My second entry for the Blogger's Quilt Festival is Love Grows a Grove, a twin-sized orange tumbler quilt.
With five lines of quilting at every seam, the process took awhile. Dealing with the very lofty wool batting and so many quilting intersections was frustrating and there is a whopping number of imperfections in it, but once it went onto the bed, I stopped seeing them entirely. Now I just see the Orange Quilt, as it is known around the house.
Spot Check in orange and some mini tumblers make up the back. There's no plain white on the front, but some of the mini tumblers are white.
Bias binding in Navy Kona, because as stubbornly orange as this is, I couldn't stubborn any more orange.
I collected orange fabrics from far and wide for this one - old stash, a couple online purchases, plus things from quilt shops nearly a thousand miles apart. I like to think that it would be almost impossible to replicate it. How many of our quilts wouldn't that be true for, though?
Quilt Stats:
Pattern: Tumbler (made from my own 6" template)
Dimensions: 62"x83.5"
Thread: 100% poly C&C in white
Yay!: ORANGE
Doh: Puckers, puckers at the crosses
Binding: Double fold bias binding in Kona Navy, machine sewn to the front and hand sewn to the back
This quilt is in the Machine Quilted at Home category of the Blogger's Quilt Festival. Happy crafting!
5.15.2015
BQF: Weathervane Island
The Weathervane quilt is finished!
I used the weathervane block variation that Patch the Giraffe used for this beauty with a different design for the sashing.
Hand-quilted about 1/4" away from the colored fabric in each block, and 1/4" outside the cornerstone squares. In the picture below, you can see a bit of the purple-on-white print I used instead of white on the inside of two of the squares.
Green and purple may be my favorite color combination. The green fabrics are a combination of stash and much hunted-for shades of the exact right green, which for me means true green leaning toward teal.
The back was pieced from fabric that's not my favorite, or that I have a whole lot of and bought just for backings.
The binding used up most of the rest of my Fizz in the medium green hue - I'm sad to see it go, but I love the shade of it and thought it was worth it to use on the binding, since it is pretty visible.
This one will hang in the very bare bedroom.
Quilt Stats:
Pattern: Weathervane variation
Dimensions: 39"x39"
Thread: pieced in C&C white 100% poly, quilted in crazy strong old handquilting thread in white
Batting: Natural 100% Cotton Hobbs Heirloom
Yay: Favorite colors! and Secondary pattern in cornerstones
Doh: I'd change some of the value pairings of color if I were starting over again
Binding: Double Fold, machine sewn to front, hand sewn to back
Linking to the Blogger's Quilt Festival and Crazy Mom Quilts Finish it Up Friday.
Happy Crafting!
I used the weathervane block variation that Patch the Giraffe used for this beauty with a different design for the sashing.
Before its wash |
Green and purple may be my favorite color combination. The green fabrics are a combination of stash and much hunted-for shades of the exact right green, which for me means true green leaning toward teal.
After its wash |
The back was pieced from fabric that's not my favorite, or that I have a whole lot of and bought just for backings.
The back, featuring not-the-best green |
The binding used up most of the rest of my Fizz in the medium green hue - I'm sad to see it go, but I love the shade of it and thought it was worth it to use on the binding, since it is pretty visible.
This one will hang in the very bare bedroom.
Quilt Stats:
Pattern: Weathervane variation
Dimensions: 39"x39"
Thread: pieced in C&C white 100% poly, quilted in crazy strong old handquilting thread in white
Batting: Natural 100% Cotton Hobbs Heirloom
Yay: Favorite colors! and Secondary pattern in cornerstones
Doh: I'd change some of the value pairings of color if I were starting over again
Binding: Double Fold, machine sewn to front, hand sewn to back
Linking to the Blogger's Quilt Festival and Crazy Mom Quilts Finish it Up Friday.
Happy Crafting!
5.12.2015
Greetings from Sleeve Island
In knitting, when you're working on the sleeves of the sweater, and you work and work and work and have basically nothing to tell the blog about other than "sleeves more again," that is called being stuck on Sleeve Island. Maybe only by the Yarn Harlot.
