MORE Side by Side Lake Pieces
Finally, I've gotten back to the "side by side" larger lake pieces.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjFOxiVoyABHOKfUDdrPp6s80OpuiI2EMYsHrsXdO1ncGOEkXaLaKko3Qpdrclp83CtC1X1hl2wusQSnz6v9Cj8iEHP1y72xM24zOEDDe2tJFHHK1YqhFpve5zvQcTScop5DLtu/s400/Library+-+4711.jpg)
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Finally, I've gotten back to the "side by side" larger lake pieces.
Judy and I were working in the studio and my husband, Lee, was engaged in a tennis match on this particular morning. Cousin, Ed, was at loose ends. He paints canvases with acrylics and had expressed interest in how my lake pieces are created. So, I prepared a foundation and gave him a bag of scraps to play with while he watched a golf tournament.
Lee's cousin, Ed, and his wife, Judy, visited the cottage this past week. She brought the sunflowers that had been constructed in a workshop with Phil Beaver * to make a wall hanging as her project in my studio. Usually we "play" one day a year at the cabin we rent in Colorado while our husbands go off into the mountains. What a treat to get to play together for days.Judy had previously hand-painted the fabrics and glued the petals together to form the flower heads. Here they're pinned in place over the background fabric on the design wall.
The sunflowers were adhered to the fabric with a spray adhesive. Judy machine quilted the raw-edged appliques. Then decided where the stems should be placed between the flowers and the vase (fabric painted by Phil Beaver). You can see that vase in the next photo.
I happened to have the perfect hand-painted green fabric for her stems and she learned my technique for couching yarns on the them. (It, along with a number of other hand-painted pieces, had just been gifted to me by my friend and neighbor, Mary.) Note the sunflowers that we got at the farmer's market as a physical reference ... as well as a decorative bouquet. There are "pumpkin peppers" growing on one huge stem among them.
Judy got quite a bit done this week. I'm sure she would've finished if we hadn't had to leave the studio to play with our husbands now and then ... and to make meals or dine out.
Recently there have been days with the wind blowing at speeds exceeding 30 miles per hour. Consequently, we get wild waves rolling from far out in the lake to shore.
There had been a number of foggy mornings about a week ago when this lake piece was created. Around noon the sun breaks through to burn the fog off the lake. I love the point where the sun begins to highlight the crest of the waves and colors appear where all had been gray.
My young artist friend who is also my niece-in-law, Diane Durand, was here last week with her family. Her project in Studio North was to finish the quilt she had previously pieced for her second daughter who's expected to arrive in January.Diane had doodled a number of quilting patterns on a note pad. You may be able to see these quilting designs if you click on the photos below.
She had pieced the back. The quilt is a bit larger than the 45" width of the main blue fabric. By cutting a diamond from a different fabric and then strip piecing the scraps left from the front of the quilt for a 1 1/2" wide inner border, there was plenty of fabric for the corner areas. It's become a two sided quilt.
As Diane was piecing and trimming I was assembling another Lake piece. I was working at the same table she rotary cut pieces to size. Many of her scraps ended up in this piece.