Quiltcon East is rapidly approaching in Savannah, Georgia. It is Feb. 23-26, 2017. There is a large, extremely juried exhibit of 'modern' quilts, vendors, classes & lectures. And Instagram friends from all over the world. I last went to the one held in Austin, Texas, February 2015 and had the BEST time.
It's stressful getting signed up for classes, they fill quickly and it is extremely challenging. I am signed up for two half-day classes, one on Sashiko (Japanese stitching) and the other is Cat Faces with Melissa Averinos. It was a HOT class, filling quickly, and someone I know saw the class in progress at Quiltcon West last year, and she says it looked like SOOOO much fun. I am all for fun!
Here is the promotional pic from Melissa's page (link above)
I am so excited for this class! Plus, I am wait-listed for Swirls & Spirals, machine quilting with the amazing Christa Watson. The aforementioned trouble with registration prevented me from getting the class successfully put in my 'shopping cart' and checked-out, so I was forced to wait-list. I have been assured there is plenty of movement on the wait-list, so I will have fingers crossed and class supplies packed and ready. Cross your fingers for me too, if you would.
Nevertheless, she persisted.
No wait. I meant to say, nevertheless, I will have a great time, but will have to watch out for those cobblestone streets. I'm in no shape for those, and cannot handle them. Watch for Instagram posts!!!
Here's to Quiltcon East and wonderful friends & fun!
thoughts on quilting and the creative process, or, how the 'look---there's a squirrel!' approach to quilting works for me
Sunday, February 19, 2017
Saturday, February 18, 2017
Baby Quilt with Elizabeth Hartman pattern: Post TWO
We had a niece expecting a girl at the end of March, so I wanted to make a fun, feminine baby quilt for her. Got out Elizabeth Hartman's The Kittens. It is a larger quilt, so I had to decide how big I wanted mine to be and draft up a plan. I decided a 3 x 4 layout of 12 blocks would be perfect. It threw me off a little that the blocks are not square, they are rectangular, so the final borders I used were 4" on the sides, but just 2" on the bottom, otherwise it was going to be too long for what I wanted. Mine ended up 36" x 50".
I pulled a palette of pinks, fuschia and purple, little bit of orange, and a tiny bit of blue, just for fun. Then, I got to cutting. Cut the WHOLE thing out on a weekend, after pairing up some fabrics. During the week, I started sewing, maybe two blocks at a sitting, in the evening. Then, my DH was gone on a business trip, so NO requirements on me other than sewing. Over the weekend I got all the rest of the blocks sewn & started assembly. Here is a close-up in progress, after attaching the first pair of glasses. Which were the MOST fun!!
I was showing friends some pictures of quilts by Laura Heine, her business is called Fiber Works in Billings Montana, because I have a class coming up with her. Her work & patterns are AMAZING; she does floral collage & painterly strips collage, but her color-sense is incredible & her fabric picks are right up my alley. When she has these beautiful pieces quilted, she uses a simple grid & very flat batting. The grid is a little uneven, so some of it might look like squares, and some like rectangles. It is very close together. She knows that for her patterns, the quilting is just to hold it together, stay quietly in the background, doesn't need to be fancy. You want to look at her beautiful design, let it shine. So I thought, hey----that's how I want to quilt this!
By Sunday afternoon, it was spray-basted & ready to go. I used Quilters Dream Poly, the loft of that is 'Request', their thinnest. It's a wonderful poly (don't make that face, poly isn't what it used to be!!!) I began quilting it, using the walking foot, but I did attach my guide to keep the lines fairly even, then I just threw in some extra lines, to get the spacing different, just occasionally. This goes really fast, very minimal marking. Just one line to start, and then maybe two more times I marked a line, because I got a little off. The guide is amazing, and to think, for years I didn't use it! At all. BIG mistake. HUGE. USE IT.
After watching (sort of) the Super Bowl with my sister & her daughter (my sweet niece who shares my Halloween birthday) I went back into the sewing room, and quilted til after midnight. Once my eyes weren't focusing anymore, I went to bed, got up the next day & repeated. Quilted by noon the next day, then got the binding on. Here's a close-up----
And we had a beautiful sunny day, so I could go outside to photograph it on the fence! And I was just saying I was lousy with deadlines. EARLY. Ready. In just ONE week.
I also love making smaller quilts for use in the stroller or car seat when baby is small. A nice size is 20" X 24" or so. Then, when baby gets bigger, they could use that quilt for their dolls or stuffed animals!! I made this using the scraps from The Kitten Quilt.
It is a simplified pinwheel pattern, with negative space. I love how they look like they are falling! The blocks are 4" and I have no idea where I saw the block, but I sketched it out in my 'ideas' book and it sure came in handy here.