I haven't come up with a good name for the same phenomenon in quilting, in which hand quilting something takes a while... and then longer... and then, like, a lot freaking longer because it takes so long. Hand Quilting Isthmus? That doesn't have the same ring.
Anyway, that's where I've been. Then, after my long stay on Quilting Sleeve Island, I got stuck at Hand Sewing Binding Down Customs. I estimated that doing all of the hand quilting was going to take 16 evenings, and I wish I could remember when I thought that, but I'm quite sure it was more than 16 days ago.
I just finished it, just now, and took a way-after-dark picture of it. I'll write up the post on Friday, so as to enter it into the Blogger's Quilt Festival. At first I thought that started 5/1 and was bummed that I'd missed it with this quilt, but of course I was wrong and it starts Friday.
Hopefully sunlight will be kinder to it. I'll wash it, too, which should shrink the batting a bit.
SELF. GO TO BED. Okay. Goodnight, and happy crafting!
I haven't come up with a good name for the same phenomenon in quilting, in which hand quilting something takes a while... and then longer... and then, like, a lot freaking longer because it takes so long. Hand Quilting Isthmus? That doesn't have the same ring.
Anyway, that's where I've been. Then, after my long stay on Quilting Sleeve Island, I got stuck at Hand Sewing Binding Down Customs. I estimated that doing all of the hand quilting was going to take 16 evenings, and I wish I could remember when I thought that, but I'm quite sure it was more than 16 days ago.
I just finished it, just now, and took a way-after-dark picture of it. I'll write up the post on Friday, so as to enter it into the Blogger's Quilt Festival. At first I thought that started 5/1 and was bummed that I'd missed it with this quilt, but of course I was wrong and it starts Friday.
Hopefully sunlight will be kinder to it. I'll wash it, too, which should shrink the batting a bit.
SELF. GO TO BED. Okay. Goodnight, and happy crafting!
4.25.2015
Bloggy blog
Working on the Weathervane.
Decided to hand quilt it because I hate finishing stuff.
The back is pieced from a half-yard that I liked a lot better online than in person (top), a FQ from a bundle that I can't stand the color of (middle), and some of the Connecting Threads yardage that I backed the Rainy Quilt with.
It would be helpful to not have seams to deal with on the back for hand quilting, but I'm glad to use up stash that I don't really like. The colors look nice together, it's just not to my taste.
I've also started a quilt for my brother that is my design, and that I'm really excited about. Once there's something more to look at, I'll post some pictures - right now it's just bits of white and gray fabric.
Happy crafting!
Decided to hand quilt it because I hate finishing stuff.
Fussy cut tree in the center |
It would be helpful to not have seams to deal with on the back for hand quilting, but I'm glad to use up stash that I don't really like. The colors look nice together, it's just not to my taste.
I've also started a quilt for my brother that is my design, and that I'm really excited about. Once there's something more to look at, I'll post some pictures - right now it's just bits of white and gray fabric.
Happy crafting!
4.03.2015
FO: Hexagon Tetris Land
When I was on maternity leave, I spent a lot of time looking at quilting blogs and collecting tutorials to return to someday. There are probably enough to keep me busy for years. When I'm thinking about new quilts, I go through the list, and on the last pass-through, this one caught my eye. It's from the Festival of Hexagons, a tutorial from acraftyfox.
By far my favorite part is the label - this little hexagon didn't make the cut for the front, because there wasn't enough contrast between the hexagon and the neutrals - it just looked like a random vine. But there was just enough room for writing, and I think it's adorable.
The back is a batik-y thing that I've had for ages. It has a nice hand and is thick and sturdy, but I confess that I find it terribly ugly. This used up nearly all of it - go, austerity! This will be a wallhanging, so I don't expect it to see the light of day much.
To quilt it, I wanted to have undulating sort of waves that sort of echoed but got distorted along the way. It didn't come out exactly as I wanted it to, but it's pretty close. I got my FMQ foot out for the first time in a long time just recently, and was surprised at how much I enjoyed the process of FMQing this, even if I'm out of practice.
