August 25, 2023

My First Quilt with Kristy Lea

Are you enjoying reading about first quilts as much as I am? It's so fascinating to learn what prompted our fellow quilters to try quilting for the first time. This month we get to read all about Kristy Lea's first quilts. Kristy is the FPP designer extraordinaire behind Quiet Play, a fabric designer, and one of the founders of Make Modern magazine. In fact, as Make Modern's submissions editor, she was the first person to accept one of my designs for publication 😊
My First Quilt with Kristy Lea | DevotedQuilter.com
You can connect with Kristy on her website and on Instagram.

Kristy doesn't have any pictures of her first quilts, but she did send this picture of one of her earliest designs. She also sent pictures of some of her more recent makes, so we'll have plenty of eye candy throughout the interview!
Red Herring blocks by Kristy Lea | DevotedQuilter.com

What year did you make your first quilt? What prompted you to make it?


I made my first quilt in 2011. Like many quilters, I started quilting when my children were little. I had always dabbled in various crafts, and I found as a mum that I wanted a hobby that I could enjoy just for me - but also make something practical. I'd always loved looking at fabric in stores, so I decided it was time to learn how to quilt. For my first quilt, I made a pair of small play quilts for my two children in bright rainbow colours.
Star Wars quilt by Kristy Lea | DevotedQuilter.com

What techniques were used in that first quilt? Did you quilt it yourself?


They were very basic with simple squares and triangles! I think I did simple stitch in the ditch quilting to hold it together. It was all very basic but I was rather pleased I'd made something that actually resembled a quilt by the end of it 😉

Who taught you to make the quilt?


My mum taught me the basics of using a sewing machine but quilting wasn't something she'd tried herself. So thanks to the advice and tutorials of many amazing quilters who shared on their blogs at the time, I taught myself the basics.  
Geo Bee by Kristy Lea | DevotedQuilter.com

Are the colours you chose for your first quilt ones you would still choose today?


Absolutely! Bright rainbow colours are still my thing nearly 13 years later! Sadly I don't have any photos of those first attempts but I remember the fabric was full of colour and little star motifs.
Rainbow Leaves by Kristy Lea | DevotedQuilter.com

Did you fall in love with quilting right away? Or was there a gap between making the first quilt and the next one?


Absolutely. I moved straight onto a new project - a pillow as a birthday gift for my Nan (grandmother). Then my next project after that was foundation paper pieced. I had no idea it was considered a difficult technique, I just really wanted to make the cute bird pattern I'd come across online! Once I started FPP, I was hooked. I still made a lot of traditionally pieced quilts, but FPP had the greater appeal. 

Where is the quilt now?


I think the quilts are packed up in a box somewhere amongst my children's baby toys. They became relegated to the toy box once the kids outgrew the size (they were very small quilts!). Now my children are teenagers, all those toys are packed away - quilts included.
In The Garden by Kristy Lea | DevotedQuilter.com

Is there anything you wish you could go back and tell yourself as you made that first quilt?


Oh gosh yes - don't use the cheap poly-cotton fabric mixed with quilting cotton! At the time I just chose fabrics where I loved the colours, having no idea about using similar types of fabric in the same project!

Anything else you want to share about your first quilt?


When I first started those little quilts, I had no idea that this was the start of something quite big in my world. Quilting became more than just my hobby, it's become my full time job. It's turned into designing my own FPP patterns, designing fabric for Riley Blake Designs, and co-founding the quilting magazine, Make Modern. I'm very grateful to my wonderful parents who encouraged that hobby, bought me the biggest cutting mat and ruler they could find and had complete faith I'd stick with the new hobby as more than a passing phase!


Thank you, Kristy, for sharing all about your first quilts! 

August 16, 2023

Illusion Quilt Pattern Release

It has been a while since I released a new pattern...outside the Stash Artists membership, that is, (not a member yet? Join the waitlist to be notified when the doors open again), but today I get to do just that 😊 I'm happy to say the Illusion pattern is now available in my shop!

Visit my shop


Illusion quilt pattern | DevotedQuilter.com
These pictures were taken in November - we do not have snow on the ground right now!
Illusion is a modern medallion style quilt, with plenty of negative space, so each of the parts of the design can really shine. It finishes at 64" x 76", making it a good size throw quilt. 

I love how the negative space around the different elements of the center of the quilt creates the illusion of overlapping squares.
Illusion quilt pattern | DevotedQuilter.com
Illusion uses only three fabrics, and I love the simplicity. I also think it would be fun to make a scrappy version, though. In this mockup, I used multiple blues in place of one fabric, and multiple purples in place of the other, with a cream background. I like it!
Illusion quilt pattern | DevotedQuilter.com
And since I was playing around in EQ8, I decided to make a few more mockups in different 3 fabric combinations. Which do you like best? Of course, I'm rather partial to the first one, with that blue background.
Illusion quilt pattern | DevotedQuilter.com
Want to make your own Illusion quilt? Pick up the PDF pattern in my shop now, or PREORDER the printed pattern.

Buy the Illusion pattern


I can't wait to see what you make with the Illusion pattern!

