Go read this. It's beautiful.
And do subscribe to their blog. You will not be disappointed
(this is about sewing and only needing one quilt)
https://spitalfieldslife.com/2021/08/29/my-quilt-x/
Go read this. It's beautiful.
And do subscribe to their blog. You will not be disappointed
(this is about sewing and only needing one quilt)
https://spitalfieldslife.com/2021/08/29/my-quilt-x/
I'm not sure what to make of this, so I have questions for you, dear reader.
https://www.spoonflower.com/en/petal-solids-swatch-book
My solution to this has always been sampling a color and creating a matching solid/coordinating print, but I am doing that for myself (which is dead easy thanks) and I am guaranteed the exact color I want, without really thinking about it. Also printed in the same method so it will fade at the same rate.
At the moment, I need a coordinating solid or print for a fabric I purchased from a major manufacturer. I am operating on the 'one for me' thinking I am so fond of, and am not using the design but sampling the color for a checkerboard pattern. AND ITS NOT FOR SALE.
If you were doing heirloom quilting, I don't know that you'd use Spoony, but if you did, wouldn't you use the same greige goods all the way through, with the same ink application?
And does this mean customers are going to be able to identify the hex colors in the primary design they are considering? Or will these be linked on the customer facing design page? Or are we being primed to buy the sampler?
I'm no quilter, but you quilty kids out there, is this something you were hoping for?
It's been a tough week. Going to do some sewing to feel better. Even trying and failing to fix a misguided make is better than being inside my head right now.