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#31
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finished another floor mosaic
The Flower Bride started out as a QNM series, must be more than 10 years
ago. I wasn't planning to make it, but decided to do the appliqué flowers and garlands as a holiday take-along project because I had so little appliqué experience. But of course, having completed the hard (for me) part, and having nothing else to really use the pieces for, I started on the quilt. More or less. The center was a flea-market embroidery from around 1910, WOW showing a girl's face with a fancy bonnet and lots of little flowers. It had been lying in my stash for a while. The night after deciding to make the quilt, I dreamed about a fairy tale read in childhood, The Flower Bride. It goes something like this: There was once an old wizard (in Wales or Cornwall) who wanted a wife like other men had, someone to tend his house, cook hot dinners and praise his cleverness, etc. But none of the local ladies were interested. So the wizard decided to make himself a bride out of flowers. He gathered together a huge pile of flowers in the dark of the moon, shaped them into the form of a woman, and spoke the words of power. And there she was, eyes blue as gentians, cheeks like rose petals, etc. But he must have put in too many wild flowers, because as soon as the flower bride heard the wizard's offer, she changed herself into an owl and flew away. So the embroidered panel went into the center, and the blocks used up just about every bit of small flower print in the scrap basket. It took forever to find an owl for the corner. Sorry this ended up so long! But you asked. Roberta in D "Idahoqltr" schrieb im Newsbeitrag oups.com... You do beautiful work! I am impressed with the Flower Bride quilt too. What is it's story? |
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#32
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finished another floor mosaic
Howdy!
Wow! And even more gorgeous up close and in person. ;-) (Did we check the bag to make sure it was all there before you left the hotel in Munich? I think we did... .) Absolutely gorgeous. Ragmop/Sandy "Roberta Zollner" wrote in message ... And you can see the photo he http://community.webshots.com/album/151241728OelHwe It's the San Marco South Transept. I followed the group's advice on the border, and I'm pleased with how it came out! Roberta in D |
#33
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finished another floor mosaic
Roberta said:
The Flower Bride. It goes something like this: There was once an old wizard (in Wales or Cornwall) who wanted a wife like other men had, someone to tend his house, cook hot dinners and praise his cleverness, etc. But none of the local ladies were interested. So the wizard decided to make himself a bride out of flowers. He gathered together a huge pile of flowers in the dark of the moon, shaped them into the form of a woman, and spoke the words of power. And there she was, eyes blue as gentians, cheeks like rose petals, etc. But he must have put in too many wild flowers, because as soon as the flower bride heard the wizard's offer, she changed herself into an owl and flew away. Wasn't her name Blouddewed, or something like that? I think I may have heard an alternate ending, too, but that was years ago. Something like the man got the girl, but he did something wrong and lost her, with all of the flowers scattering. I'd have to look it up. Anastasia --who used to be up on her Welsh/Celtic England fairy tales. |
#34
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finished another floor mosaic
What a wonderful story and idea for a quilt. I can't wait to see the quilt.
-- http://community.webshots.com/user/snigdibbly SNIGDIBBLY ~e~ " / \ http://members.ebay.com/aboutme/snigdibbly. http://www.ebaystores.com/snigdibbly...ox&refid=store "Roberta Zollner" wrote in message ... The Flower Bride started out as a QNM series, must be more than 10 years ago. I wasn't planning to make it, but decided to do the appliqué flowers and garlands as a holiday take-along project because I had so little appliqué experience. But of course, having completed the hard (for me) part, and having nothing else to really use the pieces for, I started on the quilt. More or less. The center was a flea-market embroidery from around 1910, WOW showing a girl's face with a fancy bonnet and lots of little flowers. It had been lying in my stash for a while. The night after deciding to make the quilt, I dreamed about a fairy tale read in childhood, The Flower Bride. It goes something like this: There was once an old wizard (in Wales or Cornwall) who wanted a wife like other men had, someone to tend his house, cook hot dinners and praise his cleverness, etc. But none of the local ladies were interested. So the wizard decided to make himself a bride out of flowers. He gathered together a huge pile of flowers in the dark of the moon, shaped them into the form of a woman, and spoke the words of power. And there she was, eyes blue as gentians, cheeks like rose petals, etc. But he must have put in too many wild flowers, because as soon as the flower bride heard the wizard's offer, she changed herself into an owl and flew away. So the embroidered panel went into the center, and the blocks used up just about every bit of small flower print in the scrap basket. It took forever to find an owl for the corner. Sorry this ended up so long! But you asked. Roberta in D "Idahoqltr" schrieb im Newsbeitrag oups.com... You do beautiful work! I am impressed with the Flower Bride quilt too. What is it's story? |
