Showing posts with label Lorrie Faith Cranor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lorrie Faith Cranor. Show all posts

Thursday, July 28, 2016

Fun with strips: Interleave quilts

Lorrie Faith Cranor specializes in the application of mathematical and computing skills to quilt design. Dr. Cranor is Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University and an innovator in the modern quilting world (for our 2010 post on Lorrie Cranor's quilts, click here.)  Her complex-looking Interleave quilts are pieced using a quilt-as-you-go technique in which thin strips of fabric are sewn to a foundation. The resulting strips are 1/2" wide.

Please note: We're selling beautiful quilt books at low introductory prices on e-Bay!

Interleave #4: Sine of Spring, 24″x31″, by Lorrie Faith Cranor


Lorrie Cranor's free tutorial inspired members of the Imagine That! Mini Group* of the Diablo Valley Quilters' Guild to create their own dynamic Interleave quilts.  Their fabulous, colorful creations were exhibited at the 2015 DVQG show.



(this quilt was hung around the corner of a booth, hence the curved appearance)

(this quilt was hung around the corner of a booth, hence the curved appearance)





(this quilt was hung around the corner of a booth, hence the curved appearance)

Note: To make it easier to stitch perfectly even strips, Lorrie has designed foundation fabric with a printed 1/4" grid, now available at Spoonflower!

Image credits:  Photos were taken by Quilt Inspiration.  The members of the Imagine That! Group who participated in the Interleave mini quilt challenge were:  Carol Wattles, Pamela Appel, Cindy Slavick, Patty Flynn, Rosemary Patterson, Lois Russell, Karen Mack, Faith Andresen, Sandra Brown and Linda Harding; led by Rosemary Patterson.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Engineering and quilts, by Lorrie Faith Cranor

Designing a quilt typically involves drafting a plan, calculating quantities of material, measuring and cutting, and constructing the quilt. In fact, in terms of its elements, it's like engineering (with fabric). It's a bit rare, though, to come across a professor of engineering who is also an outstanding quilter. Such is the case for Lorrie Faith Cranor, who is Associate Professor of Computer Science, and Engineering & Public Policy, at Carnegie Mellon University. Her hobby is quilting, and her quilts have appeared on the covers of scientific magazines and books. We're featuring several of them today.

Painted Sun, 2003, 24" x 24"



"Painted Sun" was featured on the cover of The Journal of Organic Chemistry in 2007. The quilt is composed of 16 blocks that are all the same, but rotated in different directions. We're fascinated by the unique geometric design. Note that the individual fabric shapes are either triangles or asymmetrical 4-sided objects (quadrilaterals). However, the irregular shapes create regular patterns. The center 4 blocks come together to form a diamond, with rays that radiate out from the center, like the sun. (At the end of this post, we'll analyze the blocks further*).

Monkeying around and around, 2003, 58" x 50"



To construct "Monkeying around and around", Lorrie started with a monkey wrench block (such as this one) and kept adding more triangles, then used Photoshop to give the whole thing a "twist". The curved shapes and subtle shading help to create the appearance of a three-dimensional spiral. The piece is heavily quilted, adding to the surface texture.

Thesis II (detail view), 2003, 56" x 56"



"Thesis II" was featured on the cover of Rethinking Rights and Regulations: Institutional Responses to New Communications Technologies, a book edited by Lorrie Faith Cranor and Steven S. Wildman. Lorrie placed the colors so as to achieve fairly strong contrast and bring out the patterns of the design. Many different colors of thread were used in the quilting. The "windows" were machine reverse-appliqued in a shiny translucent pink fabric after the quilting was completed.

Circular Reasoning, 2002, 37" x 37"


"Circular reasoning" was featured on the cover of The Routledge Handbook of Sociolinguistics Around the World. We love the pop-art feel of this quilt. The background is a blue grid with watercolor quilt style gradations, while the foreground is the concentric circles, which appear to hover in space. For embellishment, Lorrie used yarn for couching around the circles, and perl cotton thread for some big stitch hand quilting (for a view of the fabulous detail, click here).

*From octagon to "Painted Sun": We were fascinated by the geometric shapes in Painted Sun, and curious as to how the blocks were constructed. According to Lorrie, the design was generated by drawing an octagon; connecting all of the points; chopping off the top, bottom, left, and right points; and dividing the remaining square into quarters. At first, we couldn't quite see it. After a bit of reverse engineering, though, you can see that it is both logical and ingenious:



Quilt images, courtesy of Lorrie Faith Cranor.

Traditional monkey wrench block example, see Block Crazy.

Octagon block analysis, by Quilt Inspiration.
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