Publisher: Amy Marson
Creative Director: Gailen Runge
Art Director / Book Designer: Kristy Zacharias
Editor: Karla Menaugh
Technical Editors: Susan Hendrickson and Carolyn Aune
Production Coordinator: Rue Flaherty
Production Editor: Katie Van Amburg
Illustrator: Tim Manibusan
Photo Assistant: Mary Peyton Peppo
Photo Stylist: Lauren Toker
When I first met Julie Creus, she was participating in one of my workshops at Houston Quilt Festival. She stood out from the many workshop students because she presented me with a unique presenta carefully washed and ironed collection of shirt stripes bound together with a buttoned cuff. These charity shop finds were of many color combinations, some fine, some wonderfully bold.
I love recycled and found materials and used this collection in a quilt of patched stripes. The perception she showed alerted me to her imaginative use of prints.
I also began to tune into her genius for using prints for three-dimensional objects in a witty and aesthetic way.
Im delighted she is sharing this talent with us all in her first book, and I have no doubt it will reach a large and appreciative audience of textile lovers. It is thrilling and informative for me to see how she uses my prints, revealing quite a new insight into each fabric she uses.
KAFFE FASSETT
Julie Creuss delightful and ingenious way of playing with fabrics gives an imaginative, bold, and new look on color, shape, and form. Julies original projects make me, as a fabric artist, feel proud of the way she incorporates my fabrics into her charming works of art.
BRANDON MABLY, THE KAFFE FASSETT COLLECTIVE
Acknowledgments
To Cecilia Koppmann in Argentina, for her support and encouragement early on when La Todera was just an idea.
To Margaret Travis, who most generously shared all of her knowledge about the pattern business and got me started in my dream job of pattern designer.
To my pals in the Orlando Modern Quilt Guildthanks for putting up with my crazy projects, helping to try them, and cheering me along the way!
Many thanks to all of the generous companies that contributed supplies for this bookyouve never seen someone so excited to see the UPS man every day!
And to all the wonderful folks at C&T who encouraged me every step of the way with this book! Most especially, my editor Karla Menaugh, with whom I was so fortuitously paired!
Wherever this journey takes us, Ill always have a place in my heart for all of you!
Dedication
This book is dedicated to my family
My ever-so-encouraging husband, Santiago, who has such amazing MacGyver skills and impeccable taste. (And Argentine good looks to boot!) He is sooo patient about my crafty messes. Although one afternoon, after a particularly rabid day of crafting, he threatened to help me clean up my scraps on the living room floorwith a leaf blower....
My two ber creative, smart, and patient children, Olivia and Liam, who are also the best helpers in the world. My business truly wouldnt be where it is today without them.
My mom, who taught mean incorrigible student at firstto sew. And she supported all of my creative endeavors, from my first crayon mural on the kitchen floor at age two, to allowing all my crazy, messy childhood craft experiments, to helping me sew models for my patterns and talking up my patterns and fabric to anyone within earshot. :)
Introduction
My mom recently sent me a box of things shes saveddrawings and things Id made as a kid. In it was a spiral-bound stack of notecards filled with instructions and illustrations for kids craft projectsmy first crafty book!
It brought me down memory lane of the hours Id spend at the public library, almost magnetically drawn to the craft-book section. There was a certain series of books I particularly admiredThe Family Creative Workshop. Id check them out a tall stack at a time, over and over, studying the pictures and the way the authors communicated the craft instructions and how the book designer pulled all of the photos, illustrations, and copy together to achieve a cohesive book design. There was a huge range of crafts in those books. It wasnt a certain craft that intrigued me; it was the communication of those ideas. A book just seemed the most genius way to communicate to a limitless audience through strategic photos and carefully written and edited instructions!
I remember a certain vacation spent at my grandmothers condo. Red Gram took me to a store with an office supply section, and I scoured the options for a book formatthe spiral-bound notecard stack. Although I didnt fill up every one of those cards with crafts, I see that I must have spent the greater part of that trip on my grandmothers porch, writing down ideas and drawing illustrations in felt-tip pens! Gram was an innovator herselfI still have the homemade patterns she invented for a special neck pillow and for petticoat pants to wear under skirts to keep your undies from showing. Because of her own creativity, she was very supportive of me, and I remember her taking my project very seriously. :)
Red Gram, who fostered my love of making books
Grams parents, Annie and Michael. Family legend has it that Annie wasnt crazy about that photo and thought it needed flowers, so she painted them on the photo! She was a super flower fan. Red Gram, too. (Me three! My first pattern was a fabric flower.)
So there was the love of craft books. Then I followed a boyfriend into the graphic design program at college. The boyfriend didnt last, and neither did my graphic design careerI was bored designing catalog pages for others! Not to worry. The graphic design skills would serve me later.
Ive always been fascinated with three-dimensional fabric projectsbiscuit quilts, softies, folded fabric rugs, fabric flowers, things like that. Theres just something almost rebellious about making fabric do what you never thought it could! In fact, thats the basis of my business, La Todera Sewing and Craft Patterns. When I started it, there was really no other company devoted to fabric manipulation. I had a niche!
My pattern subjects are things I likeflowers, butterflies, and unusual animals. The subjects themselves come from the heart. I figure that if I design what I love, that will surely shine through and someone else will appreciate it.
Perhaps as a side effect of studying graphic design, Im obsessed with defining the essence of things, distilling an object down to the minimum elements for that object to still be recognizable. Then I set about identifying and re-creating the elements of that subject in fabric. What is it exactly that makes a zinnia a zinnia? Thick, rounded petals; graduated color; a round, layered center bud. What is the minimum sum of details that make a peacock a peacock? Wedge-shaped feathers in a fan shape, a slim body ending in a beak, and a head dress.
Then add in a bit of rebellion. Gotta have something differentsomething you cant buy, something in a scale youve never seen before, such as the .
Adventures in FabricLa Todera Style is the book I always wanted to buy. There are a few sewing books out there with fabric manipulation techniques, but mostly for clothing. Or perhaps there was only one technique to be learned.
Im leaving it all on the dance floor with this book. Every project has a special technique Ive never seen anywhere else. All of these projects are want-able, gift-able items that Ive been saving especially for this dream book of mine. I hope these projects light your fire for experimenting with fabric, too!
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