Friday 1 May 2020

Joyful - the colour chapter

There are very few books I have read and re-read (Pride & Prejudice, Earthsea Quartet, Hobbit and LOTR) so I was sure I would chose a scene from one of those.  The one that popped into my head was Mr. Darcy proposing to Lizzie telling her how "ardently I admire and love you" while insulting her family and social position at the same time.  That scene always gets to me.

In the end though, I went with a non-fiction book called "Joyful: The surprising power of ordinary things to create extraordinary happiness" by  Ingrid Fettell Lee.  In the chapter on colour the writer talks about an organisation called Publicolor who change the feel of public schools with a colour palette of vibrant happy colours and the effect has been increased attendance at the schools by both students and teachers and an environment that felt safer for all using the school.

As a quilter I am colour obsessed and my colour palette tends towards saturated, bright and vibrant so this was the perfect thing for me to try and capture in quilt form.  I found an image from a google search of publicolor where they had even painted the schoolyard and used that as a basis for a design. 


I created a template for foundation paper piecing and was a bit nervous of all those tiny lines converging but well sometimes you have to be brave and just give it a go! I made it in two parts and hoped the lines would match up- they do mostly and the piece wasn't too bulky when quilting it.  The quilting was bricks and pebbles in the background fabric and the final touch was to put it in a frame.

Glowing in the afternoon sun!

I made the piece A3 but had a smaller frame so cropped the piece and am sorry I did now as I liked the white at either sides of the blue in the original design.  For the frame I imagined a skinny black frame but didn't have one so this natural wood effect was all I had to use and framed this way the colours remind me of trees!

8 comments:

  1. You certainly captured vibrant and happy in this quilt Ruth, it is really lovely. I had never heard of this book or the concept but it makes a lot of sense when you think about it.

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  2. What a striking piece - I could see why it would create extraordinary happiness:-) It must have been quite a challenge to make and you have done it beautifully - the quilting is the perfect finishing touch.

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  3. This is joyful. It's so fresh and bright and makes me smile. Thank you for telling us about that book and the ideas in it. Very interesting :)

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  4. Colorful and dynamic. When I look at it, I feel like I am walking or running along a fence or wall laughing.

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  5. I like bright, bold colors, and lately I've been playing with the rainbow spectrum. I do love the joyous nature of this quilt. It looks like it was a delightful project!

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  6. Ruth, I read that book! Wasn't it interesting? You were Very Brave Indeed to just go for getting the sections to match up. I'm afraid I would have concluded that I could never do it. I love the clarity of the colors you chose with the pure white. I agree with Debbi's vision of running along a fence laughing! Even if you cut the white off, you still have a good photo of it. You can enlarge That and frame it in black when we can go to stores again.

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  7. What a great idea, to go with a non-fiction book!

    I have just been reading blog posts about people creating art with the phrase "andra tutto bene" [it's going to be all right] with rainbows, so this piece would certainly fit in with that trend. It is beautiful and it brings a feeling of joy!

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  8. Such an interesting path you took in the creation of this edgy piece!

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