Showing posts with label Poppy Panache. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poppy Panache. Show all posts

Friday, June 3, 2016

Summery magazine projects

Get into a summer mindset with these two projects using Ann Lauer's fabric collections! 

First up is Summer's Promise, designed by Ann, using her Sundance and Poppy Panache fabric lines. This lap quilt was featured in the May 2016 issue of American Quilter magazine. It showcases large rectangles of a beautiful floral focal print, as well as a unique pieced sashing design. 


Click here to find the kit for Summer's Promise. 
Click here to see more of Ann's patterns and the Poppy Panache and Sundance fabrics.
Click here to find American Quilter magazine.





Next up is the Butterfly Forest Bed Runner, designed by Melanie Greseth and Joanie Holton for the Summer 2016 issue of Quilter's World. As the name suggests, this runner uses Ann's Butterfly Forest collection, adding a pop of color and beautiful butterflies to your favorite bed. The runner is made from four-patches and strip-pieced sashing rows, so it goes together quickly--you could be enjoying it on your bed this summer! 



Click here to see the Butterfly Forest collection.
Click here to find Quilter's World magazine.

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Friday, January 30, 2015

Poppy Panache in Print!

Yesterday we showed you Sundance, Ann's newest collection. Today we're showing off Poppy Panache in two different looks from two different magazines. If you missed our feature on Poppy Panache, including a video interview with Ann, click here.

First, Carol Lampe created "Steppin' Stripes" for the winter 2014 issue of Easy Quilts magazine. The focal print of this simple-to-sew quilt is the signature stripe from Poppy Panache.
"Steppin' Stripes" by Carol Lampe; machine quilted by Ann Lauer;
featured in Fons & Porter's Easy Quilts winter 2014
Ann talks about the stripe:
The stripe was one of the highlights of that collection--it goes from narrow to wide, with poppy bouquets on it splashed over the entire thing. Depending on where you cut it, you either see a lot of the white part in there, or mostly stripe, narrow or wide. It gives the whole quilt nice variety from just cutting out one fabric.

Carol talks about the Steppin' Stripes quilt:
How did you come up with this design?
I wanted to use the stripe somewhere besides a border. It's so dramatic, with the wide and narrow bands, that even without fussy-cutting it, you et so much variety in the block just from one piece. Ann and I wanted to keep the block simple so the beautiful stripe would be the show. I started twisting the block in Electric Quilt, trying out different things. Using the darkest black coordinate in the block made the steps (and gave us the name for the quilt!).

What do you like about the fabric?
The whole line is so gorgeous—so much fun to work with. Ann is very talented, and such a nature lover that she sees details that some of the rest of us don't, and I feel that shows up in the fabric. When this stripe fabric arrived at my house, I couldn't sleep, I was so excited. I had to get started on it right away. It was so gorgeous, so much prettier in person. 



How did you choose the red for the border?
I auditioned some other prints and the minute I put the red on it, it was perfect. It brought out the red in those poppies. I wanted a wide enough border so you can really see that pop of red.




Click here to see the Poppy Panache collection.
Click here to learn more about Ann and find the kit for Steppin' Stripes.
Click here to find Easy Quilts.












****************************************************************
Ann designed this stunner, "Poppies in Bloom," for the December 2014 issue of American Patchwork & Quilting. The wall hanging features fussy-cut poppy blocks with triangular "surrounds" that create a circular look.
"Poppies in Bloom" by Ann Lauer
N
OTE:This pattern and material is used with the permission of APQ Magazine, December 2014, 

Meredith Corporation. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.


Tell us about the design.
I've used a half rectangle tool to create the triangles to surround the poppy blocks, which has a circular effect from a distance. Putting the surround (the triangles) in a light print adds to the circular effect, and then the black around the blocks is so dramatic. The blocks show off the large poppy print. I also used the same triangle technique in the border.

And what about your fabric choices?
The poppy fussy cuts so well—there are opportunities to fussy cut one, two or three poppies. I just love the black tonal. It has a variety of gray circles in it—enough of a contrast to show off nicely without being too busy. I used red and green prints, but you could choose different coordinates for less of a Christmas feel.



What's your favorite thing about this quilt?
There's a lot of design packed into a small quilt. I really like the circular look created with the poppy impact in the middle.


Click here to see the Poppy Panache collection.
Click here to learn more about Ann and find the kit for Poppies in Bloom.
Click here to find American Patchwork & Quilting magazine.





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Thursday, January 29, 2015

Sundance

If you liked Ann Lauer's first collection, Poppy Panache, you're in for a treat. Because she's back with another line, Sundance! Sundance stands on its own--a beautiful collection of poppies, geraniums, and more--but if it has a familiar feel, that's because Ann designed the line to coordinate with Poppy Panche, both in color and style. We asked Ann to introduce us to the Sundance prints and share some designs featuring these spring-like watercolor florals.


Tell us about Sundance.
The prints and colors in the collection all work with Poppy Panache. I wanted to have a second collection that would continue the same theme as Poppy Panache but give fresh new images and colors as well. We've done poppies again, but larger, and also added geraniums. The geranium is with the poppy, but it's also a medium-scale design on its own.



The field of flowers print is also medium scale. It's a little different direction from Poppy Panache--a field of flowers rather than bouquets, so it can be cut anywhere rather than trying to center bouquets.



The colors are so summery, so pretty.
We're looking at pinks and light orange, a reddish-orange with the geranimums. We've also added yellow. The large poppy is on a real light yellow, which creates a kind of a spring coloring. The style is true watercolor. The designs are painted on fabric with watercolor to start. I like the watercolor look—it's my style.

