Beth Markel won 1st Place: Innovative, Wall, Pieced for Spring Storm at Road 2016. She received $1,000 from sponsor, Artistic Creative Products.
Beth and Sophie[/caption]
The inspiration for Beth’s winning design came from an experience she had after graduating from college and starting her first job in Boston. She had to travel often to New York City and one sunny morning when she was at a farmer’s flower market, a spring storm roared through. Beth recalls, “Literally, one minute there were purple iris and golden daffodils and crocus, and the next there were purple and yellow petals spinning and whirling through the air.” That impression has stayed with her to this day.
Spring Storm is the first in a series of four seasonal quilts Beth is designing. Beth believes “there are seasons in our lives. Spring happens when we’re young, a little wild, tempestuous, naïve, and turbulent…the beginning of growth. Evolution. Storms. Setbacks. More growth. Beauty. So stand back. No, literally, stand back! The only way to see the twister is to stand back a way, then be slowly drawn into the joy that is every single decision, every single choice, and every single piece that together, tell a story.”
It took Beth almost 14 months to make and quilt Spring Storm partly because the piecing got so tiny (less than ¼” x ¼”) and all the seams were ¼.” The quilt has a lot of “stitch in the ditch” as well as quilting in individual squares. All of the threads were tied-off and hidden because she used her regular sewing machine, a Bernina 300, to do the quilting. Because of the basis of the piece, Beth wanted to give voice to each individual piece of the pattern. And while her choice was “tedious and wildly time-consuming,” Beth says it was “worth the effort in the end.”
Persistence is what Beth says she learned the most from Spring Storm. When she decided to start the 4-Seasons series based on her life, she knew she had something specific to say. Her youth was fairly wild, and she was constantly straining against where others wanted to pigeon-hole her. Beth has realized that growth begins “when we’re honest with ourselves, regardless of what anybody else thinks about us.” Spring Storm actually began as a 9-patch and then a 16-patch, hearkening back to her first quilt – with determination to say something new.
When Beth heard she had won first place, she was “speechless surprised.” She used some of her prize money to enroll in a writing class to help her with her blog. The rest of her winnings was spent on more fabric.
Where does Beth go from here? She is currently working on her second piece of her series, a summer themed design, which is up to 5,000 small pieces at this point. She has a “fun & interesting” trunk show which she presents to quilt guilds, as well as teaches 1, 3 and 5-day workshops. Two of her quilts are currently hanging in the National Quilt Museum as part of the book, “Art Quilts of the Midwest” by Linzee McCray.
[caption id="attachment_4348" align="aligncenter" width="453"]Tags: Award Winning Quilts, Bernina 300, Beth Markel, Muskegon Museum of Art, National Quilt Museum







