At the conclusion of our Online 7822 Patchwork and Quilting Course, students who have satisfied all the syllabus requirements are awarded a certificate by the awarding body, City & Guilds of London. We would like to offer our congratulations too!

Elizabeth Rozelaar
Elizabeth's final assessment was this bed quilt made using Provencal style fabrics. The quilt was machine pieced and free motion quilted.

A combination of several different blocks created the design.
Right: Part of Elizabeth's research and planning for the quilt.
Below: Close-ups showing the feather quilting motifs and vermicelli fill pattern.
Above: The placement of the different blocks needed to be carefully considered in order to achieve the desired effect.
Right: Drafting the block designs on graph paper.

Left: Elizabeth's first assessment piece was this wall hanging on a floral theme. Worked using applique techniques by both hand and machine.
Above: A detail of the quilt in process.
Left: Elizabeth sampled ideas thoroughly before beginning.
Below: Some of the design work that led to the quilt.
Right: A detail showing the hand applique of the petal shapes in the broder area. Delicate embroidery is added for subtle detail.
Below: Elizabeth dyed a good stash of fabric during the course!


Left and below: Exploring values of purple in collage, fabric collections and crazy patchwork.

Below: Bonded applique leaves with machine stitched detail and a pieced binding.

Below: Markal stencilling on fabric.
Left: A sample of wholecloth quilting using a traditional motif and background filing pattern.
Below: A nine-patch with woven sections and machine quilting.
Below: Hand quilting using chunky threads enhances a simple pieced checkerboard.
Below right: A pieced landscape worked over papers.

Above: Rubbings on paper.


Left: Rubbings on fabric used with a layer of net to create a piece of shadow applique with French knots for embellishment.
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© Linda Kemshall 2006