Pink is a delicate color that represents romance and femininity, and feelings of love, tenderness, and hope. At recent quilt shows we enjoyed some beautiful pink quilts including two that came from challenges. We hope you enjoy our post!
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The Elvis Dress, made and quilted by Katherine Verbeke
This quilt was made for the 2020 Cherrywood Challenge, which was to take
inspiration from Diana, Princess of Wales, to create a unique
quilt using a limited color palette: pink and white. The quilt was accepted among 224 other quilts and traveled
the world at various prestigious quilt shows with her final destination
on display at the Bohin Factory Museum in Paris, France, in 2022.
Katherine Verbeke says, "Ever since she first emerged in the public
spotlight, Diana Spencer has been my favorite Royal. Lovingly named
"The Elvis Dress" by her son Prince William, this particular pose is
beautifully enchanting - the Princess smile, the tilt of her head, her
eyes - all sum up the perfect princess. Not being a graphic artist
myself, my friend Lisa Fryxell converted a lovely Lady Diana photo into a
paper piecing pattern exclusively for me for the 2020 Cherrywood
Challenge." The lower part was covered in silver seed beads, representing the Elvis dress as Diana wore it.
You can check out more than 200 fabulous Diana quilts from this challenge online at the Cherrywood website:
Geese Crossing by Jolene Ficklin
We love this unique and beautiful quilt! Except for the flying geese border, the blocks in this quilt were createc with cross stitch embroidery! Jolene Ficklin says, "The 6 marked blocks for embroidery were given to me at least 15 years ago by my friend who was downsizing. Working only while traveling or when extremely bored, it is finally finished. The color choices are mine and most interesting is the embroidery cross-stitch flying geese. Thus the piecing called out to me. The blocks were fron Wonder Art Needle Craft Corp, dated 1985."
Paint Chip Challenge (2022) by Charlene Nelson (South Jordan, UT)
This quilted table topper with its giant hexagons showcases Charlene
Nelson's beautiful machine quilting! It resulted from a quilt group
challenge using a paint chip to guide the color choice. (Shown below is the paint chip - Taffy Twist - in the lower left corner of the quilt.
Charlene explains the challenge: "Our quilt group decided to do a paint chip challenge in 2022. Two people picked out some beautiful paint chips with very few extras. They were put in a bag and we each drew one. you had one opportunity for a second draw at the end, or you could exchange you paint chip with someone else. The rules were that the paint chip color you drew was the main color and background, and you could use one other color. you could use different values of the paint chip. My quilt is a table topper. I used Victoria Findlay Wolfe's large templates. We had six months to finish the quilt."
Image credits: Photos were taken at the 2025 Tucson Quilters Guild show (The Elvis Dress and Geese Crossing) and the 2024 Springville (Utah) quilt show (Paint Chip Challenge).
If you enjoyed this post you might also like our Free Pattern Day for PINK quilts (CLICK HERE!)
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