Look how sweet they look together!
I pulled a palette of pinks, fuschia and purple, little bit of orange, and a tiny bit of blue, just for fun. Then, I got to cutting. Cut the WHOLE thing out on a weekend, after pairing up some fabrics. During the week, I started sewing, maybe two blocks at a sitting, in the evening. Then, my DH was gone on a business trip, so NO requirements on me other than sewing. Over the weekend I got all the rest of the blocks sewn & started assembly. Here is a close-up in progress, after attaching the first pair of glasses. Which were the MOST fun!!
By Sunday afternoon, it was spray-basted & ready to go. I used Quilters Dream Poly, the loft of that is 'Request', their thinnest. It's a wonderful poly (don't make that face, poly isn't what it used to be!!!) I began quilting it, using the walking foot, but I did attach my guide to keep the lines fairly even, then I just threw in some extra lines, to get the spacing different, just occasionally. This goes really fast, very minimal marking. Just one line to start, and then maybe two more times I marked a line, because I got a little off. The guide is amazing, and to think, for years I didn't use it! At all. BIG mistake. HUGE. USE IT.
After watching (sort of) the Super Bowl with my sister & her daughter (my sweet niece who shares my Halloween birthday) I went back into the sewing room, and quilted til after midnight. Once my eyes weren't focusing anymore, I went to bed, got up the next day & repeated. Quilted by noon the next day, then got the binding on. Here's a close-up----
And we had a beautiful sunny day, so I could go outside to photograph it on the fence! And I was just saying I was lousy with deadlines. EARLY. Ready. In just ONE week.
I also love making smaller quilts for use in the stroller or car seat when baby is small. A nice size is 20" X 24" or so. Then, when baby gets bigger, they could use that quilt for their dolls or stuffed animals!! I made this using the scraps from The Kitten Quilt.
It is a simplified pinwheel pattern, with negative space. I love how they look like they are falling! The blocks are 4" and I have no idea where I saw the block, but I sketched it out in my 'ideas' book and it sure came in handy here.
Look how sweet they look together!
Tuesday, February 14, 2017
Baby Quilts with Elizabeth Hartman Patterns: Post ONE
Started a baby quilt at a retreat, the end of October, then, didn't touch it again til January. But once I got going again, it flew along. I was making baby-sized Fancy Forest by Elizabeth Hartman. That size is a quarter-panel of the larger quilt. Her patterns are great, I would highly recommend them! There is a lot of marking and cutting, so you have to be organized. They are not difficult but do take some time. I pulled my palette, cut out blocks, then put them in zip-lock bags. You make 2,3 or 4 of each block design, so the bags had the same blocks packed together. This was a very easy way to organize them, and then stitch all of the same block at one time.
My daughter's dear friend, expecting a boy, had a 'woodland' theme picked for the baby's room, and as I looked at patterns, I thought---well I HAVE to do this for her! Colors were blues, greys and white. Here are some of the blocks as they were in progress.
The quilting, up close. It's a nice all-over, done in rows, with my fave, Superior So-Fine Thread (which I love for machine quilting), Bottom Line in the bobbin, in a neutral, to blend as much as possible.
I gifted it in late January, and she was thrilled. It's really fun to pull out patterns you have always wanted to make. It's a "two-fer". You have a lot fun, they get a great gift!
Meanwhile, I'm leaving for Quiltcon, so of course, two weeks before, I twisted my foot in rough parking lot blacktop, in the dark, after rain.
My daughter's dear friend, expecting a boy, had a 'woodland' theme picked for the baby's room, and as I looked at patterns, I thought---well I HAVE to do this for her! Colors were blues, greys and white. Here are some of the blocks as they were in progress.
I used a really pretty Peppered Cotton (a shot cotton) for the background, plus the other fabrics I pulled for the blocks. Here it is, all finished-----------
I gifted it in late January, and she was thrilled. It's really fun to pull out patterns you have always wanted to make. It's a "two-fer". You have a lot fun, they get a great gift!
Meanwhile, I'm leaving for Quiltcon, so of course, two weeks before, I twisted my foot in rough parking lot blacktop, in the dark, after rain.
Could be a fracture, it needs to be x-rayed again tomorrow. There was a suspicious area, but the first x-ray wasn't definitive, so a re-check is needed. The bruising still looks about the same as the picture. My feet are quite flat, so if I wear a shoe, the part where the foot should shape to the sole is the really sore part, so there are almost no shoes I can wear right now.
Let's hope for some quick healing, the clock's a ticking!!!!
P.S. Baby boy and his Mom are doing well, he was born last week. Congratulations to all the family!
