

I combined all of these to create three stalks of wheat swaying in the wind that I used to illustrate Jesus' explaination of the meaning of the Good Seed.


Matthew 18:23 is the reference.

Ddd

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 11:48 AM PDT
Thursday, 17 May 2018
The Wise Owl
Topic: Bible Journaling

During my vacation the Drawing Room lesson was posted for my Owl.

You can get the free PDF for that here: http://creative-bible-journaling.com/drawing-room-213-wise-owl/

I used the owl in my Bible to illustrate Ephesians 1:17


Yeah, strange lettering. It looked better in in my head and on the scratch paper draft. But after using it in this piece I just threw that alphabet away!

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 11:44 AM PDT
Sunday, 13 May 2018
The Non-burning Bush
Topic: Bible Journaling

Our church is working through Exodus which was the perfect time for the Creative Bible Journaling Tip-In Corner to come up with a burning bush. I really liked how one person colored it and printed it out to reference.

Then, on vacation, I realized that I had left the paper at home so I tried to recreate it without.

I actually like my version better in the end!

Our pastor had quipped that it schould actually be called the non-burning bush since there was fire but it was not consumed. That's what this blog entry title is all about.

I had an alphabet on file of letters that resemble Hebrew characters so I used that for the ' I AM ' at the top. 

I did a lot of color blending on the elements and some tracing of the outlines in gold gel pen.


Exodus 3:14 is referenced.

Ddd

 

Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 11:31 AM PDT
Friday, 11 May 2018
Thank You For Your Kindness
Topic: Bible Journaling

Ann was the Lettering Lodge teacher again the week I left on vacation. I was home for the first two days of lessons which were the focus word:

...and the full alphabet:

While I was away I skipped the day 3 and 4 lessons and went right to using it in my Bible.


The poppies are a creation out of my head.

Ddd

 

 

 

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 11:24 AM PDT
Sunday, 6 May 2018
Drawing a Prayer Garden
Topic: Bible Journaling

In the Creative-Bible-Journaling.com Drawing Room I created a lesson on how to use one’s own handwriting to make flower stems with the names of people you’re praying for.

This was a style I developed back in high school and it seemed perfect to use the week that the Lettering Lodge was focusing on Generations.

You can download the free PDF of the drawing lesson here http://creative-bible-journaling.com/drawing-room-211-prayer-garden/ and use it to create a prayer garden like I did in my Bible.


Only by turning the page 1/4 turn to the right can you decipher the names written into the stems.

Ddd

 

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 11:15 AM PDT
Saturday, 5 May 2018
A New Generation of Lettering
Topic: Bible Journaling

First of all, my appoligies for the delay in posting. Occasionally my web/blog host just goes off the rails and all access to my blog is blocked. I can't get in to post anything and nobody (including me) can see anything. SUPER annoying! Then, before they resolved it I went on vacation so I couldn't even post when it WAS fixed. I had to wait to get home.

In the meantime, I just kept creating and keeping track of when things would have been posted if I had been able to do so. So I am back-dating many posts to keep them in order of appearance.

Here we go:

My co-teacher in the Creative Bible Journaling Lettering Lodge was the instructor of the week and chose the word Generations as the focus for her lessons.

Day 1 was learning a few of the letters needed to write the focus word.


This is a very graceful print, standing tall and having lovely curves.

Day 2 - Learning the entire alphabet


I got some free markers with a purchase so I used them on these pages. I knew I wouldn't be able to use them in my Bible because they bleed through the paper.

Day 3 we were encouraged to create a genealogy tree with the letters. My tree has so many duplicate names and has been researched a long way back so I just used the names in no particular order and focused on decorating the page with dangles and lots of color. I included the descendents as well as the ancestors.


Day 4 we always move on to writing a focus word scripture in our notebook. I used Psalm 78:4 and decorated with some easy roses to fill white space at the bottom.


Day 5 is the day we always take the new lettering style to our Bibles. Psalm 79:13 now showstwo generations praising together with arms raised.
 

Which closes out another week of lettering.
 
Ddd

Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 10:46 AM PDT
Saturday, 28 April 2018
Get Happy - Or, At Least, Get Joyful
Topic: Bible Journaling

The lettering that was taught this week on Creative Bible Journaling was another faux brush script with awesome big loops and swooshes. Ann did a good job by naming this style 'joyful'.

[I think you'll find the pictures will be clearer on artwork posted now as I finally figured out how to to scanning on my new printer instead of having to take photos and editing them]

As usual, we started on Monday with practice writing the focus word in the new lettering style.


On Tuesday we got the whole alphabet. In the faux brush style, you draw the base letter and then add a second line beside the downstrokes. Once these are inked, you fill in the gap with ink to create a thick line.


For the Wednesday activity, Ann had us create an anagram with the word 'joyful'. When I do these, I like to have mine create a phrase or a sentence rather than just listing random words.

