Last Friday night was Guild night. Our speaker was Jo Diggs from Portland, Maine. Jo is known for her awesome landscapes. She showed us a collection of antique quilts and also some of her quilts and landscapes. Her work is absolutely beautiful. It was a wonderful evening.

On Saturday, nine of the Guild members had a class with Jo. She led us through the process of making landscape quilts. Our fabrics were all different. Because of that, all the pieces that were made were different. The beginnings of the landscapes were much nicer than the photos.
Some were dark and beautiful. 
This one by Evelyn was awesome. The sun lit up the scene.
I had a class with Jo several years ago at the Vermont Quilt Festival. The piece that I made in that class is now ready to finish. 
This is how we start to make a piece.
Putting the black construction paper around the picture helps with the sizing and placement of the fabric. 
I used some of my hand dyed fabric for the new piece. The fabric allowed me to have a reflection of the sun. I thought that I could combine the two pieces and Jo suggested a triptych. I made a second piece similar to the one that I made on Saturday so there would be three. It also has reflection, but the sun is in a different direction. There is a small mountain lake in both of the pictures. When I put the three pieces together, they didn’t look good. The purchased fabric and the hand dyed just don’t play well together. I’ll mat them separately and then hang the two similar ones as a pair. The first picture is the one that was started in class as shown above. There were a lot of changes.

They should be matted and framed within a week. It is exciting to have something almost finished.
Have a great day and happy quilting.





Each of us made small items for a teacup raffle. I did win a mini quilt made by my favorite Maine quilter but haven’t taken a picture of it yet. Last July at our Christmas In July Yankee Swap, I also received a mini quilt from the same quilter. I treasure her quilts. It is the third piece in the top row. I will take a picture in the future of the mini quilt along with several others that I have received over the past few years.







Block #23 is Broken Windows by Jo Morton. It consists of half square triangles and flying geese. I just realized that the flying geese are inserted backwards. I’ll unsew this block and resew it the correct way. Or maybe, I’ll just make another block correctly and have two blocks. This isn’t a mistake. It’s a design element. I may like this one better.
The Moda Block, Circle and Star by Jan Patix is finished, I made it using a technique that I learned from David Taylor. The block was invisible machine appliqued using Gypsy paper on the back of the fabric for stabilizer. The edge was turned under with spray starch which was sprayed into a dish and applied with a q-tip. When pressed, it makes a sharp seam to stitch with a blanket stitch.
The Simple Sampler block, Cat Nap by Nicole Ves Van Auezathe was supposed to be hand embroidered. It represents a cat taking a nap on a quilt. I read Kat Tucker’s blog and she made hers with free motion quilting and embroidery. It was much easier. The cat was supposed to be black, but I only know yellow cats so free motion quilted my cat yellow. I used leftover pieces of fused fabric. I keep all leftover fused fabric is a separate baggie so that I won’t use it by mistake when I think that the color is just what I need.
Carrie ‘s blocks are brown, orange, yellow, and a few spots of green and blue.
My blocks were in the pastel spring colors. I quilted it with my domestic machine. 
