For those of you stitching the Never Ending Sampler, I wanted to let you know that Panel 4 will start in a couple of weeks. You'll need to get out your DMC threads for this Panel but you'll still be able to choose your own colors for some parts of it.
Also, I've had some suggestions and requests to offer each Panel as a PDF file in my Etsy shop. Yes, I will do this. I'll get them ready later this week and make them available for a small fee as Instant PDF Downloads.
Here are the first 3 completed panels. This is Panel 1
This is Panel 2
And finally Panel 3
For now, I'm finishing up on the Winter 2018 issue of Crazy Quilt Quarterly magazine. The release date is November 1st.
In the meantime, Volume 2 of my Crazy Quilt Inspirations book is now available:
Print and Digital are available at Magcloud: http://www.magcloud.com/user/kitty-and-me
Print copies are available at Etsy: http://www.kittyandme.etsy.com/
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Monday, September 03, 2018
Never Ending Sampler Information
Labels:
crazy quilt,
inspiration,
never ending sampler
Friday, August 31, 2018
New Release!!! Crazy Quilt Inspiration Volume 2 by Pamela Kellogg
It's here!!! Crazy Quilt Inspiration Volume 2 is now available!
Crazy Quilt Inspiration Volume 2 features my own crazy quilt artwork.
These are my Trinket Blocks. Created using little things that I've been
collecting or saving since childhood. 37 6 - inch crazy quilt blocks are
sure to inspire the beginner, the intermediate and the advanced crazy
quilter! Large photos of each block with a brief description of the
trinkets.
This is an ongoing project so more Inspiration books will follow!
40 pages.
Print and Digital available at Magcloud: http://www.magcloud.com/user/kitty-and-me
Print copies also available at Etsy: http://www.kittyandme.etsy.com/
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| Crazy Quilt Inspiration Volume 2 by Pamela Kellogg |
This is an ongoing project so more Inspiration books will follow!
40 pages.
Print and Digital available at Magcloud: http://www.magcloud.com/user/kitty-and-me
Print copies also available at Etsy: http://www.kittyandme.etsy.com/
Labels:
book,
crazy quilting,
crazy quilts,
inspiration
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Valentine Cats
I finished up on my Pink Cat Doll yesterday:
The little pink flowers are not the Cast On stitch. I tatted them while watching television the other day. Simple little tatted flowers in variegated #8 Perle cotton. I just sewed them on.
And here are the seam treatments for this piece:
Click here for more Crazy Quilt Seam Treatment Inspiration.
This will be my next Valentine Cat Doll:
I'm going to stitch on this now for an hour before I get myself together to run up to the WalMart.
The little pink flowers are not the Cast On stitch. I tatted them while watching television the other day. Simple little tatted flowers in variegated #8 Perle cotton. I just sewed them on.
And here are the seam treatments for this piece:
Click here for more Crazy Quilt Seam Treatment Inspiration.
This will be my next Valentine Cat Doll:
I'm going to stitch on this now for an hour before I get myself together to run up to the WalMart.
Monday, December 05, 2011
Little Girls In Yellow Roses Stitching Completed
This bright and cheerful crazy quilt block will most likely be sewn into a pillow:
I just love the little Victorian girls in the roses! I was looking at it yesterday and thinking it would make a pretty pillow so I'll add a green border and some pretty lace. I'm hoping to have some sewing time tomorrow.
Here is the crazy quilt seam embroidery:
Be sure to click on the images to see closeups!
Also, you can find more of my seam treatments on my Inspiration Page!
ATTN: Cheryl who commented on this piece!!! Please email your blog address to me!
I just love the little Victorian girls in the roses! I was looking at it yesterday and thinking it would make a pretty pillow so I'll add a green border and some pretty lace. I'm hoping to have some sewing time tomorrow.
Here is the crazy quilt seam embroidery:
Be sure to click on the images to see closeups!
Also, you can find more of my seam treatments on my Inspiration Page!
ATTN: Cheryl who commented on this piece!!! Please email your blog address to me!
Labels:
crazy quilt,
inspiration,
seam embroidery,
victorian
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
TAST - The Straight Stitch & More!
I'm often asked, where I find my inspiration? Inspiration is everywhere! It's all around us. We only need to see it.
Last week, Sharon posted a photo of a Jewel Toned CQ block on her In A Minute Ago blog that she was working on. A special "thank you" goes out to Sharon who has graciously given me permission to post her photo here:

For some reason, I was so taken with the beautiful geometric trim on the bottom left of the design. I don't know if it was the colors, the pattern or the overall look of Sharon's block but I knew, I had to "do" something with it!
Sharon was kind enough to take the time to email a larger image of the trim to me which I then printed up and stared at for a few days.
Yesterday, I decided to start with a simple counted cross stitch design. I charted a basic version of the geometric pattern in the trim.
Now yesterday morning, Sharon announced the "Straight Stitch" as the focus for this week's Take A Stitch Tuesday Challenge. With this floating around in my mind, it occurred to me to take the cross stitch pattern and gradually move it into a "Straight Stitch" pattern.
The "Straight Stitch" is of course a very versatile stitch and for me, one that doesn't require a knot is always welcome!
The following image is "the creative process" in action:

