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| Josef Albers, Interaction of Color |
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| Josef Albers, Homage to the Square |
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| Josef Albers, Transparency |
Albers paintings are "quilterly", and to me they beg to be interpreted in fabric and thread. I am not trained in art, but I have ordered Josef Albers' influential book Interaction of Color with every expectation that it will serve as a primer for me in my experiments with color as a quilter while also helping me gain a greater understanding of the modernist aesthetic.
After finishing my Carolina Blues quilt top, I wanted to make a quilt back for it that used the same color scheme: a spectrum of dark and light blues paired with neutrals. Because my fabric purchases are predominantly scraps, remnants, and the occasional irresistible fat quarter bundle, I don't have a lot of yardage for single-fabric backings, and usually default to a pieced backing. The Josef Albers color study on the left, below, from Interaction of Color, seemed just the thing.
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| Josef Albers, Interaction of Color, v-3 |
I aimed for a simple rendering. That is, I didn't use Albers' piece to inspire a new design, but attempted to recreate his design in a different medium. My hope is that as I become more familiar with his work and the principles behind it, my own designs will use his work as a foundation rather than a template.
For this piece, I worked from an 8"x10" color print-out, pictured below.
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| My construction notes |
Based on my estimate of the amount of background fabric I would need and the amount I actually had, I set a scale in which 1 cm on the print-out would equal 2.6" in the quilt. I kept a calculator handy to help me gauge where to position each block and how much background fabric to put where. I determined that the blue blocks would be 8" x 32" finished or 8.5" by 32.5" cut. I used a protractor to measure angles in the original design and to replicate them in the positioning of the blocks. I made up my methods as I went along, which meant there were a lot of mistakes, and not all of the angles or block positions replicate those in Albers' original.
The overlapping of blue blocks created some particular construction challenges for me because I cut the blue blocks whole at the beginning of the project (a few were pieced because of the dimensions of the fabric remnants I had at hand). If I did a similar design in the future, I would plan to piece some of the blocks during construction to better accomodate the overlapping, particularly in the second block from the bottom and from the top.
As it happened, I did not have enough of the background fabric to make a quilt back for the Carolina Blues quilt, so I have decided to make this Homage to Albers into a quilt of its own. It does not want to lie quite flat (though as I look at this picture, I am hoping it isn't quite as puckered as it appears!), so I will need to make some tucks before I attempt to baste and quilt it, but I am still very happy with the results.
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| Pick Your Blue: Homage to Albers |



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