Adventures in Design: The Ultimate Visual Guide, 153 Spectacular Quilts, Activities & Exercises
By Joen Wolfrom
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About this ebook
Joen Wolfrom
Joen Wolfrom is a bestselling author who has lectured and taught throughout the world for more than 30 years on the topics of color, design, innovative fabric art, and quiltmaking. joenwolfrom.com
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Adventures in Design - Joen Wolfrom
Dream of Infinity, detail (full quilt on page 103)
Before Beginning
We live in a world surrounded by beautiful flawless examples of nature’s design elements and principles. As you learn, study, and experiment with these fascinating design concepts, the doors to an exciting world will open before you. Enjoy each step of this amazing exploration, as you work from one chapter to the next.
In this book, Section One provides you with an in-depth look at each element of design. Section Two discusses the principles of design—those wonderful strategies and rules that help you create fantastic designs. Section Three features extra design information that is uniquely pertinent to quiltmakers and patchworkers. At the end of each chapter are activities and exercises that are relevant to the topics discussed. They are provided to give you opportunities to expand and explore the many components of design, as well as to become better acquainted with your personal design style and preferences.
Consider beginning your own artist’s notebook or design journal. As you read this book and work through the activities and exercises, keep notes about ideas, images, or pictures that inspire you, as well as your own design ideas and comments. This notebook should be a great personal design reference.
Contributors Who Have Shared Their Works of Art
You may spend many hours absorbed in investigating the wondrous, imaginative designs between the covers of this book. Explore the works of the artists for ideas, inspiration, and reference. Many captions include invaluable insight into how specific design principles have been used.
Because you relate to art uniquely, it is important to have a broad spectrum of designs for you to refer to while exploring your design ideas. For this reason, I have gathered as many different works of art as possible to illustrate nature’s design concepts. I am indebted to the artists and craftspersons who have agreed to share their talents and beautiful designs. Their generosity has been overwhelming.
Explore the talents and additional works of these artists by visiting their websites to view their other works and products. Contributors are from the United States, Canada, Australia, England, Northern Ireland, the Netherlands, Germany, South Africa, France, and Japan. Some contributors show the influence of their native land or other nations with which they have had close ties, such as the Republic of Ireland, Denmark, and Russia. Within the vast, geographically diverse United States and Canada, artists reside in many states and several provinces. Therefore, you will see a diverse selection of design styles and artistic flavors.
A Note about the Artwork and Illustrations
This book includes artwork in two galleries and within the pages of all but the first chapter. Artwork has been placed within a chapter because it is relevant to the discussion in that particular chapter. However, almost all of the artwork is relevant to more than one topic. Therefore, you will find within each chapter many references to artwork on a specific page in a gallery or in another chapter. If you do not like thumbing through the pages to view the referenced examples, do not feel obliged to do so. Give yourself permission not to take part in viewing these references if it bothers you. However, if you want to get the most out of the concepts presented, I highly recommend that you view the referenced artwork in the galleries and chapters as you read.
It is with great excitement that I share this book with you. I hope you enjoy its offerings. Happy designing!
THE CALM AFTER THE STORM by Inge Mardal and Steen Hougs, Chantilly, France, 49″ × 49″, 2009
This stunning piece is artfully balanced in its setting. In this realistic imagery, the balance has been beautifully achieved by a triangular structure that uses the three raincoat images for its endpoints. This structure allows our eyes to move from one figure to the other in the boat, then down to the reflected figure in the water, and back up to the first figure in the boat in a clockwise directional flow. The intricate quilting by Inge creates further interest and dimension. The broken-up reflection connotes movement through gentle wave action.
I’VE BEEN TO MECCA by Robin M. Haller, Carbondale, Illinois, 102″ × 82″, 2001
Robin used the historic North Wind block design to create I’ve Been to Mecca. This quilt uses value as its featured element, moving from rich dark hues to softly colored light hues.
FIVE APPLES by Pamela Mostek, Cheney, Washington, 47″ × 29″, 2008
Pamela, inspired by the Renaissance painters and their use of chiaroscuro (using the strong value contrast of light and dark—clear/obscure—as the dominant means to define three-dimensional shapes), created Five Apples, which illustrates the beautiful effect of light and shadow in this pictorial representation. The use of an uneven number of apples allows our eyes to find a focus point, which provides visual comfort. Pamela’s fabric selection allows for exceptional textural effects. Luster is created through the use of gradual value change. Five Apples won both a judge’s award and a juror’s award at the 2008 Association of Pacific Northwest Quilters show in Seattle, Washington.
STAR OF WONDER designed and quilted by Linda Crouch-McCreadie, Jonesborough, Tennessee; pieced by Renny Jaeger; 70″ × 90″, 2010
By putting the Star Echoes block in a diagonal setting, Linda gave the star a beautiful facelift (page 123). The golden four-pointed star appears to be behind the other star layers because it is lighter and grayer (more toned) than the other stars. To further enhance the quilt, Linda created a border that allows the central design to be featured.
HOUSE THROUGH ARCH by Lenore Crawford, Midland, Michigan, 38″ × 44″, 2006
This impressionistic scene brilliantly uses value to great effect to create the marvelous illusion of the house through the arch. The repeating curves in the design provide harmony, rhythm, and unity. The dark left side is counterbalanced by the beautiful coppery strong archway and the creamy foreground wall on the right. Notice how Lenore helps balance the darkness of the door with a dark brown vertical shadow on the right side. The flowers flow beautifully through the design. This scene is filled with wonderful textures created by Lenore’s selection of fabrics. The design is made from 2″ pieced squares.
