Showing posts with label sampler quilt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sampler quilt. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 19, 2021

Seasons of Life Quilt by Sandra L. Mollon

 

I love applique quilts and have made several applique sampler quilts. I am always eager to learn new techniques. 

When I saw Sandra L. Mollon's Seasons of Life Quilt: Techniques and Patterns for 13 Baltimore Album Quilt Blocks it was so beautiful I wanted to learn more. I loved the seasonal blocks, the variety of patterns, the doves and vases of flowers, and how she added adorable small animals- bunny, squirrel, and hedgehog--into the blocks.

Mollon learned Album style applique, as I did, from Elly Sienkiewicz's Baltimore Beauties and Beyond books. Mollon spent two years "diligently working away on" learning hand applique and hand quilting skills. She then earned a Viewer's Choice ribbon.



Seasons of Life by Sandra Mollon

Her Seasons of Life quilt is in the permanent collection at the National Quilt Museum.

Now, Sandra offers all she has learned over her years of quiltmaking and teaching in this wonderful book. 

She explains how to use successfully use silk fabrics in applique and the tools that will aid you. Learn how to make prepared-edge applique and glue for placing the pieces.

You will find detailed instructions with photographs showing how to make pieced leaves, folded rosebuds, rickrack flowers, ruched roses, yo yo flowers, and beaded berries. I love her idea for fringed flower centers and can't wait to try it. 

Learn how to embellish your applique with embroidery stitches and how to use ink and colored pencils for added dimension.

Student quilts illustrate ways to make your Seasons of Life sampler your own. Some kept Mollon's medallion layout while others used twelve blocks for a smaller quilt.

Flora and Fauna by Lora Zamk
Remembering Mary by Judy Green
Flora, Fauna, Butterflies, and Bugs by Beth Butura
Seasons of Life by Tina McConnell

Each block pattern is presented with a photograph of her original block and a detail of the applique. She describes the fabrics she used and her method of assembly and embellishment. 

These small photos don't do the quilt justice! Visit the publisher website where you can click on the photos to enlarge them at 


Mollon's masters degree in Biology from Central Michigan University shows in her eye for detail and precision in recreating in the flora and fauna in the quilt.

These patterns are challenging. But if you follow the instructions, you will create a drop-dead gorgeous quilt! Individual blocks could also be made for pillow tops. Or, make wall hangings with the three blocks from one season, or a four block quilt using one block from each season.

I received a free ebook from the publisher in exchange for a fair and unbiased review.

Discover more of Mollon's quilts at her gallery on her website:

Seasons of Life Quilt: Techniques & Patterns for 13 Baltimore Album Quilt Blocks
Sandra Mollon Book ( $29.95 )
 eBook ( $23.99 )
112 pages + one 16-page pullout
ISBN: 9781617459610
UPC:  734817-113966
eISBN: 9781617459627

from the publisher

Take on your next quilting feat with a champion quilt! From expert quilter Sandra Mollon, recreate the “Seasons of Life” quilt, which is now a part of a permanent collection of the National Quilt Museum in Paducah, Kentucky. Learn techniques for incorporating unusual fabrics, creating dimensional flowers, as well as shading with inks and embellishing blocks. In true “Baltimore” style, each of the 13 blocks features a different tribute to nature in highly stylized fashion: baskets, wreaths, flowers, leaves and vines, and small garden or forest animals. Appliqué each block for your very own stunning creation.

Learn tons of techniques with appliqué, embroidery, ribbon work, beading, and more!
Includes full-sized pattern and instructions to the award-winning “Seasons of Life” quilt
Make 13 unique blocks with a pieced and scalloped border encircling the blocks


Meet Sandra
Sandra is an award winning quilter living in Northern California.  She has been quilting for over 30 years, and teaching for 18 years.  

Sandra began as a traditional quilter,  specializing in hand appliqué for a couple of decades.  You can see a few of my quilts in the book, “500 Traditional Quilts” by Lark Publications. She is currently working on a book to be released in 2021 with C & T Publication for her original designed quilt, “Seasons of Life.

She has had many quilts juried into large international and regional juried shows.  Her traditional quilt, “Season’s of Life”  won a major award in 2019 both at Road to California (Outstanding Large Quilt), and at the 2019 AQS Paducah show it won a purchase award and is in the National Quilt Museum in Paducah, KY.  

Additionally her work in art quilting has wonderful many place awards, a “Best Pictorial” award and a 3rd place award in 2019 at PIQF, a 1st Place in Wall at MQX 2019,  Best of Show Award and 1st place at the RCQG show in Sacramento Ca, 2018, and a 3rd place at Road to California in 2020.  

She enjoys teaching as well as working on her art, and loves to travel and meet new people.

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Jane Austen Family Album Update

I am just about caught up with the Jane Austen Family Album weekly blocks. I did Lucky Pieces for Jane's Aunt Leigh-Perrot.
I laid the finished blocks on a bed to see how they look. I can't wait to get a design wall up! I have really missed one. 

The colors really are not showing up very well. The fabrics are French General, mostly Panier de Fleurs fat quarters I picked up a year or so ago. I added the red stripe and several greens and a cream background fabric from my stash. The gray background of the prints show up greenish in the lighting.






Hopefully before the week is over I will do block 17 and be up-to-date. There will be 36 blocks in all. Of course I have no idea yet what I will do with them! But I am having great fun working on a sampler quilt.

Work is nearly over with carpet tiling the finished basement, and the IKEA Hemnes bookcases are all up. Another week and that room should be settled. THEN we can work on the unfinished side, which now is piles of boxes all over. And when we dig out the corner with the fuse box we can call in the electrician. We have taken five more trips to the thrift shop with things to donate. 

Retirement so far seems to be  hard work!