Wednesday, 27 May 2015

Pour l'Amour du Fil 2015 | Workshops Willyne Hammerstein

I had the pleasure of seeing some truly amazing work on exhibit at the 2015 Pour l'Amour du Fil show in Nantes. I took two workshop classes, one with Irene Blanck and the other with Willyne Hammerstein, both hugely popular and very different in styles so it was really fun to delve into their creative process with them a little more. 



My morning class was with Willyne Hammerstein to learn the art of fussy-cutting, and since Willyne is the queen of fussy-cutting I thought it would not be one to miss! She was so very nice, and managed to conduct the class in both French and English, and talk to her friend in Dutch, highly impressive I thought! 



The main revelation in the class was Willyne does not English Paper Piece, she hand pieces her quilts! I must say it was news to me, as I was under the impression from her books that she was a fellow EPP'er! Apparently it was a mistake with the editing? It seems this hasn't stopped the wave of epp'ed La Passacaglia quilts popping up all over the quilting world :-) 

During the class we were given some fabric pieces and templates to make star blocks by hand, which was completely new to me so it was really interesting to learn some new techniques. We traced the templates from the graph paper to our clear acrylic sheet, cut them out and used it to find motifs and fussy-cut the fabric. Then cut the fabric, adding a 1/4" allowance. Willyne kindly gave me a demonstration on how to join the two halves together for a super neat finish as well ;-) I sat with a really lovely lady from Luxembourg  who was clearly an expert in this area and she gave me some great tips too! 


Willyne's 'house', as they call it at the the show was an absolute feast for the eyes! It was such a pleasure seeing her work in person, the detail was just incredible. They were all quilts featured in her newest book Millefiori Quilts 2. She told me it took her about five years of continuous making to design and make all her quilts from both the Millefiori Quilts books. The La Passacaglia is her favourite of all, which sold in less than one week after first exhibiting it. Wowee! 



Her least favourite part of the process is quilting - which I can fully understand! So she breaks it up by concentrating on designing in the morning; her favourite part, and then cutting and sewing or quilting in the evening.



This quilt above is 'Be Calm and Count Up To Ten', which she named from the use of 10-point diamonds to make up the stars. I asked her what her favourite fabrics are to work with and she said Japanese silks, which you can really see being used in these quilts. 



Her favourite colour? Yellow! 



… of course, I asked her to sign my books too ;-)



This is the cover quilt 'Ballet' from the second book, it was so fantastic to see it in the real life! Unfortunately, I don't think my iPhone photo's do much justice. 



My afternoon workshop the following day was an appliqué class with Irene Blanck, who was incredibly generous sharing her skills and tips with us. We had a smaller group, so we could all sit together on one table and chat which was nice. 


We each had a kit to make a block from Irene's Miz Kelly quilt. After some practice leaf and heart shapes to warm, up we got going :-) Irene covered a variety of things, such as her time saving appliqué tips - no pins! Basting shapes down with glue, her favourite notions and how she chooses fabrics for her quilts. It was really enjoyable, and I have even more of a love for appliqué now. 

Can you believe Irene gifted me the class sample block at the end of the workshop, I'm actually still gobsmacked! It was sooo generous of her, I think perhaps she saw me ogling it for too long, haha. Thank you again Irene, you absolute gem!


Isn't it gorgeous! She signed it too, so of course it's now sitting pride of place on the wall above my sewing desk. 


Irene's house was truly beautiful too, I absolutely loved each and every one and could have quite happily whipped them all home in my suitcase!


This is the Miz Kelly quilt we worked on in the class. So pretty. 



I completely fell in love with this quilt above, the brown and pink play so well together. 



What a great couple of days, thank you again to my brilliant teachers. 

Sunday, 10 May 2015

Pour l'Amour du Fil 2015 | Quilt Show | Part 1

Oh hiiiii! So I'm yet to update you on the 'Pour l'Amour du Fil', or to us English speaker's 'for the love of thread' quilting and stitching show held in Nantes, France! Today is the day. I'll run through it in a series of blog posts so I don't spam your blog readers with tons of holiday snaps ;-)



I started off the first leg of the journey with a five hour van ride with my dad (always the worst part of any holiday when you live in Cornwall at the end of the country - no offence dad ;-) Taxi to Gatwick then a short flight to Nantes! Yep it was my first experience of flying solo and my first time in France, ever! I was slightly nervous as you can imagine. 


After getting there safely, I settled in my hotel for the evening and caught up on some EPP and Modern Family - home from home really! If only I had a tea it might have been perfect… 




My hotel was just a stone's throw from the exhibition centre and the main tram line which took you into the centre of Nantes in about 15mins so it was the ideal location. 

So what is Pour l'Amour du Fil? Well, it's an annual show held by Quiltmania celebrating thread and fiber arts. In it's 7th year, and gaining more popularity with a wider audience each year - and with Quiltmania being the organisers you can expect to see a unique and diverse range of leading international quilters like no other quilt show, and this year was no exception. The headliners of the 2015 included Bill Volckening, Tomie Nagano, Fumiko Nakayama, Dijanne Cevaal, Kaye England, Kimberly Rado, Cecile Franconie, Irene Blanck and Willyne Hammerstein. Each artist exhibiting has their own specially decorated 'house' in which they have their beautiful work on display, and are on hand to talk to visitors. Many of the designer's have a new book release with Quiltmania so it's an opportunity to view the quilts from the book. 



The first day of the show was incredibly busy and it was glorious weather in Nantes. The theme for this year was 'flower power' so  we were greeted by giant crochet flowers, floral appliquéd quilts and a garden path of pinwheels and puffballs as we entered the hall. 






I had the opportunity to have a good puruse around the show in the afternoon, after my morning class with Willyne (more on that in my next post - you can also read a short piece I posted on the Love Patchwork & Quilting blog, since I know those girls are crazy for La Passacaglia!) There were lots of shops with beautiful quilt kits and fabrics on display. 




It was very much a traditional quilters paradise with the wares on offer. I didn't actually get to buy anything from the show as I miss-calculated my Euro's, oops - I didn't take into account the expensive taxi fare to and from the airport. (I thought I could use the Uber taxi app, apparently I couldn't as they don't operate in Nantes… ) The blunders of a new lone traveller I guess >.<



So I window-shopped around some fabulous stalls. This vintage display caught my eye, of course.



Stumbling on these vintage hand-pieced star blocks reminded me I must crack on with my diamond EPP quilt! 



This was the booth for the work of Cecile Franconie, she was set in amongst the shops as she was selling and exhibiting. I've not come across her work before but I understand now, she's a hugely popular french artist who creates very unique quilts embellished with intricate embroidery work. She has a new book just released by Quiltmania too; Fantaisies Faciles Florales. Lovely to see her work up close, very inspiring. 




Labors Of Love was a fabulous booth with gorgeous vintage quilts for sale. I could have quite happily have taken all of them home with me, but alas my budget didn't allow. Oh what eye candy they were piled up high though! 


All my favourite bright colours. Loved this one on the left here, it would work brilliantly with EPP, octagons and squares. Always love a basket quilt too. 


Ok this was my absolute favourite. It was draped on the side of the booth so I couldn't see it in all it's glory but what a showstopper! The colour's are phenomenal and I was immediately drawn to it. I'm so inspired to drop everything I'm doing and make a giant Lone Star type quilt with these solids. I think some 2" 8-point diamonds and bright Kona solids would be perfect, no? 

I have tons of photo's to share of the exhibitors on show and my classes with Irene and Willyne, and my sight-seeing around Nantes, so I plan to share those in a series of posts next week. Stay tuned!