Make a big impact and brighten up any room with fun, contemporary, and functional projects exploding with exhilarating color! Fresh Quilting presents 20 brilliant designs featuring quilt artist Malka Dubrawsky's intoxicating color and unexpected palettes. Learn to create beautiful and lively pieces for you and your home--from modern quilts and fun pillows to a flirty bag and cute scarf. Malka will teach you how to adventurously and confidently mix colors and prints, and you'll be inspired to infuse your own brilliant palettes into each project, and discover just how irresistible and beautiful contemporary quilting can be!
Contents
Getting Fresh: My Quilting Story
Tools & Materials
Essential Techniques for Patchwork, Quilting, & Finishing
Fresh Patchwork for Home, Family & Friends
Strings Attached Potholders
Strings Attached Trivet
Flower Garden Sham
Scrap-Busting Coin Purses
Round & Round Coasters
Menswear Pillow
Peppermint Neck Warmer
Windows Sewing Machine Cover
Indigo Needle Case
Nine-Patch Kitchen Curtain
Four Points Tote
Mix-it-up Patchwork Scarf
Zigzag Sofa Pillow
ABC Baby Book/Crib Bumper
Fresh Quilts for Wall, Be & Baby
Modern Baby Quilt
Annie's Picnic Quilt
Nate's Quilt
Whirligig Quilt
Strips & Stripes Quilt
Hexagon Quilt
Malka Dubrawsky is a fiber artist whose work has been shown in juried exhibitions including Quilt National and Visions. In addition to a successful Etsy shop and popular A Stitch in Dye blog, Malka contributes to Stitch, Sew Hip, and Quilting Arts magazines. She is the author of Color Your Cloth, and her work has also appeared in Fiberarts: Design Book, Sweater Surgery, Quilts, Baby!, Pretty Little Pillows, and Pretty Little Mini Quilts. Malka is based in Austin, Texas.
“Quilt artist Malka Dubrawsky has a way with vibrant colors, prints and shapes. From simple round coasters to a patchwork coin purse, she takes readers step-by-step through colorful techniques for creating a number of practical items. Inspiring color photographs of each finished project will have crafters searching through their stash fabric to piece together a quilted work of art.”--The Detroit News