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Friday, 28 October 2022

Quilt Symposium - Kawandi Class

My Kawandi is finished!

I took a one day Kawandi class with Lorena Uriarte at Quilt Symposium 2022.  We learnt to make Kawandi and here is mine.  



Kawandi are meant to be scrappy, but I used a charm pack of Koi Pond by Ruby Star Society.  I knew the colours would all work together and I'm pleased with how it turned out.  




But the process used up the fabric more quickly than I anticipated, so I ran out of Koi Pond fabrics before it was finished.  I had a Ruby Star Society panel in my stash, so I bravely cut in to it and put these lovely ladies in the centre.  




Lorena recommended Aurifil 12wt for Kawandi and I had a few spools in my stash to choose from. I chose a variegated one and I'm very happy with the outcome. 






Here's the back - I like it as much as the front.  The night before the class I quickly grabbed a fat quarter for my backing and it's worked out really well.  This is an Anna Maria Horner print, again from my stash.  




So, I've made a Kawandi piece.  I struggled a bit with sewing without a hoop, and without line markings, so I succumbed and started using masking tape to keep my lines parallel.  However, my masking tape was only 1/4", so my lines are quite close together and the whole piece took longer than I expected.  But I'm pleased with it and I learnt a new skill.  

I'll be taking it to Capital Quilters tomorrow for our Symposium Show and Tell.  



Now it's time for the Peacock Party.  Feel free to link up a recent blog post below.  


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8 comments:

  1. Your Kawandi project looks lovely, I need to try it sometime but it might be challenging for me. I love the texture of the stitching, very different from regular hand quilting. Happy stitching!

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  2. It's such a beautiful finish. LOVE the backing fat quarter. It's perfect for it. Your stitches are gorgeous.

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  3. Your post on Bloglovin caught my eye. I've never heard of Kawandi, but I'm definitely going to read up on it. Your piece is incredible! Sew lovely. Thanks for sharing.

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  4. I stitched a sunglass case a while back using this stitching style with Tula's fabric. I must say I loved how the finished quilted piece felt. I would like to make a pair of placemats. And of course, your fabric choice is perfect and your stitches immaculate, Wendy. Thanks for sharing this!

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  5. It’s a beautiful piece, Wendy! I love the colors and the large stitches. I would struggle with straight lines too. I always hand-quilt without a hoop. I could never get the hang of using the hoop.

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  6. How wonderful that you've learned Kawandi! I'm totally hooked on it with 12 small pieces made in the past two years. I'm smiling at you too because - of course you'd need to stitch straight lines! :-) In fact, those Siddi women make theirs without marking, and the charm is in their off-kilter stitching. Hopefully you learned that you can use your pinky finger to "measure" the distance between stitching rows. In any case, your piece turned out gorgeous. I hope you'll give it another go, with free-wheeling stitches.

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  7. Hi Wendy, thanks for sharing this interesting new piece
    What type/size needle did you use with the 12wt aurifil thread?

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  8. Hi Maggie - I use John James achenille needle, number 24. The same as I use for hand quilting.

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