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Thursday, April 11, 2019

Underwhelming...........

I have tried 2 layouts with the red One Block Wonder blocks and they are both pretty blah.  This was the first one.









I needed to move the blocks to a different design wall and this is the second layout.  I think maybe the blocks will be used for table runners.  I know I can add equilateral triangles between the hexagons but I don't think that will save this group.

12 comments:

  1. In the second photo, I see two separate color sections...the left side is lighter in tone and feeling, while the right side is dark and heavier. I think they would make separate rather striking table runners. PS: I had not "warmed up" to the separate pieces until I saw that photo.......................

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  2. Don't give up yet. I would try all the lights near the top and those darkest greens at the bottom. I think you could gather the like blocks in clusters and then place them somewhere intermingling. It still looks scattered. Sometimes it takes me over 20 layouts until it clicks. I think this one could still work.

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  3. I agree with Linda. More playing and moving the blocks around are needed. I think these blocks are still so pretty.

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  4. In the second photo, I see the dark blocks meandering like a river. I agree, keep playing with the layout. It will be interesting to watch you experiment. The blocks are so vivid and they will be gorgeous either way, a quilt or tablerunners. Andrea

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  5. This one doesn't strike me the way your others have and unlike the others who think it could still work if you aren't feeling the love then I agree it is time to change the approach.

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  6. I like the second layout better with the way you've grouped the blocks with green. I think it looks great!

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  7. You might try converting the photos to monochrome gray scale.(My phone offers this photo editing option.) This technique helped me when I was trying to balance the positioning of hexie units in my Grandmother's flower garden quilt. Value is easier to see in black and white. A point of light flow across the blocks diagonally from corner to corner or radiating from the center might be interesting. A photo sans color may also be helpful in seeing how the patterns in the blocks relate to one another.

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  8. Interesting comments today. . . BUT I know you will design what makes you happy .

    JJM

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  9. It's amazing what a difference scale makes. The thumbnail-sized picture of your blocks is amazing, so your title "Underwhelmed" didn't seem to fit. But once I see the larger pictures, your title makes more sense. Personally, I enjoy a muted red-green-tan palette for the Christmas season, so if these were my blocks, I'd be tempted to toss a bit more green and tan in the mix and call it a Christmas quilt.

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  10. What if you added other OBW blocks from a fabric in a related color way?

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  11. I would try having the darker (green) blocks meander in a diagonal with either all the lights framing that line or all the dark (red) framing that line. Maybe?

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