Friday, February 10, 2017
UPDATED
My creativity has frankly been rather stymied since the election in November, but we'll leave that smelly fish right there where it lies. It's been a challenge in self-care to get moving again, creatively speaking. Current projects left me frozen & uninspired (except for some English paper piecing). While cleaning up my studio, I found my beautiful, Massdrop purchased wafer-thin natural-light lightbox. I had gotten rid of the box it came in, which was way too oversized for my shelves. So its method of storage and protection has been to be wrapped up in 2 layers of cotton batting, then tied with fabric selvages. Tacky. Unsightly. Well, that just wouldn't do! So I thought, OK, I'll make a quick and easy case for it. That gets me sewing again.
I did a Google web search, and found this FREE pattern from Sew Can She for an iPad sleeve, inspired by a Vera Bradley bag, and changed the dimensions to fit my light-box. It worked out quite well, and now I have a stylish , nice-fitting sleeve & can slide it onto my shelf for storage. It has Annie's Soft and Stable inside, which I highly recommend using inside any bag or basket you make, rather than batting. Some friends, who are EXCELLENT bag makers, told me to always use it, and they are right.
I also made a little velcro-closure cord-keeper, as the power cord for it is too bulky for storing in any case. That has a left-over scrap of Soft & Stable inside & a coordinating fabric to my bag. I LOVE cord-keepers, and have made quite a few. The first ones had batting in, but the Soft & Stable has much better body, while staying soft. Interfacing can be too stiff or too thin. You want thecord keeper to have soft body. I use cord keepers for my phone charger cord & my Kindle charger. Keeps things nice & tidy, especially while traveling. Easy to throw your cord in your purse that way.
When making your bag, remember that if your case is larger or smaller, you will need to alter the zipper size you use. The size listed on the pattern is for the iPad sized case. Going bigger allows room for miscalculating, and then cut away any extra length before sewing those last interior seams.
The outside can be one piece of fabric & quilted, like I did, because this Japanese fabric is TOO darn cute to cut up, OR you could piece a mini quilt, quilt it, then cut it into the two pieces that you need. You could even do just a smaller amount of piecing or pieced strip set into a larger piece of pretty fabric on one side or both. So think about that. You could make this sleeve for Kindle, iPad, other tablets, or a laptop or any other flatish device. I thought this amount of cushioning was nice (one layer of Soft & Stable) but you could double it, or use one layer of that & add a layer of batting, for extra protection.
Here's a glimpse of the inside. Pick fun fabrics, the more, the better. You at least need 3 for the top, a lining fabric & binding fabric.
As to the cord-keepers, here is a link to the pattern I used, by Leafy Treetop. Really easy & very useful. They make cute little gifts too. You could even use them for cords that are too long on your appliances, like a TV or lamp. They are HANDY DANDY, and you need some!
Have a great week and remember to SEW for your MENTAL HEALTH!!
I did a Google web search, and found this FREE pattern from Sew Can She for an iPad sleeve, inspired by a Vera Bradley bag, and changed the dimensions to fit my light-box. It worked out quite well, and now I have a stylish , nice-fitting sleeve & can slide it onto my shelf for storage. It has Annie's Soft and Stable inside, which I highly recommend using inside any bag or basket you make, rather than batting. Some friends, who are EXCELLENT bag makers, told me to always use it, and they are right.
I also made a little velcro-closure cord-keeper, as the power cord for it is too bulky for storing in any case. That has a left-over scrap of Soft & Stable inside & a coordinating fabric to my bag. I LOVE cord-keepers, and have made quite a few. The first ones had batting in, but the Soft & Stable has much better body, while staying soft. Interfacing can be too stiff or too thin. You want thecord keeper to have soft body. I use cord keepers for my phone charger cord & my Kindle charger. Keeps things nice & tidy, especially while traveling. Easy to throw your cord in your purse that way.
The outside can be one piece of fabric & quilted, like I did, because this Japanese fabric is TOO darn cute to cut up, OR you could piece a mini quilt, quilt it, then cut it into the two pieces that you need. You could even do just a smaller amount of piecing or pieced strip set into a larger piece of pretty fabric on one side or both. So think about that. You could make this sleeve for Kindle, iPad, other tablets, or a laptop or any other flatish device. I thought this amount of cushioning was nice (one layer of Soft & Stable) but you could double it, or use one layer of that & add a layer of batting, for extra protection.
Here's a glimpse of the inside. Pick fun fabrics, the more, the better. You at least need 3 for the top, a lining fabric & binding fabric.
As to the cord-keepers, here is a link to the pattern I used, by Leafy Treetop. Really easy & very useful. They make cute little gifts too. You could even use them for cords that are too long on your appliances, like a TV or lamp. They are HANDY DANDY, and you need some!
Have a great week and remember to SEW for your MENTAL HEALTH!!
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