Decided on a pattern for my Grandmother's Flower Garden Quilt an started to sew a test. My plan - so far - is to use no newly produced fabric. I made the first flowers out of a rest of my 1. medieval-byzantine garb, an old jumpsuit of my kid (woodland critters), a shirt I never wore and a vintage fabric scrap. The border of the flower (or the "ways" between the flowers in the garden, there will also be "leafs" in various shades of green) consists of second hand cloth, I hope I have enough of it. I had the luck to find second hand some vintage fabric from a quilter (may the earth be light on her). I bought ~ 4 Kg fabric online really cheap and without really knowing what was in it, only because of some turquoise cotton fabric I saw on a crappy photo. I gambled a bit and was rewarded. When I opened the parcel I was so happy to find that there were several pieces of (vintage and modern) damask bedclothes included, hand died in green, olive and turquoise. Really, it's an absolute treasure box.

Edit: (Also: I feel like I am deeply in need to review my thoughts about #art and crafting. When I look at other peoples things: Yes! This is art!
When I look at my things: No, you just did.. apply things you bought, used techniques you saw. 🥴)

#Diy #handarbeiten #crafting #epp #quilting #quilts #nähen #NähenVonHand #SlowStitching #Hexies #Hexagon #stitching #Patchwork #upcycling #flowergardenQuilt #flowerGarden #quilt #englishPaperPiecing #upcycling #sewing #scrapQuilt #quilt

@sewing
@handarbeiten

@Magic_Cauldron That looks so lovely! The fabrics are gorgeous, and your needle keeper is adorable 💜

Re. the Edit: In case it helps, I feel the same about my stuff.

@Fredatron Thank you! (And the things you make are so beautiful! Full blown art!)
@Magic_Cauldron 💜 As are yours.