I filled the gaps between the double lines on the letters using different colors from a new set of markers. I also decorated my page with the flowers I taught in the Drawing Room tutorial this week. These were very popular.


When I first started writing with this lettering I thought it would make a great style to use for bounce lettering because of the big swoops. It would just take some exagerating of those as well as curving the baselines and varying the letter bases along those lines. Each letter is finessed so the parts and pieces of the words nest into one another.

So, for Thursday's activity of lettering a scripture on paper, I did a rough sketch in a generic script for spacing, and then worked on incorporating all that flair.

After inking my piece I found I had some areas with open white space that were a little distracting. I sketched some butterflies and colored them with orange marker.

That step made them take the forefront so I used the yellow brush marker to add a highlight along the left side of all the thickened ink strokes on the letters.

On Friday, as usual, the activity was to use the new lettering style in our Bbile with a scripture that has the word 'joyful' in it.

I liked the way the bounce lettering looked on the previous piece so I had another run at that for the Bible page.

I added a sketch of a tambourine to illustrate the scripture and to fill in the white space on the page.


I will be saving this alphabet to use for bounce lettering in the future. I love the way it looks!

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 3:10 PM PDT
Friday, 20 April 2018
That Looks Mighty Good
Topic: Bible Journaling

Another week of lettering lessons is up for posting today! Let's just jump right into it:

MONDAY

The font this week is a cross between a standard serif print and a novelty print. It has clean upright letters. There are notations on the sample sheet to give you some additional guidance.

Start with four horizontal guide lines, evenly spaced. From top to bottom these will be ascender, x-height, base and descender lines.

All the capitals have a crossbar at the x-height line (The H is an exception as it has that beautiful wing shape that matches the top of the M)

Letters with a fully rounded bowl (like the o, g) have a small internal curl.

The serifs on everything echo the crossbars. Watch to see which serifs are full-width and which are only half-width (extending only to the right or the left).

I’m not really fond of the mixed upper and lower case like in the last sample. But I know some who like that sort of thing, so I included it.

 

TUESDAY

I first drew out this alphabet and then I asked my hubby what it reminded him of and he said ‘Samson’s hands on the pillars he was going to crumble’. So, after discussion we decided to go with ‘Mighty’ as the theme!

Common elements to watch for: WING SHAPES on A, H, M, m. INTERNAL CURLS on g, O, o, Q, q. Make note of which serifs are full (go to both sides of the letter) and which are half-width (just extend either left or right).

Make sure your letters stand nice and tall.

Remember to Pencil-Ink-Erase (PIE) as you write out your Mighty Alphabet.

WEDNESDAY

This is a great font to use for some Mighty hymn or chorus lyrics.

I find that I like ‘display’ pieces best when every word is capitalized. I also did some in all-caps as feature words.

I drew some poppies with a very thin-point pen and colored with pencils. When doing art in this style, I stop just short of crossing over the letters with the drawing lines and I leave a slight space around the color so it does not touch the letters. This maintains the readability of the text.

THURSDAY

On Thursdays we write out a scripture using the font of the week This is also done in a notebook or journal or on plain paper.

Although one could use the index inside their Bible, mine does not have one. So, I use www.biblegateway.com/ to find scriptures. There you can type in the focus word of the week and it will show you every verse it appears in! You can even select the Bible version you want to search. The scriptures will be listed AND written out for you. How handy is that? (You can also type in a reference and get the full scripture or you can click ‘in context’ and get the surrounding scriptures as well)

For the Mighty font I chose Psalm 150:1. Once again, all the first letters have been done in upper-case.

Look at the bottom of my page and you will note that I took very simple numbers and added enough of the serifs and crossbars to make them look like the lettering!

I drew over top of my letters using colored pencils, with a different color (blue, green, yellow, pink) for each phrase.

FRIDAY

Today you’ll choose a scripture reference in your Bible that uses the word ‘Mighty’. On this page you will journal that verse using the font of the week.

I had to scale back the size of my letters quite a bit for this and you’ll see that I have condensed the vertical spacing so the descender line on one row also serves as the ascender line on the next row.

As you are penciling your letters in you may want to move the words/letters left or right a smidge so no serifs sit directly on top of one another. I only had to do this in two places with descenders. You’ll see that I stayed with my use of upper-case on the first letter of every word and that I used all-caps to feature selected words.

I did a hand-drawn image with colored pencils added for my page. You can choose to decorate your page any way you wish (or not at all).


This week we were having a 'guided tour' for new members to the CBJ facebook group. Beacuse this was such an easy font to draw we had more participation than we usually do. There were a total of 16 who shared their work with us!

 

Ddd

 

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 8:55 PM PDT
Saturday, 14 April 2018
No Habla Applique!
Topic: Quilting

It is a good thing the fabric I was given had applique elements PRINTED on it because I don't DO applique! This was another of those printed 'cheater' fabrics. The blue blocks were all part of a printed fabric and all I had to do was cut blocks with an added 1/4 inch around them, piece them together using a sashing and add a border of cute houses from the same donation source.

