Creating Movement with Fabric Art Quilts & Projects – Part 3 – Thread & Accessories

3 wise men following yonder star

I hope you’re enjoying our series on our creating movement in fabric art.  As you may have guessed by now we here at Princess YellowBelly Designs believe in the power of movement.  We believe that scenes on a quilt or fabric art panel should move in order to move the viewer.  This is the entire basis of creating emotional, artistic fabric art. 

In my first article I talked about that principle, and how to understand the theory behind creating movement. 

In my second article I talked about how to use your largest medium, fabric, to its best possible advantage.  How to mix darks and lights, create shadows, flow, temperatures, etc.

Now we’re on to the last two major mediums: thread and accessories. 

The right mix of fabric, thread, and accessories creates a magical story

Plus I’ve tossed in a few other back-up singers into your fabric art movement choir so you can create solid pieces of art all the time. 

Creating Movement with Thread

Believe it or not thread creates movement.  We’re talking about here are your topstitching, quilting, and appliqueing threads – not the thread you use to sew your seams together.  Seaming thread should be beige, 95.5% of the time.

If you don’t know why, don’t worry, we’ve got a whole article about beige thread.

So – which thread do you use to do your highlighting, quilting, or appliqueing?  Once again, the answer lies in what you’re hoping to achieve.

Intent Makes all The Difference – Once Again

If you’ve read the first two article on this you know that in order to create art you need a clear vision in mind.  If you’re at the part of your project where you’re quilting or topstitching, then you should already have developed a very beautiful and moving project.

one leaf of a rustic country table topper - heavy use of quilting foam makes this variant of a quilt burst and pop

And making the right thread choice is usually pretty easy by this stage. 

Your fabric art panel will already have specific themes, colors, and moods well developed.  And you just need to make some smart choices when choosing which thread to finish the project. 

Threads are great at adding a little sparkle or enhancing a certain mood.

Depending upon the project you can use many threads, or only one or two.  Just be aware that the larger and more complex your piece is, the more you’ll be changing threads while quilting, appliqueing, and topstitching.

Collecting & Managing Your Thread Options

As many fabrics as are available in each and every color under the sun, there are as many different threads.  And then we get into the fun threads, such as:

I used to have a few loose spools of thread rolling around in a basket, but as I got more and more into fabric art I found I needed more and more thread colors. 

Finally I found a discounted deal on an entire set of quilting thread by Aurofil. 

They came in their own plastic container with small spools on one side and large spools in the other.  Each ‘color’ has approximately 5 shades and I have used these over and over and over.

I’ve had this set for about 7 years now, and am just starting to use up some of the more popular spools.  If this set doesn’t have what I need, I go to my specialty thread box.  Naturally this is where you’ll find all the fun threads.

When I’m considering my top-stitching choices I always take a cruise through these boxes and only if there isn’t anything that will work, do I go to the quilt store for something new.

For instance, I used lavender thread for my bobbin when I was stitching my ‘Ocean Maidens’ quilt because my backing fabric was a mottled lavender, grey, green and blue.  I completely used up 4 left-over spools of lavender thread and started a 5th before I finished. 

Note: Even though each of these spools was a slightly different shade of lavender, no one will ever be able to tell, and now I have more room in my thread boxes.

Making the Fateful Choice

Now, looking at the options for doing the highlighting and everything for your quilt – these should be your considerations:

Mood

When we were debating thread choices for the Ocean Maiden, Suzanna decided that since mermaids are magical creatures, we needed a magical effect.

To her that meant metallic thread in all its variations, heavy on the silver.    

Just between us I got tired of all the thread changes, but she was absolutely right – the end result is shimmery, magical, and adds to the mystery and intrigue of the mermaid.

Popping

If you want a certain design element to simply ‘pop off’ your panel, then use a highly contrasting thread color and stitch it heavily. 

This is usually something like a satin stitch. 

The wider you make the satin stitch, the more pop it has.  This is especially true with variegated thread because the different colors really show up well in this application. 

Get Criss-crossing seams in an autumn crazy quilt when you use spray starch for ironing

This is also a good technique for metallic thread. 

In judicious amounts.  A little sparkle goes a long way, especially in a satin stitch, so I typically us a narrow satin stitch with metallic.  Also metallic thread does tend to strip and break more than other threads, so you’ve got to decide how much you want to fool with it. 

Sparkling

I like to use metallic threads in autumn panels because the bronze and gold go so well with autumn themed fabrics.  Also if the sun (gold thread) “shines” on the panel it just lights up.

