Go Back  Quiltingboard Forums >
  • Main
  • Blooming Nine Patch... >
  • Blooming Nine Patch...

  • Blooming Nine Patch...

    Thread Tools
     
    Old 02-06-2013, 08:02 AM
      #1  
    Member
    Thread Starter
     
    Join Date: Mar 2012
    Location: Canal Winchester, OH
    Posts: 33
    Default Blooming Nine Patch...

    I am head over heals for this pattern but am so very intimidated by the color selection! Anyone have any tips for this one?
    Jodi3284 is offline  
    Old 02-06-2013, 08:05 AM
      #2  
    Power Poster
     
    BellaBoo's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Jan 2009
    Location: Front row
    Posts: 14,646
    Default

    Pinterest has lots of Blooming Nine patch quilts, all are beautiful colors. I made one years ago all solids. I think the prints or floral looks so much prettier. This is a quilt you need a design wall. It's very easy to sew but very confusing to lay out.
    BellaBoo is offline  
    Old 02-06-2013, 08:42 AM
      #3  
    Power Poster
     
    gabeway's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Nov 2009
    Location: Kansas City, MO
    Posts: 10,490
    Default

    I like either florals or pastels. Saw one with batiks that was beautiful.
    gabeway is offline  
    Old 02-06-2013, 09:15 AM
      #4  
    Super Member
     
    Join Date: Jan 2012
    Location: The Colony, TX
    Posts: 3,364
    Default

    I have done a couple of these. Start with what color you want then start picking out going from light to dark, it works really good (although you can't always do this) to have some of the colors in fabric 3 in fabric 2. Do you have the book? She does through (if I am remembering correctly) how to choose fabrics and what works and what doesn't. Know that you will probably need to go to more than 1 QS to find the fabrics. Unfortunately I gave mine away and of course don't have pictures.

    If you don't have the book, it really is a good investment it has several good quilts in it.
    quiltstringz is offline  
    Old 02-06-2013, 10:01 AM
      #5  
    Power Poster
     
    BellaBoo's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Jan 2009
    Location: Front row
    Posts: 14,646
    Default

    The book pattern is very detailed and will help you a lot. [h=1]Tradition with a Twist: Variations on Your Favorite Quilts by Blanche Young.[/h]
    BellaBoo is offline  
    Old 02-06-2013, 10:29 AM
      #6  
    Senior Member
     
    Join Date: Aug 2011
    Posts: 449
    Default

    My LQS was having a 25%sale off most everything so I thought it was a good time to get the book I want to make one with batiks that I have an enormous stash of and added a few more yards because "they were 25% off"..anyway if the snow storm comes their forecasting for fri-sat comes maybe I can start auditioning fabric!
    Nantie is offline  
    Old 02-06-2013, 01:48 PM
      #7  
    Super Member
     
    Join Date: Mar 2012
    Location: Thornton, Colorado
    Posts: 1,023
    Default

    Consider using a color wheel...start with your favorite color and then use the color wheel to pick the remaining colors. If you are auditioning the fabrics you already have and you are not sure if you have them in a pleasing order, take a picture and see how the fabrics look in relation to each other. Sometimes it is enough to look through the view finder. You can keep rearranging the fabrics until they look good together.
    quilttiger is offline  
    Old 02-06-2013, 03:25 PM
      #8  
    Senior Member
     
    Rebecca_S's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Jan 2011
    Location: Boston
    Posts: 370
    Default

    I don't think that this quilt works well with fabrics that vary a lot. If it would be suitable for fussy cutting then it might not work well. Most of the pieces are cut fairly small so think about the variation you would get between 1 or 1.5 inch pieces of your fabrics. As with a OBW, the effect of the fabrics will be more their color values and motif size.

    I've seen it done well both including a few fabrics that read as blenders, to give the eyes a place to rest, as we as without any blenders for a busier effect.

    I started with my first few fabrics when I made mine, then choose more fabrics as I went along. Making one or two sample 9-patches and then laying them on the fabric bolts was helpful as I went along.
    Rebecca_S is offline  
    Old 02-06-2013, 03:27 PM
      #9  
    Super Member
     
    snipforfun's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Jul 2010
    Posts: 1,877
    Default

    Blanche is a dear friend. She is now in a care center and is in her 90s. Her family moved her to California to be near family. I have made so many of her quilts. Lots of the Bloomin... My favorite is the Jamaica and made lots of Baby Bloomin.. She gave me patterns that have never been published. She is a wonderful person and so talented. She has a real sense of color. What you think would never work - does. Lots of small florals light to dark work great. Her book has been a top seller for years. She is the "inventor" of strip piecing and was honored at Houston for her innovative ideas in quilting.
    snipforfun is offline  
    Old 02-06-2013, 03:36 PM
      #10  
    Super Member
     
    Join Date: Oct 2010
    Location: Fox Valley Wisconsin
    Posts: 1,920
    Default

    I remember when her first book came out with her daughter Helen Frost...back then the cutting was done with cardboard template and scissors...slits in the cardboard for marking...so much easier now! I am glad that she has been honored for what she gave to the quilting world!
    patchsamkim is offline  
    Related Topics
    Thread
    Thread Starter
    Forum
    Replies
    Last Post
    ralphu
    Pictures
    15
    03-05-2013 10:21 PM
    jillaine
    Main
    32
    07-08-2011 01:14 PM
    millivanillisask
    Main
    13
    04-29-2011 05:52 AM

    Posting Rules
    You may not post new threads
    You may not post replies
    You may not post attachments
    You may not edit your posts

    BB code is On
    Smilies are On
    [IMG] code is On
    HTML code is On
    Trackbacks are Off
    Pingbacks are Off
    Refbacks are Off



    FREE Quilting Newsletter