TROPICAL RADIANCE by Rachel Wetzler, St. Charles, Illinois, 64″ × 64″, 2008
This quilt’s analogous color plan provides natural harmony. Repetition of the four-pointed stars and their echoing throughout the piece brings unity to the design. The inner diagonal border offers interesting contrast. Notice how this design radiates from the center, creating beautiful balance. This quilt was inspired by the traditional quilt design The Palm, but was altered for paper piecing.
WATER CURTAIN WITH ORCHIDS by Amanda Richardson, Cornwall, England, 78″ × 60″, 2006
Water Curtain with Orchids is beautifully realistic in its garden interpretation. Amanda was able to create wonderful textures by using a wide variety of fabrics. Notice how your eyes move in a circular clockwise manner through this design. Also, notice how the large stone at the bottom right is counterbalanced by the brightly colored orchids, the water curtain, and the white orchids. This close view of a magnificent garden scene illustrates many design principles with regard to both unity and asymmetrical balance. After becoming more familiar with these principles, revisit this artwork to observe further how Amanda effectively brought balance and unity to this lovely garden scene.
AUTUMN WALK by Noriko Endo, Tokyo, Japan, 90″ × 48″, 2002
Noriko’s textured landscapes are breathtaking works of art, and Autumn Walk is particularly inviting with its analogous fall colors so effectively drawing us into the scene. The oblique lines of the trees carry our eyes down the pathway. The stunningly textured leaves are ablaze with colors that subtly reiterate the coloring of the angled tree-lined pathway. The dark brown tree trunks offer richly colored contrast. This is definitely an autumn walk that you don’t want to miss! (If you are mesmerized by Noriko’s use of texture, refer to her book Confetti Naturescapes.) Notice that the brilliance of the textured leaves is most intense in the foreground. As the trees move down the pathway, the colors become more subdued. Also notice that the autumnal hues on the ground are toned rather than brilliant. Capturing the subtle nuances in nature is one of Noriko’s wonderful talents.
Clearly there is no one right way to create a design that fascinates or satisfies everyone. There is, however, an established manner of working that increases the beauty and success of any design. You can achieve great design success by observing nature at work and using her as your visual guide. Adventures in Design is a presentation of nature’s design basics to help you build a design foundation from which you can develop your personal style.
It is a dramatic turning point in our artistic pathway when we come to the realization that a design that beckons us to pause and admire its beauty was not haphazardly created. Instead, its magical draw is a blend of imagination and nature’s design basics. Knowing these wonderful design secrets gives you the freedom to create designs with amazing success.
Being Your Artistic Self
Designing your own art, no matter the medium, is an expression of your creative soul. Your instinctive design style emerges from a combination of your innate personality, lifetime experiences, surroundings, reflections, and sensibilities.
No one piece of art or single style is right for everyone. It does not matter, then, if your taste differs from that of others. Most assuredly, it is of little consequence or importance if you find yourself alone in your likes. Recognizing what styles of art you want to create and surround yourself with is one of the most important gifts you can give yourself.
Because you use design to express yourself and tell your visual story, it is important to know what captures your spirit, what makes you excited, and what you think is beautiful or stunning.
You should recognize whether you prefer busyness and complexity or clean lines and simplicity, gentle or dramatic hues, sharp or soft edges, or angular or curved shapes, to name a few preferences. To recognize your preferences and innate style, it is important for you to actively view all kinds of art; this will broaden your scope and give your imagination a banquet of ideas to feast on.
CREATING BEAUTIFUL ART
All beautiful art is made up of design elements. By name, these elements are line, direction, shape (form), color, value, texture, proportion, and scale. Consider these elements as your personal design team. Each of these team members will play a part in your design. When you begin your design, you will decide which element plays the leading role, which one has a secondary position, and in what way the other elements may support or enhance the design. As the designer, your role is to manage these individual team players so that they blend into a beautiful visual statement.
In design, if the elements are allowed to do whatever they want, there is visual noise—better known as visual chaos. One element cannot be allowed to become so distracting that it overwhelms the other members of the design team. Two elements competing against each other for attention are distracting. As the designer, it is your task to determine how the team members play together; which one to feature; which one, if any, is a secondary player; and which ones simply support and enhance.
As with any team, there are rules and strategies to help you succeed. In art, these rules and strategies are commonly referred to as the principles of design. Unity is a key principle in a successful design, but it needs help from other principles to exist. These ancillary principles that help create unity and visually strengthen a design are repetition, rhythm, harmony, variation, contrast, bridging, proximity, movement, and dominance. Some are needed in every design while others are included when invited. Balance and focus, two additional principles, have tremendous power and responsibility in the visual success of a design. Although they both can vary in their nature, their existence in a successful design is essential.
Understanding the elements and principles gives you design power. Knowing how to use them in interesting ways allows you to achieve strong visual success.
With these thoughts in mind, it’s now time to begin this adventure in design.
How do you begin a design? What decisions come first? It’s much like the question of the chicken and the egg. Although your inspiration may come from any one of the elements of design (page 13), the essence of your design most likely begins with line—the element that provides the simplest, most effective way to make your design possible.
Line can be a star in its own right without any help from other elements. Pen-and-ink drawings and cartoons are excellent examples of line creating visual suggestions. It’s amazing how different lines can create different imagery, as shown to the right.
Fat, thin, short, long, curved, straight, jagged—there are so many choices with which to interpret a design. Line is like a chameleon in the way it can change. Its interpretive powers are limitless. Line is present in every design, yet it changes its character and style from one design to another. It can evoke a sense of excitement, curiosity, apprehension, awe, power, calmness, perfection, or peace. Movement or stillness, strength or weakness, happiness or anger—all can be shown through line.
A delicate line; a short pointillist stroke; a strong, wide brushstroke—all create different visual effects.