The two person quilts category was pretty self explanatory - it’s for quilts that have had two people work on them, that includes quilting whether that’s the result of pure collaboration or if the quilt has been professionally long armed (that’s when you send your quilt away to be quilted).
But the quilts were far from ordinary, like the other quilts on display they were full of imagination, inspiration and great work, and I really don’t think it matters that more than one person has worked on a quilt, but I guess in a competition it provides transparency.
As with the other categories the judges were looking for visual impact, the emotional response to the quilt, the composition and use of colour as well as its construction and accuracy of piecing, and no doubt much more. I’d be terrible as a judge as I liked pretty much every quilt, and as I walked around the show the ‘wows’ kept coming, in fact I think if I walked past the first quilts I saw I’d be even more wowed by them the second time I saw them!
But anyway, here’s my favourites in the two person quilts category.
GOLDEN WEDDING, EILEEN WING AND DEBBIE HOLLAND
I’m sure it will be a surprise to no one that this was one of my favourite quilts in the show - it uses yellows and oranges, is heart shaped and has a mix and match of blocks and an interesting background. Isn’t it lovely?
And as much as I love the ‘Golden Wedding’ quilt above, the winner in this category was entirely different and so intricate.
CATEGORY WINNER: TWO HALVES MAKE US WHOLE, CLAIRE WALLACE AND TELENE JEFFREY
It was one to stare and stare and admire the work, all of it.
As was this next one, just look at the detailed quilting on show. That alone boggles my mind, and that’s before you notice the design - this photo is just a quarter of the quilt, but the detail was lost in the whole quilt picture, and the detail needs to be seen.
DAISY, HELEN BROOKHAM AND SANDY CHANDLER
The final two quilts are a study in colour composition, both use more traditional quilt blocks and yet these appeal to me as much as the others I’ve included in this post.
JARDIN DES ETOILES, JAYNE TRUEMAN AND JO RIOUX
I loved the name of both of these, there’s a play on words for both of them. Above you have garden of the stars - and I can imagine each of those stars as flower beds with hedge borders around them as you see in so many French chateaus. And below, the name Time is so appropriate for the hourglass blocks.
TIME, JO MYHILL AND TEAMO QUILTING
I love the colours in this one two, and how my eye travels across the quilt tracing the shapes. And then looking more closely I see how the fabric is repeated, and how the backgrounds blend between a cream and a creamy white and to a light grey.
It’s an absolute dream, and as I said before I’d be no good judging any of the categories - all the quilts are just too lovely!
