How to Create Original Quilts

How to Create Original Quilts

I speak and teach about color, creativity, and my quilting techniques to quilters from all over the world, and one question I get asked a lot is-- how do you come up with the ideas for all of these different quilts? 

My answer-- I've given myself permission to make lots of "mistakes".

Our Brains HATE Risk

From an early age, we are trained to avoid mistakes at all cost! We are rewarded for an A+ paper that has no mistakes in it-- that is what we strive for in school. Often we shy away from areas and activities if we think we will not be successful. We don't want to risk failure!

It's not our fault, our brains have evolved to seek pleasure and avoid discomfort and risk. We are wired to conform, to do what we know will work; to do what feels safe and comfortable.

This was important when we were living in caves and fighting off lions; taking risks was dangerous!

But this is a problem if you want to make original work in your creative life. Your brain sees any uncertainty as imminent death. It freaks out. 

Your primitive "lizard" brain will think you are about to die, when really you're just trying out a new color palette!

In order to make something new and original, you have to try something you've never tried before, and when you try something you've never tried before, you don't know if it will work or not.

Sometimes it works beautifully, sometimes it doesn't.

You have to be okay with this if you want to make original work. Tell your brain to calm down-- everything will be okay!

Your Permission Slip

Give yourself permission to make “mistakes”. Lots of them.

It's in the new and uncertain where the magic can happen!

Sometimes the experiment is a total flop. Sometimes it turns out just "okay". But sometimes, every now and then, the result is amazing! 

This is the creative process, much of it is throwing a bunch of spaghetti at the wall and seeing what sticks. You try something, evaluate, learn, and try something else. Round and round it goes.

You’ll never get to the point where you’re 100% happy with everything you’ve made, that they are all masterpieces and perfect. If you did, it would mean you’re not stretching yourself or growing.

Experiment Small

I am always encouraging our Meander Guild Members to experiment small. We learn a new technique/style each month, along with some creative variations for those styles, and we always start with an "Experiment".

When they try something new, whether that is a new technique or style, quilt motif, whatever it is, experiment on a small scale. That way if it is a total flop, no big deal! Just move onto the next thing. You haven't "wasted" too much time or materials. Take the lesson you've learned from the "mistake" and do better next time.  

 

There is No Waste in the Creative Process

Know that all of the "mistakes" or "wasted" fabric or time is all for a purpose. Just like in life, you can learn from every mistake and grow to be a wiser person. The same is true of creative endeavors. You take what you've learned from that "failure" and tweak it, and try something new or go in a different direction. This is how you and your work evolve. 

If you only make things that you know 100% will work out, you are probably not growing. 

And if you've experimented on a small scale, you can make mistakes, learn from them, and try something new so much faster than if every quilt you make is twin sized!

If you like the idea of experimenting with different styles and techniques, I think you'd love the Meander Guild! It's an online guild where we explore different quilt-making styles, master color, grow creatively, all alongside other likeminded quilters from all over the world. Click here to learn more and sign up!

Alright, my dear, I'd love to hear from you! What insight stood out to you the most and how could you incorporate it into your creative life? Leave a comment below and let us know!

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19 comments

I needed this article today! Have made a table runner and am practicing with my new quilting templates. Lots of wobbly lines and patterns happening but I am now giving myself permission to just go with it rather than giving up.

Lyn Wilkinson

I’m such a miserable. I’m afraid if it doesn’t turn out to my liking that I’ve wasted material. But not so much waste on a small scale. Liked that idea. I was in a “funk” because my machine quilted flag isn’t turning out the way “it should”. Your article has encouraged me to go tackle it and take it one small step at a time. Thanks.

Sharon Jackett

Thanks for the great article! Best advice from it was to experiment with small projects !! That is exactly what I needed to hear today!!

Doreen marsh

I agree completely…there are no “mistakes”—they are all creative opportunities. I am always trying new methods. i jump right in and give it a try. Thanks for your post. I always enjoy them.

Peri Kujawa

I love being creative, but am afraid of wasting materials. Your program sounds worth checking out.

Pat Morford

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