I also like to use silver or gold in projects of a Christmassy nature.

And, like I said, I used a huge amount of silver and lavender metallic thread on my mermaid quilt. 

Try to keep a balance with sparkle thread though – a little bling goes a long way.  Notice how your eye is drawn to the mermaid tails first – you only notice the rest of her second, and that’s how it should be.

Highlighting

Three wise men going to Bethlehem in our panel

When I want to highlight something I will use a bold color choice – often black – but stitch it with a straight stitch or an open zig-zag.  This will draw the eye eventually, but not grab the lion’s share of attention and that’s what highlighting is all about.

Fox applique on a panel with a zipper back

Blending

If you want something to just lay there and be quiet, use a color that matches your element and stitch it either with a straight or blanket stitch.  Your eye will pass right over it while your brain registers only the movement – and that’s where your movement comes from!

I use beige to top-stitch backgrounds. 

How to Use Accessories to Create Movement in Fabric Art

I’ve actually already covered this topic in depth because I love to accessorize so much.  So please check out my Bling Blog for ideas on accessorizing your fabric art. 

What I just want to point out here is how to use these accessories to move the eye across your project. 

In my Coral Reef Panel, I used long thin, orange-ish leaves that I found in an autumn arrangement at Walmart.  I pulled the wire off of the back and then used them to represent sea grass. 

When you look at this panel, your eye sees these and follows them along, and this creates directional movement. 

Anything that will make your eyes track from one point to the next creates movement. 

I also create this effect by:

  • Sewing buttons or beads on a line
  • Ribbons that lead from one element to the next
  • Crystals that draw the eye to certain elements (I do this for eyes and flower centers)
  • And in the Ocean Maiden I’m using bubbles to finalize the illusion of movement 

Give your imagination free reign when you’re thinking about what accessories will enhance your projects.  And keep an open mind when you’re wandering the aisles of stores looking for inspiration.

Accessories are actually one of the few elements I recommend purchasing on a whim.  Especially if you shop at antique and thrift stores like I do a certain decorative element will probably be gone the next time, and you’ll never see its kind again.

The Most Customizable Accessory – Appliques

This is a French word – you should be able to tell by its weird spelling – for any extra shape that you sew onto the front of your project. 

One of my favorite custom-made appliques…ever!

You can buy embroidery appliques in the sewing section of most stores.  They are quick and easy to sew on, but they’re not terribly unique or lifelike.  If you want anything realistic looking you have to do it yourself. 

There’s a relatively easy way to this – check out my Appliqueing with Confidence blog. 

What I want to emphasize here is that appliques are one of the most powerful elements you can incorporate into your projects to create movement. 

All of the appliqued mermaids in my Ocean Maidens quilt help to keep the eye moving, especially since each one is a different color and shape – sort of- and they’re all engaged in different activities.

When you add an applique it’s like a spotlight has been shone on it – everyone notices it instantly. 

Bonus!  Back-Up Singers in Your Fabric Art Choir

Wow!  I can’t believe we’re almost done with one of my favorite subjects in the whole world.

Still, while we’ve covered the three major mediums that can be used to create movement in fabric art, there are a few more hidden elements that you can take advantage of to increase the impact of your project.

Batting

You can read my blog on batting for all the different choices you have in this area.  In short form, your batting choice will help you to emphasize certain elements of your fabric art.  There are a multitude of techniques and batting types you can choose, so I definitely recommend giving the whole article a read!

Foam

Think thicker, more emphatic batting.  I also have a foam blog, so just hop on over there and read it. 

Background Quilting Techniques

I estimate that for about 80% of all my project backgrounds I sew a simple free-motion stipple pattern when I quilt.  It’s fast, easy and does a super job of holding everything together.  You don’t need a pattern; stippling is simply sewing swoops, lines, and squiggles all over your background without sewing over a previous line of stitching. 

Just think of it like dropping a long piece of string onto your project and following along it as it curls and dips. 

You can also do spreading ripples, sunrays, and feathers as quilting on your background without a great deal of trouble if you’ve got a free-motion quilting feature on your machine. 

Specialty Quilting Patterns

When I want a specific shape to quilt onto my background I use one of my plastic quilting templates and use either my chalk ponce or an erasable pen to trace out the pattern.  I did this on my Cassidy Rose quilt and my Starburst quilt. 

Sometimes, as in my Camel Panel, I use a cookie cutter for the shape I want.  A specific shape quilted onto your background, draws the eye (creating movement) and also helps the background to become an integral part of the story – rather than just lying there.

