It's just as well, really, because that super-bright, primary yellow
Canary fabric leans a little juvenile, and this quilt is for a
nearly-17-year-old young man.
So, funny story. After determining via my Kona Solids swatch chart that Grellow was the right shade for this quilt, I googled "Kona Solid Grellow" in hopes of finding an online shop that stocked the fabric. To my surprise, my own blog came up in my search results, because I'd used that exact shade in Lars's Mission Impossible graduation quilt last Spring. I had totally forgotten that! Of course I had to raid my stash in hopes of finding leftover yardage, but the best I could come up with was a few leftover triangle scraps. Laying that scrap of Grellow onto the pieces I cut out for this block, I am even more confident that swapping out the bright Canary yellow for the darker and more saturated Grellow will be worth the wait.
Here's what the whole quilt looked like before, with Canary and Sunflower
for the two yellow shades:
(Looking at this rendering with the black lines indicating seam lines, I've
resolved to go back in and redraft some of those blocks that have flying
geese units in place of diamonds and Y-seams. As a
reminder/disclaimer, my Beware the Ishmaelites is basically the
Moda Modern Building Blocks sampler quilt from 2014, with added borders, resizing, recoloring, and several of the original
blocks swapped out for different ones).
I'm glad I ordered a different yellow, but wish I'd made this decision
earlier in the day. Although I already had all of the block fabrics on
hand for this quilt, I only ordered the border fabrics yesterday morning.
So I ordered an additional 3 1/4 yds of Canary that I will not be
using in this quilt at all, and then about four hours later, placed an
additional order for the Grellow (without getting my coupon discount).
And now I have to wait to start these blocks until the new fabric
shows up in the mail and gets washed and ironed. Grrr... Oh,
well -- it's just as well, because there is still plenty of quilting to be
done on Spirit Song while I wait for my Grellow to arrive.
Anyway, here are the blocks I'm planning to make next for Beware the
Ishmaelites:
I thought they would give me a nice break from the endless hours of custom
quilting on Spirit Song, and as they are far less complicated blocks than
the last one I pieced for this project, I was hoping the four yellow blocks
would give me some lost momentum that I need to get that going again.
I'm planning to piece the first of these blocks just with rotary
cutting and traditional piecing, because the math works out nicely for that
one. For the other three, I'll be foundation paper piecing since my
block sizes don't translate into ruler-friendly measurements. So, even
though I'm slightly annoyed that my two shades of yellow fabric look so
different together in real life than they did in my design software, I am
still indebted to my software for freeing me to easily make blocks in
whatever weird size I want with printable foundation paper piecing
patterns.
Well, at least I have my rotary cutting charts and foundation paper piecing patterns all printed up and ready to go when that fabric arrives, right? Meanwhile, back to my quilting! My one and only To-Do this Tuesday is to finish ALL of the quilting on my Spirit Song quilt. Wish me luck!
I'm linking up today's post with:
TUESDAY
· Colour and Inspiration Tuesday at Clever Chameleon
· To-Do Tuesday at Home Sewn By Us
WEDNESDAY
· Midweek Makers at Quilt Fabrication
· Wednesday Wait Loss at The Inquiring Quilter
5 comments:
I think you made the right decision--Grellow will definitely look better in your design.
Great tip on using the rotary cutting tools for the foundation. I just used the foundation option for the wedding table topper, Double Wedding Ring. So precise and so much better than cutting and piecing all those arcs!!
Ooh, I like the grellow! It's definitely a better contrast with the lighter yellow solid. What we see with our eyes, fabric color-wise, always seems to be different than what we see on a screen!
Definitely a good decision to go with Grellow. Shame about the wait though. I've found the same with using design software - sometimes the physical fabrics just don't play the same way as the on screen colours.
Great color choice and worth the wait in mho. Fingers crossed on Spirit Song because I just can't wait to see it finished! Thanks for sharing on Wednesday Wait Loss.
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