July 28, 2023

My First Quilt With Michelle Peters

Around here, the last Friday of the month is My First Quilt interview day and today I'm excited to share my interview with Michelle Peters. Michelle owns Watergirl Quilt Co in Ontario, and we first connected in 2020 when she contacted me about teaching workshops through the shop, which I had so much fun doing. She has a Newfoundland connection as well, which you'll read about 😊
My First Quilt with Michelle Peters | DevotedQuilter.com
Here's what Michelle had to say when I asked how people can connect with her: 

Check out our online store, class offerings and events at www.watergirlquiltco.com 
You can also follow @watergirlquiltco on Instagram, Youtube and Pinterest. We are most active on Facebook.  Watch Michelle live or on replay, every Wednesday, Thursday and Friday at 9am EST at our Facebook page for tips, tricks and closeups of new merchandise. Join our private Facebook Group called Share Your Creations Watergirl Quilt Co. to share your journey with others, to be inspired and to encourage other quilters in our community.

And now, here is Michelle's first quilt! Isn't it a fun one?
My First Quilt with Michelle Peters | DevotedQuilter.com

What year did you make your first quilt? What prompted you to make it?


I started quilting in 1989. I had finished high school one semester early and I wanted to use my free time before going off to university to learn something that was just for me to enjoy. I took a full semester, learn to quilt class at St. Lawrence College in Brockville, Ontario. We met 3 hours each week. I didn't even know how to use a sewing machine when I signed up. Luckily, the college provided sewing machines because all I had was my Mom's old Singer machine in the cabinet, not very portable. I remember being so scared! Jean was a wonderful teacher and we made placemats, pot holders and small projects. The quilt that consider to be my first quilt was started in that class but not completed until 1996. My first quilt was also my first UFO! 

What techniques were used in that first quilt? Did you quilt it yourself?


So my first lap quilt involved machine piecing, needle turned applique and I quilted it by tying yarn knots in the corner of each block. I used all teacher themed fabrics because I wanted to use it one day in my classroom when I became an elementary school teacher. That quilt either hung in my classroom or was on my rocking chair for 24 years. Now I show my ABC quilt to my customers who are learning to quilt to show them that we all started out at the beginning, making simpler projects. Well, most of us started that way! 

Who taught you to make the quilt?


Jean Boyd, a well know quilter and pattern designer in our area taught me and many others. Everytime my husband and I run into Jean, my husband says to her, "This is all your fault" and we have a laugh. Well, I think Jean is getting tired of hearing it!


Are the colours you chose for your first quilt ones you would still choose today?


Oh my goodness, no way! So my first quilt was all reds and blacks because it suited the novelty theme. I prefer to sew with fabrics that are very bright and cheerful like turquoise, oranges and fabrics such as those by Alison Glass and Tula Pink.  
My First Quilt with Michelle Peters | DevotedQuilter.com


Did you fall in love with quilting right away? Or was there a gap between making the first quilt and the next one?


I did fall in love right away. My Nanny in Newfoundland had made quilts and I loved them but with me living in Ontario, she never had much chance to teach me. I was really proud to make potholders for Nanny as a quilt-as-you-go project in that class. I continued to sew until I moved to Japan where I didn't have a sewing machine. I tried hand piecing during the years I lived there but didn't care for it. Looking back, I wish I had known about English Paper Piecing because I am a huge fan now and do EPP everyday. A few years after returning from Japan, I made my first king size quilt using upcycled kimonos I bought in second hand shops. I made a friend through quilting and I went to her house every Wednesday evening for almost a year. She lent me one of her sewing machines and we would talk about our lives while sewing. After making that quilt, I decided it was time to invest in my own sewing machine and that was 2011. Since then, I am obsessed with sewing and quilting and must spend time in my studio every day for my self care.

Where is the quilt now?


The quilt is now at my store, Watergirl Quilt Co. as a reminder that we all begin somewhere, we all improve and learn, and to remind me that dreams can come true. I wanted so badly to be a teacher and I was for 24 years. The hobby that helped keep me sane throughout my teaching career also, became my biggest passion and so I left teaching to open a quilt shop. My first quilt reminds me that we should be open to the journey.

Is there anything you wish you could go back and tell yourself as you made that first quilt?


I would have told myself, don't be scared or nervous. You were born to be creative and you are capable. Everything you make is beautiful even if the techniques don't turn out the way you hoped. The imperfection is the beauty. 

Anything else you want to share about your first quilt?


I was only 18 years old when I began my quilting journey.  I would love to see more young people taking up textile related hobbies and hope that us, the "elders" can encourage and offer opportunities to young people to try different experiences. When I signed up for that quilting class, some kids teased me that I was doing "old lady stuff". I am glad to see that attitudes are changing. I even have 2 fifteen year old boys who work for me and their peers think it's just fine. I could never have imagined that when I made that first quilt, I would one day create my own quilt shop and community. What a blessing!


Thank you for sharing your first quilt with us, Michelle! I love that you're spreading the love of quilting to so many more people now through your shop!