Archive for February, 2010

Old Projects, New Adventures

Barn Dance, finished!

Barn Dance, finished!

Finally got around to taking some pictures yesterday.  Here’s my “Barn Dance” quilt hanging on the clothesline.  It was a bear to quilt, but it’s finished!  I have to say that I’m quite pleased with how it came out.

The next picture is of my “Rail Fence” quilt.  I like how the lights and darks zig across the surface.  It’s quite a lively quilt, with a lot of movement.  Not bad for just sitting down and sewing a pile of strips together!

I’ll get them packed up this weekend, and in the mail to the Hopes and Dreams Quilt Challenge for ALS on Monday.

Rail Fence Scrap Quilt

Rail Fence Scrap Quilt

I went up to Alley Kat’s Quilt Shop yesterday.  All the fabrics were 30% off, including white PFD (prepared for dyeing) mercerized cotton.  Such a deal!  I got five yards for less than $18, including sales tax.   Ben Franklin is having a sale this weekend, too.  I have a 40% off coupon, so I think I’ll run over there this morning, and get another quilt batting.  With all the quilting I’m doing right now, it’s nice to be able to save a few bucks on batting.

Now that I have some white fabric to play with, I may do some dyeing today.  Fabric Dyeing 101 has lots of great tips for dyeing fabric.  I especially like her directions for making batik-like fabrics with gel glue.  I’ve dyed a lot of yarn, and even tried my hand at some socks last fall, but haven’t done any fabric yet.  Since I already have the pro mx dyes, soda ash, and everything else I need, I’m ready to go!

I also took a look at Fusing Fun!  Fast Fearless Art Quilts by Laura Wasilowski yesterday afternoon.  I am hooked!  What a fun book.  I even have an idea for my first fused quilt, once I get a few fabrics dyed.  I need to pick up some fusible web while I’m out today, too.  I have some Wonder Under around here someplace, but since I don’t want to tear into my closet, I’ll just buy some more and wait for it to surface, which it will, eventually.

Haven’t done any sewing the past couple of days, and don’t know if I’ll get any done today, but hopefully I’ll get back to it tomorrow for a bit.  Right now my brain is so full of stuff that I feel like I may explode.

Thill's Fish Market, at the Lower Harbor in Marquette, MI

Thill's Fish House, at the Lower Harbor in Marquette, MI

One last thing:  Marquette, MI,  my hometown, is one of the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s Dozen Distinctive Destinations for 2010.  Here’s what it’s all about:  “Since 2000, the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s Dozen Distinctive Destination program has recognized cities and towns that offer an authentic visitor experience by combining dynamic downtowns, cultural diversity, attractive architecture, cultural landscapes and a strong commitment to historic preservation, sustainability and revitalization. In each community, residents have joined together and taken action to protect their town’s character.”

Between now and February 28,  anyone over 18 can vote for their favorite, as often as they want.  Marquette is trailing behind Rockland, Maine, and we can’t let that happen!  So please click the link, register (they just want your name and email) and vote for Marquette, MI!  Vote early and vote often!

Lazy Day

Yay, Andrew made it home safely last night, around 12:30.  He was tired, but wound up, so it took a little while for both of us to calm down enough to go to sleep!

So of course nobody was up early this morning.  I slept til eight, which is late for me.  I let Andrew sleep til 9:30 before I woke him up.  I hated to do it, but I know he would have trouble sleeping tonight if I let him go too much longer.

I did manage to get some laundry done, but other than that, the day was a wash.  And there’s nothing wrong with that, either.  It was nice to sit on the couch with my honey and look at the pictures he took in TN and just talk.

Mary from Making Scrap Quilts From Stash was nice enough to send me a link for Mile-A-Minute Quilts.  This sounds exactly like what I’m looking for.  The idea is that you piece a long strip about 20″ wide, and then machine quilt the strip.  Then you join the strips. The strips are much smaller and easier to handle than a full-size quilt.  Love it!

I was tempted to order it, since I can get it for less than $5, but shipping always adds up.  So I ordered it inter-library loan!

Speaking of which, the first three books I ordered last week came in yesterday.  Of course, I had to walk right down to the library to pick them up.  Liberated Quiltmaking, Liberated String Quilts, and Fusing Fun! Fast Fearless Art Quilts are MINE for the next three weeks!  And I also have Thinking Outside The Block by Sandi Cummings and Karen Flamme on order, along with Mile-A-Minute Quilts.

Liberated String Quilts is great!  I’ve already gleaned lots of ideas from this book.  I need to make a few notes so I can remember them later on. I can’t wait to get started on my next project now!

Just started looking at Liberated Quiltmaking this afternoon, but didn’t get too far before I  nodded off.  I’ll look at it some more tomorrow, but it looks it’s full of great ideas, too.

I was going to take some quilt pictures today, but just didn’t do it.  Oh well, tomorrow is another day, as Scarlett O’Hara says.  I need to walk up to the little quilt store in the Village tomorrow since they’re having a sale, so while I’m outside, I’ll pin the quilts to the line and snap away. I know, going into a fabric store when they’re having a sale is dangerous, but I’ve already decided the only thing I will buy is some Wonder Under and maybe a couple of yards of white material to dye.

Molly perched on the arm of the couch

Molly perched on the arm of the couch

I’ll close with this picture of Molly.  She was so funny last night.  While Andrew was gone,  I usually went to bed around 11:20, after watching the local news and weather.  Last night, of course, I was going to wait up for Andrew, so I didn’t go to bed like I usually do.  Poor Molly was just having a fit!  She started jumping up on the back of my recliner around 11:25 pm, and was obviously agitated over something.