In the Ocean Maiden quilt, I used metallic thread to quilt in rows of a ‘loose’ feather shape to look like waves on my ‘Mermaid Sea” border. 

Always think carefully about what you want your background/borders to say or do and then quilt accordingly. 

Your fabric art is as unique, beautiful, and vibrant as you are yourself.  And the results you can achieve are limited only by your imagination – and the number of times your thread breaks.  I hope you enjoyed this series on creating movement in fabric art.

Next week we’ll be back with another great topic.

Black stallion running wild against red, orange, and gold sunset backdrop fabric magic quilt

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You can also email us with specific questions or comments at karyl@pybdesigns.com.  Until next time, all our best!

Creating Movement with Fabric Art Projects – Part 2 – How to Use Fabric

Welcome back to our blog series on creating movement with fabric art.  Last week we talked about the principles of creating motion in fabric art.  We also talked about why we have to have movement in order for it to be fabric art (as opposed to a traditional quilt).

I hope that I’ve been helpful in opening your eyes to one of my favorite things.

And I also hope that you’re feeling encouraged and excited about starting to create movement with fabric art. 

As I mentioned in my last blog, there are three necessary elements to create movement – fabric, thread, and accessories.  With those three simple, beautiful items, you can make any item flow, move, and bewitch the eye. 

These fabrics are your canvas, your brushes, and your paints. Enjoy!

This week, I want to talk about using the biggest of those three mediums: fabric.

Creating Movement with Fabric

This is the biggest choice you have to make for any project – because it’s the biggest part.  It also sets the tone:

  • Dark and broody…
  • Light and sunny…
  • Day or night…
  • What century…
  • Fun and whimsical…
  • Beautiful and inspirational…
  • Etc.  

Creating Movement with Fabric – Colors

Color choice is everything in fabric art. 

This goes for your thread and accessories as well, of course, but the fabric is the determining factor – always. 

Movement in fabric is dictated by:

  • The colors you use
  • The way you move between them – think of a rainbow
  • And the patterns printed on the fabric itself. 

When you go to a quilt store you will see whole shelves of the same color – like green – in 50 different shades and patterns.  And any one of those shades and shapes of green could be right in the right project. 

You have to make the right choice.  Here’s the easiest way to do it.

Lay out your choices on the cutting table next to each other, stand back and look carefully at how they go together. 

If you want to draw the eye subtly and gently, use different shades of the same color scheme from light to dark. 

If you want to accomplish a visual punch to the brain, use bright, highly contrasting colors. 

However, even a visual punch – such as a Bargello pattern – employs light-to-dark shades of the same color scheme to achieve its effect. For my ‘Bargello Strawberry’ table topper we used 5 different shades of red from light to dark. 

The varying shades were very distinctive when we laid them out side by side at the quilt store, but when they were sewn into 1” squares it became very hard to tell them apart.  What you see is a strawberry that moves from light-to-dark so subtly that it appears mottled – exactly like a real one. 

Take the time – or make the time – to think about the effect you want from your finished project. 

If you make a mistake in a color combination, you will usually be able to see it very quickly – as I did when I used blue in my wedding ring quilt.  The first set that I put together just screamed at me, so I tore it apart and chose a different fabric.

Peacock Paradis - fabric panels for quilting combined to create a brand-new image

Consider Shadows in Your Fabric Choices

We often don’t think about shadows in real life.  But shadows are the very definition of what we see.  Shadows:

  • Give depth to color
  • Layers to scenery
  • And impact to moments

Most importantly, shadows create 3-D effects that enhances your background, makes the visual much more realistic, and adds a great deal of interest.  Shadows should be added whenever you want to make something appear deeper or to show the way the light is moving. 

If you’re creating a stone wall, for instance, and using a grey mottled fabric for the stones, then you need to deepen the scene.  You can do this by adding fabric strips of either darker grey or black strips. This will create the 3-D effect you need. 

Experiment with the width of the “shadow” so that you achieve the right effect without overwhelming the main element. 

Another way to achieve shadows with fabrics is to use a darker shade in a strip-pieced pattern.  I especially like to do this with crazy quilts, strip quilts, and pinwheels. 

I also like to look at photographs and then try to model my shadow effects after them.

Pay Attention to Design and Pattern

The other way to create movement with fabric is to use fabric printed with many different designs. 

