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Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Pojagi Panel #2
For this, my second pojagi panel, I used two colors of shot cotton, a magenta and a peach... Neither are colors that I am currently drawn to, but I thought they would work well in this venue.
Using 2 colors instead of 1 allowed me to play a bit more with the stained glass effect that this type of patchwork offers.
The piecing is all improvised, (I'd go insane if I had to sew something like this from a pattern!)
The seams on this panel were done differently then on my first panel, (which you can see here). To learn how the seams were stitched on both panels, see my tutorial in the post below!
36 comments:
Please know that I read, and truly appreciate each and every comment! Thank you for taking the time to let me know what you think. While time restrictions prevent me from being able to respond personally to every comment, please know that if you ask me a specific question concerning a technique, etc., I will do my best to respond in my comment section, so be sure to check back!
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Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteSuper gorgeous! I love it!
ReplyDeleteWow! I just saw your other post on how to do this and I had no idea what you'd been up to... amazing work, Vic!! Loving the stained glass vibe.
ReplyDeleteWow, so beautiful! I know what you mean about the two colours, but they work here so well and really create an antique stained glass impression. Fab stuff!
ReplyDeleteI really appreciate you sharing your adventures with fabric. You go places I am not sure I'm ready for yet but would like to one day. I will probably try something with this style first. You've got me thinking...
ReplyDeleteYour panel is beautiful! Thank you for generously sharing the tutorial. I'd like to try this...
ReplyDelete; )
Love the soft contrast of the two colors you used - so lovely...
Beautiful Pojagi artwork! I like the window that you use to display your projects!
ReplyDeleteOh I love this - this is another thing for the to do list
ReplyDeleteGlorious, especially in a window with the light coming through. I enjoyed the tutorials too - thank you!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful. Definitely a stained glass look.
ReplyDeleteI love the way this panel looks with the light shining through. I would never get tired of such an interesting and beautiful window. I bet it looks different at various times of the day and it's always beautiful.
ReplyDeleteLovely!!!
ReplyDeleteWith great interest, I followed your posts on the process of creating the first panel, which I thought was complete and total perfection.
ReplyDeleteThen you make the second one! OMG ! the gentle contrast of the two colors is sublime - so subtle but there - just beautiful.
Thanks so much for taking all the time to write and photo the seam tuts - I very much appreciate that
I love this style...will blog about this on our local quilt guild's blog. With a link back to you, of course! I also looked at the handsewn patchwork by Mai that you linked to in an earlier blog. Her work is also wonderful. Thanks for sharing the joy!
ReplyDeleteThis is stunning! Wow! I love this! Thanks for sharing all the info about the seams, etc. Just wonderful!
ReplyDeleteVictoria this is awesome! Your workmanship is incredible. I just love the light and dark stained glass effect.
ReplyDeleteThis piece is stunning.
ReplyDeleteLove this, I could see this technique making a fabulous coat! A collage of color.
ReplyDeleteOddly, I was thinking of you and these pieces as we drove through the vineyards last week. Not an entirely odd connection as the fields are easily interpreted through this construction.
ReplyDeleteThis is so beautiful!!!! Did you do each seam as you went?
ReplyDeleteStunning! Makes me think of stained glass. :)
ReplyDeleteSweet! It does look like stained glass! So this is what has kept you so quiet lately! It's lovely Vic!
ReplyDeleteAmazing how much it looks like stained glass. It's beautiful!
ReplyDeletethese are truely beautiful Victoria
ReplyDelete: )
I really think an art gallery installation of this series is in order. A traveling show would work well....especially one that traveled (with artist) to Oregon.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful, Victoria! Back when I was a teenager, we were taught to use the method you shared in Tutorial #2 with sheer fabrics. It was called a flat-felled seam, I believe. What a great effect it has when you hang the pieces in the light -- breathtaking!
ReplyDeleteDiane
thank for that good tutorial!
ReplyDeletewhen I saw your first pojagi work I hoped for a tutorial!
these pieces are so beautiful!
liebe gruesse aus Austria!
Thank you for this very interesting tute and all the info on pojagi. I always see some wonderful here.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! I really love these.
ReplyDeleteOh man, this is me! I practiced the seaming on my scraps I should have been using for my 15 minute blocks....oops!
ReplyDeleteI love the stained glass technique. This is definitely me. Thank you so much for the tutorial.
So...where do you get your shot cotton? I found several outlets, and think I got a great price...
glen
Thanks everyone for your kind words and enthusiasm!
ReplyDeleteAllie, yes each seam is done one at a time... sew, fold, press, fold, press again and sew again... then add another piece of fabric and do all over again!
QuiltSissy, So far I have gotten shot cottons in local shops, quilt shows and online, primarily from Pink Chalk Fabrics.
Beautifull and very interesting!!!
ReplyDeleteGaby
Gorgeous work as always, Vic! It is such a pleasure whenever you post as it is always something of wonder! Love the views beyond the windows too! Where's my barn? Still building?
ReplyDeleteI really like this..great for hanging in a hall way in a long thin window. I have a stained glass window in my hallway that has a very similar feel and goes from red to orange to yellow to green to blue.
ReplyDeleteIt really does remind me of stained glass... it's just lovely.
ReplyDeleteWonderful. I just recently learned of this style of needlework (love Pinterest). I have been buying various pastel organzas to make a curtain for my east facing dining room window. I never considered that I might be able to sew it by machine. Now I am inspired to get at it.
ReplyDelete