
Design a crib-size quilt with at least one nursery rhyme. (Crib
size is approximately 42"- 45" wide and 60" long.)
- Barb Vlack
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Quilt 1 |
Quilt 2 |
Quilt 3 |
Quilt 4 |
Barb Vlack |
Barb Vlack |
Nancy Anderson |
Nancy Anderson |
St. Charles, IL USA Designed for clubEQ challenge for July, 2008: Nursery Rhymes! Applique blocks from the EQ6 block library were combined to create the center motif. |
St. Charles, IL USA Designed for clubEQ challenge for July, 2008: Nursery Rhymes! Applique blocks from the EQ6 block library were converted to redwork with the thread tool. This is a nursery rhyme that many American children have played with for generations. Today it might be called "politically incorrect" because it describes violence toward children. Often I say this rhyme and conveniently forget the concluding lines. There was an old woman, |
I used mostly applique blocks and motifs
from the Library. |
Nursery Rhymes. |
Quilt 5 |
Quilt 6 |
Quilt 7 |
Quilt 8 |
Kari Schell |
Claudia Chang |
Angie Roux |
Carol Baldry |
Brooklyn Park, MN Come to the window, |
From Taiwan |
Binghamton, NY I had a lot of fun importing and tracing clip art. |
Davenport, IA |
Quilt 9 |
Quilt 10 |
Quilt 11 |
Quilt 12 |
Carol Baldry |
Barbara Gilstad |
C.M.Verbiest |
C.M.Verbiest |
Davenport, IA |
Sing a song of sixpence, This nursery rhyme was one of my favorites when I was a small child.
I felt so proud of myself when I could recite all four stanzas by myself.
Whoever would have guessed then that I'd be designing a quilt to highlight
its theme today? Not me! But that was what seems like a thousand years
ago when we never imagined we'd have a wonderful tool like EQ to play
with either. . |
A part of the Netherlands all the people
lives beneath sea-level. Also the the town Amsterdam. Before in this
part by starting to build new houses first they drives reinforced concretes
in the ground . In this song it told you that:
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The song of seven frogs. Is going about seven frogs in a ditch by the farmershouse . There are a lot of more couplets with a good ending |
Quilt 13 |
Quilt 14 |
Quilt 15 |
Quilt 16 |
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Charlotte Jones |
Christiane Wipplinger |
Carol E. Skrube |
© Daphne Stewart |
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Ramona, CA |
This is a german nursery rhyme,which means: |
Sheboygan,Wi. |
Lucy Locket lost her pocket, In this English nursery rhyme, Lucy Locket was a barmaid at the Cock, in Fleet Street, London, sometime in the 1700's. Lucy discarded one of her lovers (her 'pocket') when she had run through all his money. Kitty Fisher, a noted courtesan, took up with him even though he had no money. The rhyme also taunts Lucy because a 'pocket' was what prostitutes kept their money in. They would tie it to their thigh with a ribbon. I found the entire rhyme in "Ring Around the Moon" (©1977) by Edith Fowke -- a delightful book. Sunnyside, Washington |
Quilt 17 |
Quilt 18 |
Quilt 19 |
Quilt 20 |
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© Daphne Stewart |
Dianne Gronfors |
D. Katherine Willis |
Hammond K. |
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The refrain of this nursery rhyme ditty is: Then the birds of the air In the five verses, the Sparrow admits to doing the foul deed with his bow and arrow; the Fly saw him die with his little eye; the Fish caught his blood with his little dish; the Owl dug his grave with his paddock and trowel; and the Rook was the chief mourner because he can croak. The background of the story identifies Sir Robert Walpole as Robin -- Robin being a pet name for Robert. The 'death' is not his actual death but satire for his spectacular political rise, fall and then resignation in 1742. But some still say this Robin is the mythical (or not) Robin Hood. Sunnyside, Washington |
Ontario, Canada |
Houston, Texas, USA "Miss Suzy" isn't a nursery rhyme, but it's a childhood treasure. To recreate the cover of this beloved book, I drew the characters as motifs in Patchdraw and set them on Layer 2 of a Custom Set quilt. The text was created with the Set Applique Text tool. So many wonderful fonts in this program! |
Why have one nursery rhyme when you can have a bunch of them? I was actually playing with a nursery rhyme quilt when I learned about the contest! A little motivation to TRY to clean this up a bit. The size isn't quite right though -- too big. |
Quilt 21 |
Quilt 22 |
Quilt 23 |
Quilt 24 |
Hammond K. |
Hélène Laparra |
Janet Bangs |
Janet Bangs |
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I've taken off one of the borders and adjusted the size of the blocks to make it the right size for the contest, but I think I'd personally make the "too big" one for a play blankie. :) |
For this famous French song for children, I drew the first boat of a famous French sailor (Eric Tabarly): the Pen Duick I. This year is the 10th anniversary of his death. Sun compass is from EQ libary. Cheers from France |
Guildford, England Mary, Mary, quite contrary The Mary in this nursery rhyme is thought to be Mary Queen of Scots. The "pretty maids all in a row" refer to her four ladies in waiting. |
Guildford, England Hush-a-bye baby, on the tree top, There seems to be an English and an American Indian origin to this nursery rhyme. I'll go with the English one, which suggests it dates from the time when women working in hop fields tied their babies' cradles to the branches of trees, allowing the wind to rock them to sleep. |
Quilt 25 |
Quilt 26 |
Quilt 27 |
Quilt 28 |
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Jolene Ficklin |
Jo Moury |
Jane Turgeon |
Judith Best |
Las Cruces, New Mexico This quilt was designed and constructed this month for an expected grandchild. It is applique, pieced and hand quilted as shown with red thread to indicated the filght pattern of the ladybugs and drangonflies. |
I'll gave y'all the "G" Rated
version of this Nursery Rhyme. If you want the R rarted one check out
nursery rhymes on Wikipedia! This was a fun challenge, both to intrpret
the rhymes we knew as kids and to see the meaning behind them. I also
learned a secret for keeping file sizes small. I colored this with fabric
as I usually would and saw 56 fabrics in the sketch AFTER I compressed
for email ... knew Andrea would shoot me!! So I started deleteing fabrics
from the sketchbook and said "Yes" when the prompt bounced
up and said I had used the fabric. I only kept the very soft background
fabrics and allowed EQ to select a color very similar to the print I
had selected. I wouldn't stitch it in solids, but it sure works for
design purposes. This is best viewed with the outline patches and blocks
turned off. |
Couldn't resist EQ Mouse going and Hickory Dickory Doc. Northeastern Ontario |
I had drawn some animals to put on the bottom of a
sweat shirt so I just drew a few more animals for MacDonald's farm,
added a barn and some flowers |
Quilt 29 |
Quilt 30 |
Quilt 31 |
Quilt 32 |
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Kevin K. |
Karen Neal |
Leanne Davis |
Baa Baa Black Sheep |
Aan original design Poor Humpty is the latest victim of the lousy American healthcare industry. |
Grand Ronde, OR Mythical Horses fabric |
Adelaide, South Australia |
Perth Western Australia The "Three bags full" block is an original. The "Little boy down the lane" uses the "Man" from the classic applique EQ library. The rest are just taken straight from the EQ libraries. Of course, the words are as follows: Baa, baa, black sheep, |
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