I find Leah Evan's map quilting approach very inspiring, especially her nontraditional quilt edges creating tension in the borders.
Friday, May 14, 2010
Rival Quilter
I find Leah Evan's map quilting approach very inspiring, especially her nontraditional quilt edges creating tension in the borders.
Introduction
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGfxt23kquYwENvtV105yBFU1CRxdVTsJGEM71subKnKgP1UFkA0Xh3rZ7Ff48OM_4azPhHjt7YCYC1E8PN1zon4xoTODE8RZoRkKG7isgGfvqQCcerfpZDJqpS6lB9Nag4c89zU0CBPI/s400/tulip.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj9_tgXbOeax9lYPH7w0r0m0YJh9VWY9cfUv8b97zK48TIr-kn8ZMqj4qjieSw6NUzP0DmmXwAKr7nZEjD2GS19iA1jDmRU8p1h1oucKqEblcpHOfy9ymtJXR-_Nt_29hVCn8R17X6mu4w/s400/inspir.jpg)
I have recently been interested in exploring the relationship of how people piece their lives, similar to how quilters piece fabric.
After leaving art school I lost the venue for in progress critiques. I would like to use this blog to post inspirations, receive feedback on projects, and keep communication open with other artists (that means you SAIC).
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