Having just finished my ‘Ocean Maidens’ quilt, I’ve spent a lot of time gazing at fabric with swirls (waves), bubbles (water), dots (floaty organic material), and leaves (ocean flora and fauna). 

The entire quilt appears to move, especially as we moved the fabric from light through dark to simulate the ocean from top to bottom.

If I had chosen the exact same color scheme but in plain fabrics only, my ‘ocean’ would just lay there, boring and dead.  So always plan ahead and know what effect you want to achieve before you lay out one cent or make your first cut.

Handing holding cash and coin money over purple and pink quilting fabrics sewing within your means illustration

How to Save Money & Avoide Mistakes

As always, I’ve got a few items on my “don’t” list, as well.  Knowing what not to do, what not to choose, and why not will go a long way in saving you time and money.

“Don’t” Tip #1

Unless you absolutely have to, don’t buy plain fabric.

You’ll really maximize your moneys’ worth by purchasing multi-colored fabric or fabric that is printed with a design in the same color scheme. 

The multi-colored fabric allows you to bring in any other color that’s also printed on the main fabric.  If you have a gold-based fabric with green & orange swirls on it, then you can bring in green and orange fabrics and they will all run together – which is the exact subtle effect we’re looking for. 

Fabric that is printed with a design – such as bubbles – will often use the same color scheme from light-to-dark, which allows you to bring in each of these shades.  This simple trick moves color through your project and moves your eyes to follow it, thus creating movement with fabric.

Simple!

“Don’t” Tip #2

Try not to buy on a whim, ever.  If you’re super-attracted to a fabric, chances are you already have something similar.

Always go through your stash before you head for the quilt store to buy fabric for a new project. 

Large plastic tub full of color-themed grey and silver fabric

If your stash is anything like mine, you can often find all the fabrics you need right at home without investing a cent.  Remember, most of the time you’ll only be using a quarter yard of any one color in any project – if that – so you don’t need an entire building to stash your stash. 

If you don’t have the exact right color:

  1. Take your project and the fabrics you have already chosen from your stash to the quilt store
  2. Mix and match carefully
  3. Buy only what you need. 

You’ll save a lot of money this way and keep your stash under control at the same time.

“Don’t” Tip #3

Don’t allow yourself to be bullied into fabric choices that you loathe just because it’s what’s hip or modern.  Or even if it’s called for in the pattern. 

Personally, I have to love the colors of the fabric I’m working with or my dislike shows in the finished piece.  Besides that, I get no joy out of creating it and life is way too short to spend time on things that you don’t like. 

I absolutely loathe the ‘modern’ color combination of pale, washed out teal and that anemic brown you see everywhere and I refuse to spend one cent in buying those color schemes.

As I’ve said before, autumn is my favorite season so I have a great many of those fabrics in my stash.  I also love the jewel tones of purple, turquoise and jade – so I have a lot of that. 

Different colors – whole new art set

It’s amazing how many different places you can use these colors. 

And often patterns, even traditional patterns, don’t need to have the exact fabrics.

When I did my one and only Jinny Beyer quilt I used the fabric supplied in the kit – because I loved those colors.  Later I saw a quilt at the quilt store that used shades of purple, green, and turquoise instead of pinks, reds, and purples. 

The effect was, and almost always is, equally stunning. 

However you go about creating movement with fabric, remember, it’s about the story.  You don’t want your quilt to sit there.  You want it to move people through the context, to fold in light and shadow, emotion and love.

Next week we’ll finish out this blog series by talking about the other two mediums used in creating movement with fabric art; thread and accessories. 

Until then, please consider signing up for our newsletter.  It’s quick, easy, and FREE!  You’ll receive tips, best products, some personal updates, and more. 

How to Create Movement in Fabric Art Quilts & Projects – Part 1

Mermaid riding a dolphin

I like to self-identify as a fabric artist rather than a quilter.  Which gets a lot of puzzled smiles, quietly raised eyebrows, and a question:  “What’s the difference between a fabric artist and a quilter?”

After all, a traditional quilter creates…a quilt.  A fabric artist creates…a quilt.  The differences may seem small, but they’re there, trust me. 

The difference is in intent and outcome. 

Ever dangle your legs over a stream? Then let’s do it on fabric!

Do you want to create a quilt that is beautifully sewn, has all its points matching perfectly and wins a blue ribbon at the local quilt show?

Or do you want to tell a unique story that shows passion, humor, and beauty?

Fabric art isn’t so much about traditionalism and winning blue ribbons at fairs.  Although as Isaac Newton famously said, “If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.” 

