How Long Does It Take?

Now that the holiday clutter is cleared away, it’s time to focus on finishing my South Dakota postcard quilt. So, how long does it take to make a quilt?


  • January 5, 2005

    The vision

    I get a germ of an idea.  It stews and brews in my head for months, maybe years.


  • January 9, 2005

    The research

    All the time that the new quilt idea is cooking in my brain, whenever I see a book, an article, a picture, a fabric that relates, I file it away for reference.  Sometimes I collect whole notebooks full of pertinent creative thoughts.


  • January 12, 2005

    The bits and pieces

    • I poke through my collection of the miscellany over and over
    • I sort
    • I sift
    • I measure it
    • Slowly, slowly I let it stew

    How long does that take?  Until that picture begins to gel and until I get the courage to begin.


  • January 16, 2005

    The Design

    • I lay out my collection of fabric and pictures and sort out my head.
    • I get out a big sheet of table cloth paper, full size and I begin to sketch.
    • I draw.
    • I smooth and sharpen my lines.
    • I begin to clip out patchwork pieces and make applique shapes.

    Some seem right.  Some go straight into the trash.  Experiment, experiment.  Hate it, love it, hate it, love it.


  • January 19, 2005

    The Work

    • I begin to assemble.
    • I tweak and add.
    • I lay it out on the floor and squint at it.
    • I move my pieces around.
    • I patch and worry my way through crisis and recovery.

  • January 23, 2005

    When to call it done?

    At this point, the quilt is usually radically different from what I had sketched.  Same elements, same fabrics, but the design shifts and moves.  I have learned not to be distressed that it is different.  Usually it is better than I  first planned.  The quilt tells me when it is right, when it’s done.


  • January 26, 2005

    Reconciliation.

    Once I have quilted and bound off my quilt, we (the quilt and I) often aren’t close friends for a while. Maybe it’s because we have been so close, so intense. I know every flaw, every change, every ache and stress. Like raising a child, it takes me a while to reconcile the new reality to the original vision. And then, another month, another year, I look at that quilt and I am surprised to discover that it has a spark of my heart in it.


  • February 2005

    I first had the idea for my South Dakota postcard quilt in 1989. I played with the idea for 15 years. It took me that long to figure out how to put my trademark rectangular door into a tepee. I finally began cutting out my fabric in December of 2004. Now, eight weeks and a lot of angst later, the top is almost ready for the quilting frame. It’s not done yet. So much happens in the quilting. But, soon….. soon…..


  • March 6, 2005: It’s Done! Hallelujah! Now you can figure out how long it really takes to make a quilt.

    My set of 24 Post Cards is finally complete.