Saturday, September 20, 2014

Sitting on a shelf...


I have had a small art quilt on my shelf for about five years—only partially completed. I started it when I began to learn appliqué, and then added beads, embroidery, and made the top just the way I wanted. Of course, I had a lot of mistakes, but it was exciting to have made something so different from the media I usually used. But then I needed to quilt and bind it. I read books, asked quilters, watched some videos, but I still felt like a roadblock stood in my way. I just couldn’t figure out how to get started on that phase of the project, and I was afraid of ruining everything I had just worked so many hours to finish. I had also made some mistakes in preparing the top and back, so I would end up folding the binding toward the front, rather than the back, which just seemed to confuse the whole process in my mind.
But I finally decided just to go for it, to take it off the shelf and finish it. It took about four days of work, and then it was done. Yes, my hands and arms were sore, and there are some mistakes. The hand quilting isn’t perfect, and the binding is a little awkward in places, but it actually looks pretty good overall, and now I have a quilt I can hang on my wall—a finished project. I learned so much from the process, not only in finding solutions and finishing it, but also in the mistakes that I made. I know the next time I make an art quilt, I won’t feel as lost or confused.

And I learned that it’s better to move forward than to be afraid to make mistakes. We learn by trying, not by having our project sitting on a shelf.