#35
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finished another floor mosaic
Yes, it's a Welsh tale, her name was Blodeuwedd (pronounced blod-eh-with). The story was a part of the 'Mabinogion'. It's a fairly complicated story which ends with Blodeuwedd being turned into an owl for treachery. The Mabinogion is a really good read if you can get hold of a copy (shouldn't be too hard). In message , Teacher Gal writes Roberta said: The Flower Bride. It goes something like this: There was once an old wizard (in Wales or Cornwall) who wanted a wife like other men had, someone to tend his house, cook hot dinners and praise his cleverness, etc. But none of the local ladies were interested. So the wizard decided to make himself a bride out of flowers. He gathered together a huge pile of flowers in the dark of the moon, shaped them into the form of a woman, and spoke the words of power. And there she was, eyes blue as gentians, cheeks like rose petals, etc. But he must have put in too many wild flowers, because as soon as the flower bride heard the wizard's offer, she changed herself into an owl and flew away. Wasn't her name Blouddewed, or something like that? I think I may have heard an alternate ending, too, but that was years ago. Something like the man got the girl, but he did something wrong and lost her, with all of the flowers scattering. I'd have to look it up. Anastasia --who used to be up on her Welsh/Celtic England fairy tales. -- Jo P Malvern UK "I have not failed, I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work" ~Thomas Edison |
#36
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finished another floor mosaic
Treachery! It's been a good 50 years since I read the story in a book of
fairy tales for little kids, but obviously they edited out a lot of the dire bits so as not to scare young readers! Roberta in D "Jo Pender" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... Yes, it's a Welsh tale, her name was Blodeuwedd (pronounced blod-eh-with). The story was a part of the 'Mabinogion'. It's a fairly complicated story which ends with Blodeuwedd being turned into an owl for treachery. The Mabinogion is a really good read if you can get hold of a copy (shouldn't be too hard). In message , Teacher Gal writes Roberta said: The Flower Bride. It goes something like this: There was once an old wizard (in Wales or Cornwall) who wanted a wife like other men had, someone to tend his house, cook hot dinners and praise his cleverness, etc. But none of the local ladies were interested. So the wizard decided to make himself a bride out of flowers. He gathered together a huge pile of flowers in the dark of the moon, shaped them into the form of a woman, and spoke the words of power. And there she was, eyes blue as gentians, cheeks like rose petals, etc. But he must have put in too many wild flowers, because as soon as the flower bride heard the wizard's offer, she changed herself into an owl and flew away. Wasn't her name Blouddewed, or something like that? I think I may have heard an alternate ending, too, but that was years ago. Something like the man got the girl, but he did something wrong and lost her, with all of the flowers scattering. I'd have to look it up. Anastasia --who used to be up on her Welsh/Celtic England fairy tales. -- Jo P Malvern UK "I have not failed, I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work" ~Thomas Edison |
#37
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finished another floor mosaic
All the bits were there! It was about half quilted when you saw it, took me
ages to get it done because other projects kept interfering. Roberta in D " Ellison" schrieb im Newsbeitrag . net... Howdy! Wow! And even more gorgeous up close and in person. ;-) (Did we check the bag to make sure it was all there before you left the hotel in Munich? I think we did... .) Absolutely gorgeous. Ragmop/Sandy "Roberta Zollner" wrote in message ... And you can see the photo he http://community.webshots.com/album/151241728OelHwe It's the San Marco South Transept. I followed the group's advice on the border, and I'm pleased with how it came out! Roberta in D |
#38
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finished another floor mosaic
You are one talented lady!!!!
Melissa in NJ -- Pics of My Quilts: http://community.webshots.com/user/quiltngryhndlady Quilt Something for Yourself! -- Remove STOPCRAP to reply -- "Roberta Zollner" wrote in message ... And you can see the photo he http://community.webshots.com/album/151241728OelHwe It's the San Marco South Transept. I followed the group's advice on the border, and I'm pleased with how it came out! Roberta in D |
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