I got up to see what her problem was, and she led me straight to the bedroom!  I told her we were going to stay up and wait for Daddy, but she wasn’t convinced.  She finally did settle into my lap for a bit before Andrew got home.  Poor kitty.

And Now For Something Different…

Moon peeking through the tree branches.  Andrew took this one, don't know where or when.

Moon peeking through the tree branches. Andrew took this one, don't know where or when.

My last post was about new beginnings.  Well, a new beginning is in progress around here.  No, I’m not pregnant!   I’m 55, and my baby days are through.  However, I’ve had an epiphany of sorts…

Machine quilting, at least with my current set-up, sucks!  No kidding, huh?  After spending three fun-filled days machine quilting “Barn Dance” and “Rail Fence,” change is definitely in the air.

First, crawling around on the floor pin-basting a quilt has got to be a recipe for a trip to the chiropractor.  When I’m done, either my knees hurt, or my back hurts,or my wrists hurt, or my neck hurts.  Or all of the above.  Plus I’m going to rip up that nasty old carpet next summer, and put in laminate flooring, so there won’t be anything to pin the quilts to in a few months.

Second, repeatedly horsing forty inches of quilt, batting, and backing through an eight-inch opening on a sewing machine  is REALLY not fun.  Also, it makes it very hard to have any semblance of control over the quilting, even if  your quilting is composed mostly of what is supposed to be reasonably straight lines.  I doubt my sewing machine enjoys this process much, either.  After all, this isn’t what she was built for.

Third, if my goal this year is stashbusting, I gotta get a lot faster at making these quilts.  Selling them is my eventual goal, but if they’re time sinks, making a living is impossible.

So, what are my options?  Investing in a machine quilting system?  I have considered this, but most of those systems are pretty pricey, and they’re geared towards people who want to do it as a business.

Paying someone to machine quilt donation quilts doesn’t seem too cost-effective, does it?

Soooo, what’s the answer?  Quilt-as-you-go, also known as QAYG.  This involves sewing the strips or pieces directly to the batting and backing that’s already cut into block-sized pieces.  I’ve tried this in the past, but having to join the blocks by hand is a long and time-consuming process.

I should have known that someone would come up with a way to join the blocks by machine.  Here is an excellent tutorial detailing how to do this.  Quick and easy!  I can’t wait to get started.

Most of the QAYG blocks I’ve seen involve strips.  This is good, but I want to do something different.  There will be a joining strip in between the blocks, so I need to take this into account and use it as a design feature.  I’ve been mulling this over, and I think I have come up with a design that will utilize some of the the nearly 200 four-inch squares I’ve got on hand.  I’m pretty excited to get started on this.

My fisherman is heading home today!  I sure have missed my sweetie.

My fisherman is heading home today! I sure have missed my sweetie. (If you want to know, I think that's a king salmon on the left, a lake trout in the middle, and a coho salmon on the right.)

My big news is that my honey is on his way home today!  He may make it home tonight, if he feels up to driving through.  Today is a good travel day, as there’s nothing major on the radar between here and TN.

It’ll be good to have him home.  I’ve kept busy, so the week has passed reasonably quickly, but I’m ready for him to come home.

New Month, New Ideas, New Beginnings?

The beach is always changing...Waves take the old pebbles away and wash new ones up all the time.

The beach is always changing...Waves take the old pebbles away and wash new ones up all the time.

Woo hoo, a new month, full of possibilities!  What new ideas will wash ashore this month?

Wishing I had my camera right now.  I decided I didn’t feel like machine quilting yesterday, so I started another AAQI quilt.  This one will be called “Fragments,” for the fragments of memory that float to the surface of the mind.

The fabric I’m using is recycled  from an old Sacred Threads coat I had bought at Goodwill.  When I was pulling it apart, there was unfaded fabric in the seam allowances.  So I’m trying to use the frayed edges, and take advantage of the contrast between the faded and unfaded parts of the fabrics.

Most of the quilt is made up of a piece of loosely woven material.  I cut holes in it randomly, and used reverse applique to sew down some spots of material to peek through the holes, which are the memories.  I’m leaving the edges of the holes to fray out.

I started quilting it last night.  But I’m not quite satisfied with it.  It needs a focal point of some kind.  Think I’ll pin it up to my foamboard today so I can look at it as I work today.  Wish I could put a picture up.  I was desperate enough to take a picture with a cell phone yesterday, but my TracPhone doesn’t have a camera on it!  Oh well, Andrew will be home in a few days, so I can show you then.

Water changes form, to ice, and back to water again in the spring!

Water changes form, to ice, and back to water again in the spring. Recycling old clothes changes their form into something new.

Read a post the other day on recycling fabrics, and now I can’t find it!  It must have been a link from one of the blogs I check every day.  I’ve already been doing this for years, on and off.  My best find was an extra large ladies’ blouse for ten cents!  It was cotton (of course), fuschia with a black print, and there must have been two yards of fabric there.  Sweet!

I’ve cut up many men’s shirts, too, but unless it’s an extra large, it can be problematic because of the pockets on the front.  I suppose I could make a pocket quilt?  Hmm, have to think about that one.  Actually, the best garments to cut up are women’s jumpers and skirts, especially if you can get them on sale.  Goodwill is getting more expensive, which I don’t understand.  I mean, it’s used clothing, right?  There is a St. Vincent De Paul thrift store right up the street from me, and also a Salvation Army thrift store across town, and they’re more reasonably priced.

But right now I need to stay away from thrift stores and fabric stores.  Let’s see, in January I pieced four lap-sized quilts, and machine quilted a UFO, and three others.  Plus I made one AAQI quilt.  But I still haven’t made a noticeable dent in my stash!  There are lots of new beginnings just waiting here…

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