
Choosing colours for any quilting project is a creative and enjoyable process that greatly impacts the overall aesthetic of a quilt. The selection of colours involves considering personal preferences, the intended design, and the mood or theme of the project. Here are some tips and strategies to help guide colour choices for hand piecing:
Understand Colour Theory
Familiarize yourself with the basics of the colour wheel, including primary, secondary, and tertiary colours, as well as complementary, analogous, and triadic colour schemes. You can also, with great succes use a monochrome scheme. This can be as easy as to read your colour wheel.

Use the principles of contrast and harmony to balance bold and subtle tones in your design.
Start with a Focal Fabric
- Select a fabric with a pattern or colour scheme that inspires you and build your colour palette around it.
- Pull colours from the focal fabric to coordinate your other fabric choices, ensuring cohesion across the quilt.
Consider the Mood or Theme
- Choose colours that reflect the mood you want to evoke. For instance, soft pastels create a calm and soothing feel, while bright, vibrant colours convey energy and playfulness.
- Seasonal or thematic quilts (e.g., autumn leaves, seaside scenes) often draw from specific colour palettes associated with the theme.
Cosider these two patterns for a scatter cushion.


Test Value and Contrast
- Incorporate a mix of light, medium, and dark shades to create depth and visual interest.
- Use value contrast to define patterns, ensuring individual pieces stand out rather than blending.
- Viewing fabrics in black and white (by taking a photo, change the effect to grey scale or using a colour-reducing app) can help evaluate value differences.
Use a Design Wall or Mock-up
- Arrange fabric swatches on a design wall or piece them together loosely to see how the colours interact.
- Adjust the placement or swap fabrics until you’re satisfied with the overall balance.
Limit or Expand Your Palette
- For simplicity, start off with a limited palette of 2-3 colours for a cohesive look.
- If you are a little braver, you can embrace a scrappy style by including many different colours, united by a common feature like tone, value, or pattern. Group the fabric in tone value – light medium or dark, rather than colour.
- Another trusted method is to choose a focus fabric and pick up the colour palette from the prints on the fabric with the rhyme: one darker, one lighter, one duller one brighter. This gives you a pallet of five colours. Your personal taste will depend on the fabric you want to emphasise. (Beyer, 2019) This method ensures a balanced palette with effective variety in tone values.
Experiment with Fabric Patterns
- Combine solids and prints for variety. Solids can anchor the design, while prints add texture and interest.
- Consider the scale of the fabric patterns to ensure they complement rather than overwhelm your design.
Use Pre-made Colour Tools
- Colour cards, quilting colour wheels, and online palette generators can inspire your choices and provide combinations that work well together.
- Explore fabric collections from designers, as they often include pre-coordinated fabrics that simplify the selection process.
Be Inspired by Nature or Art
- Nature provides endless colour combinations that work beautifully together—think of the greens and blues of a forest or the warm hues of a sunset.
- Artwork, photographs, or even home décor can spark ideas for unique colour palettes.
Trust Your Intuition
- Ultimately, quilting is a personal expression of creativity. Choose colours that resonate with you, as they will make the process more enjoyable and the final piece more meaningful.
By thoughtfully selecting colours, quilters can bring their designs to life, creating visually stunning and emotionally resonant quilts. Experimentation and practice will help develop a personal style and a keen sense for combining colours effectively.