Tomorrow I'll wash it and get it hung up.
Quilt Facts:
Title: Hexagon Tetris Land
Batting: 100% cotton Hobbs, either organic or not (can't remember which scraps I pulled from)
Thread: C&C 100% polyester, white
Backing: ancient stash batik
Yay!: scrappy neutrals
Doh: herky jerky starts and stops in FMQ
Number of Meta-Hexagon fabric included: 3
Yay, Finish It Up Friday is back! Linky linky.
Happy crafting!
By far my favorite part is the label - this little hexagon didn't make the cut for the front, because there wasn't enough contrast between the hexagon and the neutrals - it just looked like a random vine. But there was just enough room for writing, and I think it's adorable.
The back is a batik-y thing that I've had for ages. It has a nice hand and is thick and sturdy, but I confess that I find it terribly ugly. This used up nearly all of it - go, austerity! This will be a wallhanging, so I don't expect it to see the light of day much.
To quilt it, I wanted to have undulating sort of waves that sort of echoed but got distorted along the way. It didn't come out exactly as I wanted it to, but it's pretty close. I got my FMQ foot out for the first time in a long time just recently, and was surprised at how much I enjoyed the process of FMQing this, even if I'm out of practice.
Tomorrow I'll wash it and get it hung up.
Quilt Facts:
Title: Hexagon Tetris Land
Batting: 100% cotton Hobbs, either organic or not (can't remember which scraps I pulled from)
Thread: C&C 100% polyester, white
Backing: ancient stash batik
Yay!: scrappy neutrals
Doh: herky jerky starts and stops in FMQ
Number of Meta-Hexagon fabric included: 3
Yay, Finish It Up Friday is back! Linky linky.
Happy crafting!
3.26.2015
March WIPs
The Carmarthen mittens are done, and they're very pretty, and they're huge.
My beloved owl mittens have sprung a leak right in the middle of the pad of the right thumb, so when it was 3 degrees Fahrenheit (that's right) one morning this week, I went ahead and wore the Carmarthen. They are indeed too big to be practical, which is disappointing. They might be just the right size for a gift for someone, but I'm not sure yet.
The Weathervane Quilt is coming along. As I worked on the blocks, I was convinced that this was going to be the single most beautiful thing I've ever made, but then I got them up onto the design wall and am not as psyched.
Value strikes again, I guess. I did some B&W pictures to try to distribute the values better, and sitting here looking at this picture makes me want to make a few more changes before I keep sewing. Next up is some sashing with cornerstones.
Finally, there's this weird thing.
This is based on the hexachevragon tutorial at acraftyfox.net with an asymmetrical border that I'm adding. I can't decide if the border says, "Interesting attempt to add motion to the design and achieve balance with asymmetry" or "My hexagon ruler can make a bunch of different sizes!" I've dug deep to not repeat any orange fabrics in the big hexagons, piecing several pieces together from scraps from the orange tumbler quilt, and I'm really enjoying the scrappiness of the neutrals.
Just have the top border to finish on this one, then it can be basted and quilted. The design wall here is the batting that will be used in the quilt, and there is a batik-ish reddish orangish bit of fabric I've had forever that is just the right size for the back.
Happy crafting!
My beloved owl mittens have sprung a leak right in the middle of the pad of the right thumb, so when it was 3 degrees Fahrenheit (that's right) one morning this week, I went ahead and wore the Carmarthen. They are indeed too big to be practical, which is disappointing. They might be just the right size for a gift for someone, but I'm not sure yet.
The Weathervane Quilt is coming along. As I worked on the blocks, I was convinced that this was going to be the single most beautiful thing I've ever made, but then I got them up onto the design wall and am not as psyched.
Value strikes again, I guess. I did some B&W pictures to try to distribute the values better, and sitting here looking at this picture makes me want to make a few more changes before I keep sewing. Next up is some sashing with cornerstones.
Finally, there's this weird thing.
