Sunday, August 29, 2010

Pinwheel Baby Quilt

I've been busy the last couple of weeks.  My sister, Patti, is a brand new grandma as Kingston Quin Ball was born July 16.  Today, I finished a baby quilt for this new addition.


This was a kit from Connecting Threads.  I was so excited to get started on this one that either the instructions were confusing or I read them wrong.  I prefer to think it was the instructions...anyway, I cut the cream fabric wrong, ruined a bunch of it and had to reorder.  One of these days, I will learn to take a deep breath, read the instructions at least twice, before I even pick up the rotary cutter.

With this pattern, the pinwheels are actually prairie points and they are not sewed down but left to flap in the breeze so that baby can play with them.  So I could not put this one on the frame because I had to sew around the prairie points.  I also stitched in the ditch, which I HATE to do because I don't do it very well.  Why on earth did I not do an outline stitch???  Would have been lots less frustrating.


I'm glad it's done and I think it turned out well.  I hope Kingston and his new parents like it.  Congratulations!

Pinwheel Baby Quilt

I've been busy the last couple of weeks.  My sister, Patti, is a brand new grandma as Kingston Quin Ball was born July 16.  Today, I finished a baby quilt for this new addition.


This was a kit from Connecting Threads.  I was so excited to get started on this one that either the instructions were confusing or I read them wrong.  I prefer to think it was the instructions...anyway, I cut the cream fabric wrong, ruined a bunch of it and had to reorder.  One of these days, I will learn to take a deep breath, read the instructions at least twice, before I even pick up the rotary cutter.

With this pattern, the pinwheels are actually prairie points and they are not sewed down but left to flap in the breeze so that baby can play with them.  So I could not put this one on the frame because I had to sew around the prairie points.  I also stitched in the ditch, which I HATE to do because I don't do it very well.  Why on earth did I not do an outline stitch???  Would have been lots less frustrating.


I'm glad it's done and I think it turned out well.  I hope Kingston and his new parents like it.  Congratulations!

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

One Block Wonder

In between several projects, I am still working on this One Block Wonder.  After spending weeks rearranging the blocks into some type of rhyme or reason (I've since decided this is impossible.), I finally gave up and just started sewing.  I got all the strips put together today.


Now I've got to square it and go shopping for border and backing fabric.


I ran out of blocks that matched the purple section and pieced one to fit.  I thought it turned out pretty well!

I will be SO glad when this one is done......


One Block Wonder

In between several projects, I am still working on this One Block Wonder.  After spending weeks rearranging the blocks into some type of rhyme or reason (I've since decided this is impossible.), I finally gave up and just started sewing.  I got all the strips put together today.


Now I've got to square it and go shopping for border and backing fabric.


I ran out of blocks that matched the purple section and pieced one to fit.  I thought it turned out pretty well!

I will be SO glad when this one is done......


New Featherweight

Insanity struck last Sunday.  I had been toying with the idea of getting beat-up Featherweight with the intention of eventually getting it restored and repainted.  So I watched eBay for months and would always chicken out at the last minute.  It's trying to find a balance between "want" versus "need" and I surely didn't "need" another sewing machine.  Then I saw an ad on the local Craigslist that was posted a month ago.  It hadn't sold yet and it lived only a couple of miles from me (so no astronomical shipping charges to pay!)


This machine is a 1946 vintage and was owned by a former professional ballerina, currently in a nursing home at age 95.  There's quite a bit of wear and tear on the bed, but she runs beautifully (especially after I removed the monster fuzzball under the throatplate!).


I knew, on my way over to see it, that I wouldn't be able to refuse and, of course, it was going home with me!  Some things are just meant to be.

New Featherweight

Insanity struck last Sunday.  I had been toying with the idea of getting beat-up Featherweight with the intention of eventually getting it restored and repainted.  So I watched eBay for months and would always chicken out at the last minute.  It's trying to find a balance between "want" versus "need" and I surely didn't "need" another sewing machine.  Then I saw an ad on the local Craigslist that was posted a month ago.  It hadn't sold yet and it lived only a couple of miles from me (so no astronomical shipping charges to pay!)


This machine is a 1946 vintage and was owned by a former professional ballerina, currently in a nursing home at age 95.  There's quite a bit of wear and tear on the bed, but she runs beautifully (especially after I removed the monster fuzzball under the throatplate!).


I knew, on my way over to see it, that I wouldn't be able to refuse and, of course, it was going home with me!  Some things are just meant to be.

Monday, August 2, 2010

Sweet Sugar Swirls

Last year, I saw a quilt in a store in Concord, California, that I really liked.  It was made out of lots of batiks in grays, blues, greens, teals and it was beautiful.  Although I did get the pattern, I forgot to take a picture of that quilt.

When the One Block Wonder got the best of me, I tried making a few blocks of the Swirl using a Moda "honey bun" called Kansas Winter.


Lots of strips and LOTS of bias edges.

Might have to set this one and the OBW aside for just a little while.  Seems we have a brand-new great nephew that needs a new quilt.....

Sweet Sugar Swirls

Last year, I saw a quilt in a store in Concord, California, that I really liked.  It was made out of lots of batiks in grays, blues, greens, teals and it was beautiful.  Although I did get the pattern, I forgot to take a picture of that quilt.

When the One Block Wonder got the best of me, I tried making a few blocks of the Swirl using a Moda "honey bun" called Kansas Winter.


Lots of strips and LOTS of bias edges.

Might have to set this one and the OBW aside for just a little while.  Seems we have a brand-new great nephew that needs a new quilt.....

Sunday, August 1, 2010

One Block Wonder

I went to the second class and spent 4 hours trying to "retrain" my brain to see patterns differently.  Donna, the teacher, had to great ideas about how to arrange the colors and patterns in our quilts.  We were supposed to try to arrange them in such a way that our eye could see motion or flow.  I think I have too many colors in my fabric to try to come up with a simple theme to the pattern.


All of us in the class put our blocks together with the straight of grain on the outside edges.  And were feeling pretty proud about doing it correctly.  In class, the teacher would find the odd block and told us we could take it apart, turn the pieces and resew it.  Every single one of us thought that was "cheating."

I've spent the last several weeks tweaking the placement of the blocks into some sort of arrangement that made sense.  I've taken about a dozen blocks apart and resewed them.  Yesterday, I quit.


Now I have 20 strips of 27 itty-bitty triangles.  I shudder to think just how many seams I'm supposed to match in this darn thing.  I guess we'll see just how accurate my 1/4-inch seam allowance is.  If I'm close, it's gonna be good enuf!

One Block Wonder

I went to the second class and spent 4 hours trying to "retrain" my brain to see patterns differently.  Donna, the teacher, had to great ideas about how to arrange the colors and patterns in our quilts.  We were supposed to try to arrange them in such a way that our eye could see motion or flow.  I think I have too many colors in my fabric to try to come up with a simple theme to the pattern.


All of us in the class put our blocks together with the straight of grain on the outside edges.  And were feeling pretty proud about doing it correctly.  In class, the teacher would find the odd block and told us we could take it apart, turn the pieces and resew it.  Every single one of us thought that was "cheating."

I've spent the last several weeks tweaking the placement of the blocks into some sort of arrangement that made sense.  I've taken about a dozen blocks apart and resewed them.  Yesterday, I quit.


Now I have 20 strips of 27 itty-bitty triangles.  I shudder to think just how many seams I'm supposed to match in this darn thing.  I guess we'll see just how accurate my 1/4-inch seam allowance is.  If I'm close, it's gonna be good enuf!