My Sister and I
My sister, Dale Walker, is an artist. I should restate . . . She is an amazing, talented and beautiful artist.
This is a Pegasus she drew in 1984. I'm sorry if my picture doesn't do it justice, but the detail and the creative flare she brings to her art amazes me. She loves horses and I used to watch her draw when we were growing up and envy the beauty she could put on a piece of paper. Even when we were little, I was always amazed at how she could even color better than I could. Her Barbie coloring book was always way more beautiful than mine.
Dale fell in love with the artist, Laurel Burch when I made her a small lap quilt. When Dale and her husband, Charlie purchased a horse trailer with living quarters, she asked if I could make her a quilt using Laurel Burch fabric if she supplied the fabric. YES!! What quilter doesn't love the fabric being supplied and knowing exactly what your finished project will be used for?
Soon Dale started shipping fabric. And more fabric. And more fabric. And more. I had enough fabric cover the State of Texas with a quilt!! What fun this would be. I took inventory of the miles of fabric Dale purchased and started looking around for a pattern I liked. Nothing really jumped out at me. She wanted the quilt to center around a specific panel she loved and I couldn't find any pattern that I liked to suit the panel. There was only one solution and that was to come up with my own design.
I started with the panel as the center and decided to build out from there. The horses need a pasture, so outside the panel is a border and a flying geese block because to me the horses looked as though they wanted to fly right off the fabric. Then came the hard part. Dale sent me fabric that wasn't just brights, but also fabrics that had subtle tones that I needed to work into the quilt. I solved that problem by putting the olive green in with the bright purple flying geese. I liked the progress, pinned it up on my design wall and waited for more inspiration. Those horses spoke to me.
I had a beautiful large print that I felt needed to be sent on point. It seemed to me that these horses were so beautiful that you would want to try to cage them, so the split rail block worked well. I broke up the split rail because you realize something so beautiful can't be penned. But something needed to stand guard as a Sentry to these horses.
So she got two throw pillows. I had small scraps left over from the quilt and made prairie point pillows. Didn't use much fabric there so . . .
Pillow cases. Six different horses on each pillow case, although you only see 3 here. Still had fabric. I know what you're thinking and no I didn't make sheets!!
But I made a bag!! I thought this would work good as an overnight bag or for whatever she would like to use it for.
I decided that I would have the quilt appraised so that Dale could see that her fabric money was well spent. Dancing Horses appraised at $2,200. I packed everything and shipped it to California. I was so sad that I couldn't see her open the box, but her repeated "Oh My God" told me she loved her quilt. Enjoy Dale. Love you.
The pictures here, though beautiful, do not do justice to this quilt. The embroidered horses really jump out at you. They give it a 3D effect. The stitching accents the squares. We also plan to fold down the top of the quilt and Judy put a border on the back side. So when you flip it down you not only have the blue backing but this stunning border. Color isn't for everyone or every situation. But the horse trailer living quarters can be a bit dark and this will completely accent it. Don't worry folks this is a $110,000 horse trailer and the quilt will be well cared for and shown off. The trailer is worthy of a nice quilt though I think this is the queen of quilts. Thank you Judy, This is a work of art!!!!!! Love you too.
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