This is based on the hexachevragon tutorial at acraftyfox.net with an asymmetrical border that I'm adding. I can't decide if the border says, "Interesting attempt to add motion to the design and achieve balance with asymmetry" or "My hexagon ruler can make a bunch of different sizes!" I've dug deep to not repeat any orange fabrics in the big hexagons, piecing several pieces together from scraps from the orange tumbler quilt, and I'm really enjoying the scrappiness of the neutrals.
Just have the top border to finish on this one, then it can be basted and quilted. The design wall here is the batting that will be used in the quilt, and there is a batik-ish reddish orangish bit of fabric I've had forever that is just the right size for the back.
Happy crafting!
3.11.2015
FO: Get Along, Green
Well, it's all over but the sawing.
Of the dowel rod, that is.
Think I could've done better with the color placement, especially in the blue-to-green range - I let my shapes dictate where each piece went and it ended up not being a terribly smooth color transition. The green to yellow is dire, but I don't like the colors in that range very much, so it's not surprising there weren't many scraps there.
Bound the quilt in Kona Jade left over from the Mail-Order Gorilla - squeaked by with just enough, which was nice.
This was the fastest hanging sleeve ever. Thank goodness for fugly why-do-I-own-this fabrics - there's no sense in spending $9/yard for a hanging sleeve. This one was the perfect size selvage to selvage, so I left them on (no folding and sewing down) and didn't sew the sleeve to itself, just stuck it in place as I sewed the binding to the front so it caught on the back.
I've seen tutorials that call for basting the hanging sleeve about as much as you will need ease for the dowel to go through, but whenever I can avoid basting I do. My trick is to put the dowel in, pin it into place so that the fabric lies flat against the back of the quilt, and then sew it down binding-style.
Quilt shows would probably not be impressed, but that's okay. Have not yet decided where this one will live - it may go with me to my office, or it may spruce up my very bare bedroom.
Quilt Facts:
Finished Size: 19.25"x43"
Batting: Yes, definitely batting
Thread: White mystery thread, some cotton/cotton, others probably not
And now I will give in to the urge to go through my scrap bin and cut a bunch of white and close-to-white scraps into 2.25"x4.5" strips. That seems like the kind of urge one would regret jumping on.
Happy crafting!
Of the dowel rod, that is.
Think I could've done better with the color placement, especially in the blue-to-green range - I let my shapes dictate where each piece went and it ended up not being a terribly smooth color transition. The green to yellow is dire, but I don't like the colors in that range very much, so it's not surprising there weren't many scraps there.
Bound the quilt in Kona Jade left over from the Mail-Order Gorilla - squeaked by with just enough, which was nice.
This was the fastest hanging sleeve ever. Thank goodness for fugly why-do-I-own-this fabrics - there's no sense in spending $9/yard for a hanging sleeve. This one was the perfect size selvage to selvage, so I left them on (no folding and sewing down) and didn't sew the sleeve to itself, just stuck it in place as I sewed the binding to the front so it caught on the back.
I've seen tutorials that call for basting the hanging sleeve about as much as you will need ease for the dowel to go through, but whenever I can avoid basting I do. My trick is to put the dowel in, pin it into place so that the fabric lies flat against the back of the quilt, and then sew it down binding-style.
Quilt shows would probably not be impressed, but that's okay. Have not yet decided where this one will live - it may go with me to my office, or it may spruce up my very bare bedroom.
Quilt Facts:
Finished Size: 19.25"x43"
Batting: Yes, definitely batting
Thread: White mystery thread, some cotton/cotton, others probably not
And now I will give in to the urge to go through my scrap bin and cut a bunch of white and close-to-white scraps into 2.25"x4.5" strips. That seems like the kind of urge one would regret jumping on.
Happy crafting!
3.03.2015
Yay for Slidey Ramp
I've written 74% of three different blog posts in my head, and have 11 minutes in which to get it all down, and it doesn't seem like it's going to go well. Off we go!
First:
I finished the blanket! It's snuggly warm, we're still living in a frozen hellscape, and yay. Decided to do the garter edge when it seemed like I'd have plenty of yarn left over then had about 8" of yarn left over. Close enough!