So how does one take a design worked entirely in "cross stitch" and turn it into a design worked entirely in "straight stitches"? The answer is one step at a time.
Obviously, the final design looks quite different from the original design based on Sharon's trim. My goal in the beginning was to recreate the trim design. Since one thought always leads to the next thought, that in turn inspired me to create a "straight stitch" design based on the original but not necessarily as an exact "straight stitch" interpretation of the original design. Call it, "killing two birds with one stone" if you will. I wanted to do something for the TAST Challenge!
Through the process of changing a few cross stitches at a time to a few straight stitches, I created 9 variations of the pattern until I reached my final goal of creating a "straight stitch" design based on the original.
Again everyone, this is the creative process. It works this way for everyone, not just for me. It only depends on our awareness of it. We only have to open our eyes to see the inspiration and the beauty that's all around us and then take that inspiration and do something with it. Some of us choose not to do anything with it. For some of us, it takes an artistic path.
I've divided the charted patterns into two parts. Each part should print up nicely on one sheet of paper each:


Click on any of the images to go to my Flickr site where you can download the larger versions of the patterns.
So where does the inspiration go from here? It moves in your hands. If you're a cross stitcher, you might want to stitch one or all of these into bookmarks. You can use whatever colors you like. You could also work the entire design as a band sampler.
If you're a crazy quilter, try stitching up one of these designs and working it into the foundation of a new block. Embellish it and see where it goes.
Try working one design vertically several times with different threads for a different sampler variation.
Do you see where I'm going with this? The creative process (inspiration) is constant. It moves from one thought to another thought and from one person to another person. There's nothing special about where I find my inspiration. It's everywhere and we all have the ability to see it and use it. And in this case, it didn't even start with Sharon's block. It may have started with whomever designed and manufactured the trim that Sharon used on her block. Perhaps the person who designed the trim was inspired by something they saw somewhere else. It then moved to Sharon through her block and then to me and now it's moving from me to you, my readers! What will you do with it? And where will it go when it moves from your thought to the next person's thought?
It's know this all a little deep. But it's something to think about!
Until tomorrow, enjoy your TAST patterns!
Last week, Sharon posted a photo of a Jewel Toned CQ block on her In A Minute Ago blog that she was working on. A special "thank you" goes out to Sharon who has graciously given me permission to post her photo here:
For some reason, I was so taken with the beautiful geometric trim on the bottom left of the design. I don't know if it was the colors, the pattern or the overall look of Sharon's block but I knew, I had to "do" something with it!
Sharon was kind enough to take the time to email a larger image of the trim to me which I then printed up and stared at for a few days.
Yesterday, I decided to start with a simple counted cross stitch design. I charted a basic version of the geometric pattern in the trim.
Now yesterday morning, Sharon announced the "Straight Stitch" as the focus for this week's Take A Stitch Tuesday Challenge. With this floating around in my mind, it occurred to me to take the cross stitch pattern and gradually move it into a "Straight Stitch" pattern.
The "Straight Stitch" is of course a very versatile stitch and for me, one that doesn't require a knot is always welcome!
The following image is "the creative process" in action:
So how does one take a design worked entirely in "cross stitch" and turn it into a design worked entirely in "straight stitches"? The answer is one step at a time.
Obviously, the final design looks quite different from the original design based on Sharon's trim. My goal in the beginning was to recreate the trim design. Since one thought always leads to the next thought, that in turn inspired me to create a "straight stitch" design based on the original but not necessarily as an exact "straight stitch" interpretation of the original design. Call it, "killing two birds with one stone" if you will. I wanted to do something for the TAST Challenge!
Through the process of changing a few cross stitches at a time to a few straight stitches, I created 9 variations of the pattern until I reached my final goal of creating a "straight stitch" design based on the original.
Again everyone, this is the creative process. It works this way for everyone, not just for me. It only depends on our awareness of it. We only have to open our eyes to see the inspiration and the beauty that's all around us and then take that inspiration and do something with it. Some of us choose not to do anything with it. For some of us, it takes an artistic path.
I've divided the charted patterns into two parts. Each part should print up nicely on one sheet of paper each:
Click on any of the images to go to my Flickr site where you can download the larger versions of the patterns.
So where does the inspiration go from here? It moves in your hands. If you're a cross stitcher, you might want to stitch one or all of these into bookmarks. You can use whatever colors you like. You could also work the entire design as a band sampler.
If you're a crazy quilter, try stitching up one of these designs and working it into the foundation of a new block. Embellish it and see where it goes.
Try working one design vertically several times with different threads for a different sampler variation.
Do you see where I'm going with this? The creative process (inspiration) is constant. It moves from one thought to another thought and from one person to another person. There's nothing special about where I find my inspiration. It's everywhere and we all have the ability to see it and use it. And in this case, it didn't even start with Sharon's block. It may have started with whomever designed and manufactured the trim that Sharon used on her block. Perhaps the person who designed the trim was inspired by something they saw somewhere else. It then moved to Sharon through her block and then to me and now it's moving from me to you, my readers! What will you do with it? And where will it go when it moves from your thought to the next person's thought?
It's know this all a little deep. But it's something to think about!
Until tomorrow, enjoy your TAST patterns!
Labels:
beading,
counted cross stitch,
crazy quilting,
embroidery,
inspiration,
needlework,
pattern,
straight stitch,
TAST
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