The applique elements on the blocks as well as the mitered-corner frames on them are all part of the printing.

I did NOT want to do free-motion outlining of the frames or elements so I did an all over free-motion medium meander. It is backed with the same medium-blue showing in the binding.

This will go to the hospital's Passages program - my 72nd quilt for them.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 9:43 PM PDT
The Promise Of Fine Lettering
Topic: Bible Journaling

Last week I tutored another class on lettering in a style I called 'Promise'. Thi was a combination of two different lettering alphabets that I tweaked to use together - one for the upper-case and wone for the lower-case.

As we go through the daily lessons you'll note some issues I had with some letters and how I solved them.

MONDAY

Welcome to another week of lessons in the Lettering Lodge! We are going be learning a semi-script that I call ‘Promise’.

I say semi-script because there are scrolls on both the upper- and lower-case letters (like a script) but there is no connection between individual letters (like a print). These letters are very upright, leaning neither to the left or right.

The height of the lower-case letters is slightly LESS than half of the uppers.

Work on getting those swoops right, you’re going to be using them a lot!

You’ll note that words written in all caps are not very readable. The word you’ll write out is just for practice.

So, have a go at this – remembering to draw in pencil until you have good forms, then ink, then erase your pencil.



TUESDAY

Since there are several loops, swoops and scrolls that are common between letters, practice some of these along the upper edge of your page. It will make it easier to write consistent letters if you get these forms into muscle memory first.

As you look over the alphabet page below, please note the two alternate forms for the letters ‘I’ and ‘T’. I actually did all the homework lessons this week with the original forms and found I did not like them. The original ‘T’ looks like a ‘C’ and the original ‘I’ looks like a ‘T’. So, I gave the ‘I’ to the ‘T’ and made a new form for ‘I’. IT IS PERFECTLY ACCEPTABLE TO DO THIS YOURSELF IF THERE IS A LETTER THAT YOU DON’T LIKE! Just create a new letter form that uses elements common to the style. In fact, I noted yesterday that a couple of people have already switched out the upper-case S for a form they liked better.

So, as you write out your alphabet, substitute in the letter forms as YOU like them and this will become your personal reference sheet as you complete more assignments this week (and in the future).



WEDNESDAY

Find a song or quote about God’s promises and write it up as a reminder of His faithfulness. I used a quote from Rev. Billy Graham.

NOTE ON USE OF CAPITALS: I find that I like to capitalize every word (even the articles) when working on a full page like this. It looks nice and gives lots of practice on the large letter forms.

Unfortunately, all of those upper-case ‘T’s look too much like ‘C’s or ‘G’s so it is easy to read: “Go, Che and Chat”. This is why I gave those alternate forms yesterday!

Remember P-I-E (pencil, ink, erase) and decorate the page if you wish. I used the rainbow as a reminder of God’s promise.

 



THURSDAY

Today, use the ‘promise’ font to write out a ‘promise’ scripture in your journal, practice notebook or on plain paper.

NOTE ON CENTERING: If you want to center the words on your page, write and ink them on a practice sheet first. Then I usually pencil in a center mark on EACH LINE separately and pencil in a center line on the final page, top to bottom. This gives me a target. Then place the ‘final’ page over top of the practice piece and use a light box or a window to trace the words. You can slide the original sideways in whichever direction you need to center the lines on the page.

Another way to center them is to fold the practice paper right above the line of text and align its center line with the one on the final page. Then copy the letters on the final page just above the corresponding letter on the practice page. Repeat these steps as you move down the page.

If you want to decorate your page, do all the inking of the letters first using a heavier weight line and erase their pencil guides. Sketch your artwork in pencil and ink it in very thin line pen. Erase those pencil lines before coloring. I used a dove representing the Spirit of God. This is a fancier version of the Drawing Room dove, with swoops and swirls added to the wings and tail.



FRIDAY

Now we will bring the ‘promise’ font to our Bibles.

This is the point at which I swapped out the alternate ‘T’ and ‘I’ letterforms. Isn’t that so much more readable?

Don’t forget that all our work is done with the P-I-E (pencil, ink, erase) process.


So that wraps up another week of lettering lessons - I'm on the schedule to teach lettering in the coming week, too, so there'll be another wrap-up next weekend.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 9:24 PM PDT
Saturday, 7 April 2018
Cheater Pants
Topic: Quilting

This quilt started out as a piece or yardage printed with a pattern of patchwork. I cut out 9 portions of the pattern, eliminating sections that I didn't want. What I ended up with was stars with 4-patch corners.

I pieced these together using sashings from a striped fabric (you've seen this fabric a lot lately on recent projects) and cornerstones I cut from scraps of other parts of the yardage.

I quilted this around the stars and the 4-patches.

The binding is made from scraps of the original yardage.

Ddd

 

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 8:42 PM PDT

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