Why geraniums?
They're small, and a different shape than poppies, and I really like the clump look. Color-wise, I like that it bridges a touch of yellow with the pinks. In the large print, quilters can fussy cut it into all different size of blocks without worrying about fussy cutting and waste to get bouquets. You can almost cut anwyere and get some poppy and some geranium. In smaller blocks, the print gives you a Georgia O'Keefe feeling—with the watercolor feel and detail in such a large image. Plus it makes gorgeous backings. 


Do you have a favorite print?
I really ike the diagonal stripe. I drew every single line of it on the computer and played with the scale. Because it's printed on the the diagonal, there are so many fun opportunities to use it—for borders, for blocks, for bindings—and still have the outside edges on the straight of grain.

I do love the marble look—a real pretty hand marbled tonal coordinate in seven colors. I didn't add a whole lot of new coordinates because all of the ones from Poppy Panache work here as well.

I'm also really happy with the large poppy and the field flowers. That large poppy print is showy as heck, and it works really well in some of our popular patterns that call for big prints. I've also used it in bargello quilts, and it adds a huge amount of movement.



Ready for some quilt inspiration for Sundance? 
These first two can be downloaded from our website.

"A Secret Garden" (quilt and runner) by Tailormade by Design

Star Dance by Ann Lauer


And here are a few of Ann's patterns, available through her website, Grizzly Gulch Gallery, featuring Sundance. Find the patterns for these quilts, as well as kits, here.

"Free Fall" by Ann Lauer

"Imagine This" by Ann Lauer

Morning Melody by Ann Lauer

Turn About by Ann Lauer

"Walkabout" by Ann Lauer

Click here to see the entire Sundance collection, and here to see Ann's previous collection, Poppy Panache.
Click here to find the free patterns made using Sundance.
Click here to learn more about Ann and find her patterns and kits featuring both Poppy Panache and Sundance.
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Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Poppy Panache on the Road

There's nothing like a trunk show to fill quilters with inspiration and get them itching to start on a new project...and that's just what Ann Lauer did last week with quilts made from her new Poppy Panache fabric collection! 


Ann graced the walls of her local quilt shop, The Sewing Palace in Helena, Montana, with quilt after quilt stitched in her debut fabric collection. 

Many of these patterns are available on her website, Grizzly Gulch Gallery, or you can ask for them at your local quilt shop. (And we're offering a free pattern, Playful Poppies, on our website!)

 Which pattern is your favorite?


Poppy camo: She blends right into her quilts with her red and black poppy shirt!

Ann and her husband, Norb

See more of the Poppy Panache fabrics and hear what Ann has to say about her first fabric line and the quilts she's designed here.
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Friday, June 6, 2014

Ann Lauer: The Face Behind the Poppies

We're thrilled to be sharing Ann Lauer's debut fabric line, Poppy Panache! A talented quilt designer, Ann has used her quilt pattern knowledge to make an incredibly quilter-friendly collection. She'll tell you more about it, both in the video below and in the Q&A session that follows.



Did you always want to design fabric?
When I started designing patterns, I was quite happy doing that, but then I thought that it would be great to use my own designs in the patterns I'm designing. So what I'm doing now is designing fabrics that fit into the types of patterns I like to design. It works beautifully—I can adjust motif size or shape, to what will work—things that I've learned after designing quilts with other people's fabric lines.

Why poppies?
My patterns scream for big, showy prints. We have very short summers here in Montana, but I actually do have poppies in my rock garden. It sounds cliché, but I was hiking and saw two small purple flowers—harebells and a kind of daisy—in the same color and value of purple, and I thought 'what a great combination!' That brought another range—adding purples with values of reds and greens.

Which print started it all?
I began with the great big poppy print, and spent a lot of time working with the Benartex artists on the colors—I wanted lots of variation to make sure the flowers were realistic and dimensional rather than flat. The poppies build on different values of reds, pinks, and oranges. Then I used those colors to pull the coordinates out. I think I have some really unusual coordinates—they're designed for this collection, but they work with others as well.


Do you see Poppy Panache as traditional, contemporary, or somewhere in between?
Poppies can be contemporary or traditional—depending on the colors—so I wanted my collection to be able to go both ways. The black, red, and white combination is more contemporary, while the soft greens and pinks are more traditional. I also think the coordinates really stand well on their own.


In your mind, what else stands out in the collection?
We worked a lot on the style too. It's not an actual watercolor, but the designs are really fluid with a lot of depth. Those greens in the foliage really flow, I think.


Favorite prints?
I love the large poppy and I think it's really dramatic on black. Then there's the stripe—I think it's really exciting. It has a  gradation from a very narrow up to a wide stripe. It is laid out on the fabric so it goes wide to narrow on a selvedge and then back to back in the center. You can slice a width of fabric down the middle to make 4 fussy-cut borders.



As a pattern designer as well, Ann's been busy creating patterns that show off her Poppy Panache fabric. She's shared images of three of her favorites with us here, two of which she also talks about in this second video (and you'll recognize All That Jazz from the first video!):



All That Jazz looks complicated but is not. The stripe is a 10" block cut on point and adds the dramatic graphic lines in the design. I love the colorful, happy feel of the design. The quilt pictured is queen size.


Center Attraction also uses the dramatic stripe cut in 10" squares, and this time it is the center focus of the design. The pieced border is simply made from an easy strip set. The quilt pictured is queen size.


It's Magic can be made as a table runner or a bed runner. The technique is bargello quilt-as-you-go and the poppies are fused on and edge stitched.  Simple but showy. It's dramatic in red, black & white and soft and pretty in the greens and purples. The table runners are pictured.  






See more of Ann's patterns using Poppy Panache (plus kits for many of them!) on her website, Grizzly Gulch Gallery.
Below is a sneak peek; see the full Poppy Panache fabric line here.








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