In my garden I try to choose plants which will fill a certain space … as a quilter I can prune any floral block anyway I want it.

Aussie native plants don’t like being told what to do, but quit block designs usually do as they are told
read moreIn my garden I try to choose plants which will fill a certain space … as a quilter I can prune any floral block anyway I want it.
Aussie native plants don’t like being told what to do, but quit block designs usually do as they are told
read moreThe most dominant colours of Australian wildflowers are red, orange and yellow. Plant breeders have not produced much variety by adding pretty pastels to the colour range, but I thought I would try breeding some fabric variations.
The shapes of Aussie flora in pastel colours are very pretty, but would not look so good covered in dust!
read moreIntroducing a project file with several variations of Log Cabin blocks along with a mixed bag of applique designs based on some of Australia’s native flora. It has taken about a month to sort out colours for the background Log Cabin blocks, but the colour of the flowers was easier as many of the varieties of flora native to this country might have different colour flowers, and most of them have red included in the family.
Some of the pieced backgrounds designs would look OK without the applique added, like the one above and below, but others, like the ...
read moreAustralian native Banksia flowers come in quite a few different varieties … this is based on one of them.
I like both of these designs, but if I was going to make either I would probably change something about them. At the moment there are just half a dozen quilt designs in this project file, but that will change once I hit the publish button for this post!
read moreI have thought that the background colour of some of these designs is wrong, but then I remember that bush fires leave behind a blackened landscape, which is home to a lot of seeds of plants which start growing after rain, and are soon producing flowers.
Once the flora starts showing their colours, the fauna also come out to enjoy the new growth, including our native hopping mouse which is unrelated to the average mouse, but is part of the marsupial species which thrive in Australia.
read moreI love banksia shrubs, and so do our native birds, and I am loving playing with the banksia blocks.
I would love to have a garden big enough to plant heaps of Banksias, along with lots of other Aussie native plants, but at least I can design virtual quilts with masses of Aussie plants.
read moreHappy Australia Day!
Sturt’s Desert Pea is the state flower of South Australia. It is a ground cover which grows to cover wide areas of the desert in Central Australia after infrequent rainfalls. A small patch grew in the in the back yard at Mum’s, but I have not been able to grow them as I have lived in areas with a wide variety of sand and clay soils, but not the right one for these plants.
After a good rain in central Australian desert areas they cover wide areas of seemingly infertile soil with a carpet of ...
read moreIn Electric Quilt 8 we can use Pieced Block Designs as quilt layouts, providing only straight lines forming squares and rectangles are used.
The blocks above are the blocks I have chosen from my collection to use with applique block designs in a project Outback Banksias.
When the block is used as quilt layout the blocks can be drafted to fit the size and shape of the block, but I find that adding teh same block everywhere in the setting is the easiest way to have my first look at what happens when square blocks are used in rectangles.
Most ...
read moreI started playing with custom designs quite a fair while ago, and drew up a lot of pieced blocks with just vertical and horizontal lines to use. This morning I decided to try using one of them to introduce a new collection of blocks.
One of the first problems is that the blocks placed in assorted rectangles get rather distorted, so I spent time to redraw some blocks. Need more practice with this great idea.
I am rather pleased with the second design, though I admit that several versions got deleted along the way.
read morePretty pastels in a very traditional style quilt … not the natural colour of Aussie flora, but some of our flowers fade in the sun, just like our fabrics, especially those which hang in windows!
I like the second design.
read moreAussie florals are anything but formal, but I have a lot of fun using them in formal designs. I don’t bother trying to prune them into formal shapes in the real world!
Love the second design!
read moreLove the centre block.
Love the colouring of the second design. It looks a bit dust, just like an Aussie summer!
read moreThe first design does not look like the colours of Australia’s native Sturt Desert Pea, but the shapes are very much like the flowers, and as far as I know this species only comes in red, though there may be some whites ones.
The second design is more like you will find in out back areas. That is the dinkum Aussie colouring.
Happy Australia Day!
read moreSome of our Aussie flora have some weird but very interesting, and attractive, flowers.
Some of them are rarely seen in built up areas but are almost weeds in the bush, some are easy to grow under cultivation, and some of my favourites will not grow for me!
At least I can grow them virtually and in whatever combination I choose.
read moreToday I am sharing two colourways of the same design, first with a slightly off white, light sandy coloured fabric.
The second the background is a total black out!
I love both of them, and I also love the Mitchell Hopping mice which found their way into the designs. I had a close encounter with a hopping mouse during a mouse plaque many years ago.
I had traps set all around the house to catch any, and hopefully every mouse which found it’s way indoors, but rarely saw any mice except in the traps, until one day I wandered ...
read moreI love it!
The background colour is a bit dark in the second design.
Needs to be washed out until it becomes pale grey perhaps.
read moreNo waratahs, lots of wattle. In these designs the wattle is Drummonds Wattle.
Interesting flowers which would look good in many other colours, but as far as I know the real thing only comes in one colour.
read moreThis project file uses my version of the state flower of South Australia … the Sturt Desert Pea. It is an annual, though the seasons are based on rain rather than calendar months. The plant emerges soon after rain in dry sandy red sand in desert areas, and flowers profusely for a short period, and sprawls along the ground with the flowers sitting above the carpet of soft grey green.
My Mum had a small clump which flowered after a good rain, but I haven’t been able to keep them alive beyond one flowering season, but in my virtual world ...
read moreThe shapes are inspired, but the colours are not … the flowers represented in todays designs come in reds, not pink and purple.
The colours are more English cottage garden, and i had a lot of fun playing with the colours, and my hands didn’t get dirty once, unlike the real garden outside.
read more