Mixing White and Cream
#52
Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Central Indiana
Posts: 234
Originally Posted by KSCrafter
I've been working on a scrap quilt with dark prints and off-white (or cream-based) lights. I'm going to make another scrap quilt and would like to hear opinions on mixing whites and creams for the light portions of quilts. Is that a no-no? Or is it okay? In the quilt I made, some of the creams were prints with bits of color on them- little swirls of blue, or pink flowers- but I didn't mix them with white.
What do you prefer?
What do you prefer?
#56
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: California, USA
Posts: 1,318
Alex Anderson did a quilt called "Pushing Neutrals" and it is full of creams and whites - no real colors just different shades of tone on tone creams and whites. Her quilting was spectacular and the quilt was quite beautiful. It was one of her earlier quilts. I've seen it many times as she belongs to our guild. (Ever notice how some people start out great and just keep getting better as time goes on?)
Besides a well-known quilter using creams and whites - the one thing that I always believe is this:
There are no rules in quilting other than making 1/4 inch seams and closing your rotary cutter after each use. Other than that, if it looks good together and you like - it works.
To make my point even pointier: Remember when the quilt judges turned their noses up to machine-quilting? Then along came Harriet Hargrave with her fantastic machine-quilted quilts, who one blue ribbons for her work, and suddenly everyone was standing in line learning to machine quilt. Now most of the quilts in a quilt show are machine-quilted verses hand-quilted.
The rules change all of the time, so why not get to the front of the line and start your way of doing it? Who knows you might become an 'well-known' quilter yourself!
Besides a well-known quilter using creams and whites - the one thing that I always believe is this:
There are no rules in quilting other than making 1/4 inch seams and closing your rotary cutter after each use. Other than that, if it looks good together and you like - it works.
To make my point even pointier: Remember when the quilt judges turned their noses up to machine-quilting? Then along came Harriet Hargrave with her fantastic machine-quilted quilts, who one blue ribbons for her work, and suddenly everyone was standing in line learning to machine quilt. Now most of the quilts in a quilt show are machine-quilted verses hand-quilted.
The rules change all of the time, so why not get to the front of the line and start your way of doing it? Who knows you might become an 'well-known' quilter yourself!
#57
I mix them most of the time. Think in terms of "value". If you have ever used a Jelly Roll, there is a mix of lights, mediums and darks. IMHO it makes the quilt more interesting - visual texture. Gramily
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