Tuesday, May 6, 2014

The Babar Triangle

Other than chicken burritos, there is not much that my son loves more than elephants. A few weeks ago, we celebrated his older brother's birthday at a ceramics place. I told the kids that they could pick out anything they wanted...no restrictions. Nolan passed up Iron Man, Spider Man and even his dearly beloved Incredible Hulk to pick up this elephant. He painted him the obligatory gray, but then went for more colors of paint. When he got back to the table, he asked me to turn him into Elmer (The Patchwork Elephant). I did as much as I could whilst supervising 5 kindergarteners, 1 preschooler and 1 baby who was missing her nap in a room full of breakable objects. That is how much he loves elephants. 



So, without further ado, let me introduce "The Babar Triangle," the birthday bedspread for my little boy that has watched every, and I do mean EVERY episode of "Babar" and has checked out EVERY Babar book in our library (a couple of times).


 I really stepped out of my comfort zone with the colors for this quilt. This was not a combination that came naturally for me, and truthfully, I fought it. I ended up telling myself that I was picking colors out for Nolan, and that this palette was every facet of his four year old personality. Warm sun, green grass and sweet thoughts. The reflection time was good for me, though. I vowed to use a heavy hand with brown, which is I think the only thing that kept Babar from having a vacation in the tropics.



The one indispensable item I used in making this quilt was a template. I made my own out of a sheet of acrylic and an acrylic knife using a pattern I drew up. I constructed my own equilateral triangle pattern with a protractor and newsprint to make a triangle that was 15 inches tall. The best part of having a template was having the flexibility of going hog wild with triangles, and knowing you could cut everything down perfectly to the exact same size.


I paper pieced about half of these blocks. I know, I know. But, a 15 inch triangle is BIG and I didn't want a quilt full of friendly triangles waving back at me. I slapped down that template on top of a newspaper and got an instant paper foundation. After that it was simple to draw in piecing lines. My six year old son helped me draw them in one lazy afternoon. The rest of the quilt blocks were a combination of intentional design and serendipitous scrap management. :-) I am still thinking of things I could do to a triangle. Ha!


I started having second thoughts about writing his name in the back. Once I finished the letters, I asked my husband what he thought of them. He told me that if the whole quilt thing didn't work out I could always take up ransom notes. Yep, that's exactly what I was thinking. Seriously. The other thing I was thinking is that this back deserves a name. I would call it "Hubris, by Jill Fisher." One of my favorite episodes from "The French Chef" was when Julia Child tried to teach how to make a grated potato pancake. I say "tried" because when she tried to flip it using the pan, she dropped most of it on the stove. "Whoops," she said. "I just didn't have the courage of my convictions!" So, despite my reservations about doing a pivoting design on a not-so-forgiving solid background, I tried it anyway. I just checked the back in a borderline compulsive manner during the entire process.


It's hard to hold up a twin size quilt. It was hard doing pivoting straight line quilting on a twin size quilt. If we keep doing this, we're both going to have AWESOME shoulders.


Here is Nolan, photobombing his own quilt. He is asleep under it as we speak and he went to bed with a huge smile on his face. I am happy too.

16 comments:

  1. It is so gorgeous Jill. I love the colors you used, really fun and holding up quilts is hard,lol!

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  2. That is a beautiful quilt! Love the colours altogether.

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  3. This is one of the most wonderful quilts I have ever seen!!! What a generous momma and lucky son.

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  4. Oh I love babar! This is such a great quilt, lucky boy!

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  5. This is fabulous! With the courage of your convictions, you combined some great colors. I loved that episode of The French Chef.

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  6. wow that is beautiful, the colors are bold but perfect for a young boy. I love his name on the back and that will mean a lot to him in the future. There comes an age where you want to see your names on things.

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  7. Clever use of a variety of piecing methods for the triangles and I love the bright colours, Jill. Your intense quilting was worth it. Stunning quilt!

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  8. I love this triangle quilt! And the backing is lovely!

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  9. These are not colors I would normally be drawn to, but the way you've used them and combined them is so wonderful! I love it SOOO much! You've definitely inspired me to step out of my color comfort zone.

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  10. What a lovely quilt. I'm sure your son will be delighted and use it for many years to come. I love to work in bright colours too. I'm visiting from the Plum and Jane bloghop.

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  11. I love that you made your own template. Did you used printed newspaper for your foundation? I've used blank 8.5x11" news paper before but I've been worried about news ink rubbing off on fabric and haven't tried just a standard newspaper.

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    1. Liz,

      I just used regular newspaper and I didn't see any ink. I also used dark fabrics, though, so it's possible you could get some graying of really light fabrics. I tried using the shiny newspaper that the grocery ads come one. That was a disaster. The foundation had more tape than paper by the time I was done. I have also tried parchment paper when I needed something a little bigger than 8.5x11.

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  12. What a fun quilt for a little boy! I love how you did the quilting. I bet you did have some tired arms though when you were done. Whew!

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  13. Elephants are my favorite too. Love the quilt!

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  14. I love the colors!! The name on the back is just perfect. What a fun quilt!

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  15. You are such a talented quilt designer. Another stunning quilt!

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