The actual fabric appears closest to the first two photos and is not as saturated as the last photo shows. The overall appearance has a dusty look to it with the background being mostly a medium water blue with darker ocean blue areas that have a slight purple undertone. The dots are mostly medium turquoise blue and light shamrock green.Â
The first and last two photos are ones that I took and the third photo is the manufacturers thumbnail image. This is a reference to show the variations in the batik colors. The second photo is the view looking at the fabric as wrapped on the bolt and not WOF. If you’re unsure about the true color, please contact me directly. I’m happy to help.
The latest bolt of this beautiful fabric is more pastel than it appears in the last three photos. The tones are softer and include turquoise blue, banana yellow, indigo, plum purple, fuchsia pink, grape purple, shamrock/lime green, teal green, and a melded brownish color where some of the colors run into each other. This is a gorgeous fabric in person!
The last two photos are examples of a quilt that I made using this fabric. The last photo shows the backing (same fabric as in the border) showing through the front of the white quilt background with sunlit backlighting – making a stained glass effect.Â
The actual fabric appears closest to the first two photos and is not as teal green or as muddy as the last photo shows. There are areas of lime green, cold and warm purple and medium and dark turquoise blue with gray color where the areas meld together. The Aboriginal snake design on top is in the same/lighter color scheme.
NOTE: This fabric has white streaks throughout it about every 1/2-yard. Some of it lightens when water is used to remove these areas, but it doesn’t disappear entirely. This may be a detergent that was used during the batik making process. Please be away that this is will likely be present on fabric that is purchased. See lighter/white streak that runs through the middle of the first two photos.
The first and third photos are the manufacturers thumbnail images. The second photo is one that I took and is the best representation of the actual colors in this collection.
There are variations in batik colors because they are hand-dyed. The actual fabric may look slightly different in color and fabrics are usually lighter/brighter in person than what appears on the computer screen. If you need further color assistance, please contact me directly. I’m happy to help.
The Stick N Stones collection has black, white, blue-gray, pink-gray and beige in it.