We like to embrace the traditional beauty and influences, but build on it. 

So, if you intend to create a story, you may use traditional techniques – but achieve an entirely different outcome.

Defining Fabric Art by Creating Movement

The fabric art that we create is mostly movement and accessories.  I spoke about the accessory angle in my Bling Blog, and I touched on creating movement in my Backgrounds First blog but I want to go into it in more depth here.

Just to clarify; when we say we’re creating movement, we don’t mean physical movement. 

What we’re referring to is any aspect of a quilt that draws your eye from one section to another. I, for one, much prefer to view a project that tells a story and pulls you in, inviting you to become a part of the conversation, rather than a beautifully crafted, point-perfect masterpiece. 

Here we have two moving elements; water, which always moves, and the butterflies. There’s a suggestion of potential movement from the frog – but that creates tension rather than movement.

You may sense a little bitterness here towards what I like to refer to as the ‘Quilt Nazis.’  If you’ve gone to a quilt store of fair where everything runs on rules, you know what I mean.

Or maybe it’s even a little bit of quilter’s envy, since many great traditionalist quilters achieve levels of mastery that I can only envy.

But what it really is, is a superior attitude on my part.  I, like many human beings, like looking down at the poor quilting robots trapped in their “this-is-the-pattern-and-I-have-to-follow-it-religiously” rut.

Genesis of My Quilting Rebellion

It started for me way back in the day when I made my kids’ first baby quilts.

I’ve got a real low boredom threshold.  So rather than just make a quilt with blocks of the same Scotty dogs or bunny rabbits, I decided that I had to enliven things.  I did this by adding variety:

  • Different fabrics for each block
  • Colored ribbons
  • Yarn embellishments
  • Different colored threads
  • And squishy bunny tails 

These were a great hit with my babies, so when they were ready for regular beds, I made them each a twin quilt. 

Instead of sewing a basic Sunbonnet Sue or Suspender Sam quilt, I went to Walmart.  And there I found all the little girl/boy appliques they had and added one to each block. 

Each block of these early quilts featured a quaint little cutout engaged in a different activity.

A Sunbonnet Sue may be seen picking flowers or flying balloons, and in my son’s quilt a Suspender Sam could be driving tractors or playing with a dog.  I knew this was the way to go when I overheard Suzanna telling her siblings a story about what was happening in the quilt. 

After that I explored the whole crazy quilt genre which I liked exceedingly because of all the different fabrics and colors and varying angles they’re sewn at. 

When everyone I knew or was related to – and their dog – had a quilt from me, I started looking around for something different to create and gradually ended up where I am now.  Just let me say that the fabric art I create and sew is not that technically difficult.

What it can be, however, is extremely creative and often time consuming. 

To the way my mind works though, it’s a perfect fit. And for a project to “fit” for me it has to move and say something.  Here is how I go about creating movement and stories in my fabric art.

Critical Questions to Ask Before Creating Movement in Fabric Art

  1. Is my character moving or is it the background? 

I have discovered that it is both too difficult and too time consuming to try to accomplish both in the same panel.   Plus its way too complicated and actually accomplishes the opposite of drawing a viewer in.

Do one or the other, but not both. 

In my ‘Christmas Delivery’ panel the unicorn is standing still; it’s the fairies that are moving.  In my ‘Coral Reef Panel’ the fish are moving so much that you don’t really notice the water. 

As an aside, water, air, and fire are background elements that break the general rule.  In Coral Reef the water’s moving, but it’s so subtle that your mind sees it and dismisses it because what’s going on in the foreground is just so interesting.

Once you’ve got your what, it’s time to move on to creating movement with non-moving materials.

  • What materials will accomplish movement?

Execution matters. 

If it’s your background that will be moving, you have 3 options – fabric, thread and accessories. 

If it’s the character that’s moving you have the same 3 options, but to these you can also add batting, foam, appliques, and specialized quilting techniques.

We’ll talk about these elements next week in the middle installment of this article series.

Hey, it’s movement.  And creating movement is the very basis of fabric art – it can’t be talked about in just a few short lines.  OK, a few long lines, but still!  That’s why we’re here. 

In the meantime, please sign up for our FREE newsletter.  We’ve got some very exciting developments coming up in the next few months, and we can’t wait to share each update with you personally.

Read the Next Article:

Creating Movement with Fabric Art Projects – Part 2 – How to Use Fabric

Creating Movement with Fabric Art Quilts & Projects – Part 3 – Thread & Accessories