Holi is the Indian festival of colors. It marks the welcoming
of Spring. People play Holi (smear each other with colors and douse each other with colored water) and eat festival foods till they are sick. By late afternoon, everyone is exhausted from playing and then scrubbing (attempting at least) to get themselves clean.
Yummy Scraps |
Growing up in India, I hated Holi.
It was an excuse for just about anyone (male/female,
young/old, familiar/stranger) to touch you, on the pretext of playing
Holi/smearing you with color. The colors were not good for your skin. Some
would not be washed away for days later. It was messy and filthy and I hated
it.
I would lock myself in my room and not come out till 4:00 in
the afternoon, when the “playing Holi” was officially over. I actually enjoyed the Holi foods, though.
Now that I am away
from the forced mingling and should stay away from most festival foods anyway, the big question is – how do I celebrate the festival of colors???
…With Fabric, so much yummy fabric. Playing with colorful
fabric scraps is like Holi. But it is so much better.
And that is exactly what I did - played with colorful scraps.
Elongated 4-patches |
With lots of 2.5" scraps left over from Grape Salad and A Walk in the Park, I started to play. I cut up the scraps into rectangles - 2.5" by 4.5" and played and played till I was exhausted and Paul admonished me to go to bed.
Playing with Color!!! |
The pattern came to me in my sleep. It was the "Phoebe's Flower Box" Pattern (Thank you, Jenny). As I started putting the blocks on the design wall, Paul suggested that instead of using white sashing, I should use black. It stands out more, he said. What do you think?
Sashed in Black |
Jewel Tones |
All things bright & beautiful |
I had 100 blocks. I could make either a lap size quilt or two baby quilts. Hmm, two quilts - spread the joy!!! Right?
As I was sashing the colorful batik blocks with the Kona black solids jelly roll strips, I was listening to Bollywood music, as I often do when I am sewing. Sometimes, nodding my head, sometimes
singing along and occasionally I will translate for Paul the meaning of the
song, in the hope that he will “try” to learn the language. Silly me!!!
So Simple and Stunning |
One such song is “Ae Zindagi, Gale Laga Le. Humne bhi tere
har gam ko gale se lagaya hai, hai na”
Translation – O Life, embrace me. I have embraced all your
sorrows. Haven’t I?
Love love love this song/lyrics. It is as if Life is another
person. The writer/singer is conversing with Life and saying that since I have
accepted you, O Life, with all your troubles, won’t you embrace me too? Show me
some love…
Finished!!! |
The finished quilt is about 43" square. The batting is Warm & Natural.
Walking Foot Quilting |
I am naming this quilt – Life’s Embrace.
Life, because it is
colorful with its myriad hues, lights and darks and mostly because even our
happiest moments are tinted with sadness (Batik) and the saddest moments may
have something to smile about.
Embrace because the black sashing embraces the
colored rectangles.
I used this super adorable fabric for the backing.
Pink Elephants |
Orange Giraffes (Note the flowery tail) |
I quilted it using a decorative stitch on my Janome, in almost straight lines. The binding is a pale orange and it matches the backing - Love when that happens.
Binding, from the front |
Binding, from the back |
And finally, here is the label - Life's Embrace. This is my 7th finish of 2015 and I am so happy with the way it turned out.
Hope it will inspire to play with fabric scraps and have loads of good clean, non-messy, fun with colors!!! Happy Spring to you all!!!
You were spot on with the black sashing!!! WOW!! Beautifully done! I switched from decorative to straight line stitching a while ago - I was totally hooked the first time I tried it! I mess around with stitch length too - sometimes I'm in a longer stitch length mood than others ;)
ReplyDeleteAnd the backing fabric! Makes me smile :) So did you locking yourself in your room until the party was over. I think I might have done the same! Colorful fabric is definitely a better way to celebrate :D
I love it! Bright and cheery, full of meaning and way neater than full-body coloring! I'm more a fan of black than white sashing for most quilts I've done. My word of the year is "embrace" so I'm in love with your quilt's name. This is your 7th finish in less than 4 months??!! Girl, you go!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful story and quilt
ReplyDeleteBlack sashing - absolutely awesome! It is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely love the black sashing and the story behind this quilt. Your binding also looks great! Congrats on another beautiful finish.
ReplyDeleteLove the quilt. Will you do a second one with the other blocks? It will be hard to top this one.
ReplyDeleteThe black sashing was a great idea - it really emphasises those fantastic rich colours. This is a beautiful little quilt, perfect for a baby, and I love the story you tell us as you describe your creative process. Great post!
ReplyDeleteLove the orange binding with the black and really like the quilting you've done!
ReplyDeleteI like it with both colours of sashing. They have very different effects. I like the bright colours, the zig zag quilting and the orange binding as well.
ReplyDeleteVery colorful - love it. The black sashing really makes the colors sparkle. Micki @ 2dogsstudio.us
ReplyDeleteSo bright and cheery and will surely be loved by some child.
ReplyDeletelove the arrangement of the colors, ordered but exuberant. I fell deeply in love with elephants after seeing a Nat Geo museum exhibit on them. Then a TV show with an elephant and a dog as best friends completed the link and now I just want anything with elephants on them. I got a teal elephant creamer at Anthropologie last year.
ReplyDeleteSo is this an original pattern of yours or did the arrangement come to you in your sleep? A lot goes on with us when we sleep.
LeeAnna at not afraid of color
Great contrast with the black sashing! Fab scrappy quilt. Thanks for linking up to #scraptastictuesday
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing...even though I am seeing this delightful quilt a little bit late!! :)
ReplyDelete