Second:
Now starts Austerity. On this wallhanging, I used up a lot of the cotton-covered cotton/mystery white bobbins that are proving unfit for bed quilts that get pulled on a lot. (By which I mean every night I listen to my quilting on the Mail Order Gorilla quilt popping and gnash my teeth.)
I pieced the back from several neutral remnants.
Third:
Sometimes I wish that Finish it Up Friday were Stick a Fork in it Sunday. I finished the gradient quilt on Sunday and then didn't want to post about it until Friday, so then I got confused and wandered around and then finished this cowl, of which I had knit all but the bindoff about four years ago:
It's so pretty, and warm, and I'm not sure why I left that sitting for so long.
Fourth:
In working on the green/purple/black jewel box quilt, I discovered that I hadn't made enough purple hsts or b/w 4-patches, now that you mention it, and the idea of making more of those blocks was unappealing. So I designed three more quilts and then cut the fabric I'd been avoiding, plus fabric for a coordinating wallhanging.
Fifth:
Weathervane. I've worked on this all day - it's Random Day Off Day, and I've squeezed every drop of quilting time out of it. Couldn't go on.
Paper plate system shamelessly stolen from Tales of Ineptitude. Those three little scraps of white in the middle are what remain of my big stash of plain white fabric, soooo. Austerity's going to be hard. I've got a bit to spend with which to stock up on stuff, but then it'll be nothing except birthday/Christmas generosity.
Happy crafting!
First:
I finished the blanket! It's snuggly warm, we're still living in a frozen hellscape, and yay. Decided to do the garter edge when it seemed like I'd have plenty of yarn left over then had about 8" of yarn left over. Close enough!
Second:
Now starts Austerity. On this wallhanging, I used up a lot of the cotton-covered cotton/mystery white bobbins that are proving unfit for bed quilts that get pulled on a lot. (By which I mean every night I listen to my quilting on the Mail Order Gorilla quilt popping and gnash my teeth.)
I pieced the back from several neutral remnants.
Third:
Sometimes I wish that Finish it Up Friday were Stick a Fork in it Sunday. I finished the gradient quilt on Sunday and then didn't want to post about it until Friday, so then I got confused and wandered around and then finished this cowl, of which I had knit all but the bindoff about four years ago:
Fourth:
In working on the green/purple/black jewel box quilt, I discovered that I hadn't made enough purple hsts or b/w 4-patches, now that you mention it, and the idea of making more of those blocks was unappealing. So I designed three more quilts and then cut the fabric I'd been avoiding, plus fabric for a coordinating wallhanging.
Fifth:
Weathervane. I've worked on this all day - it's Random Day Off Day, and I've squeezed every drop of quilting time out of it. Couldn't go on.
Paper plate system shamelessly stolen from Tales of Ineptitude. Those three little scraps of white in the middle are what remain of my big stash of plain white fabric, soooo. Austerity's going to be hard. I've got a bit to spend with which to stock up on stuff, but then it'll be nothing except birthday/Christmas generosity.
Happy crafting!
2.21.2015
Doh
In hopes of finishing the baby's blanket for her birthday, I worked on it for several evenings. Took it to work and got a lot done on it during a rare hour-and-a-half phone call, then forgot it as I ran out of the office for the evening two nights in a row. It occurred to me to be worried that I may not finish it before winter ends, but at the rate we're going, there will be plenty of frozen hellscape left in which to enjoy a snuggly new blanket. Meanwhile, she's turning one and has no concept of a birthday or birthday gift, so it'll get finished soon and I'll give it to her when it's done and that will be fine.
The purple and green quilt is coming along - three blocks are together and more are laid out.
I'm working hard to accept that this quilt will be a slow plod - I'm working really hard to match up points and edges, and the third block looks better than the first. Once I finished the first block, I considered making it bigger by a block in each direction, and then I considered the work it would take to do that and gave right up. When I realized how slowly this one was going, I went with a whim and started a new quilt.
And then when I forgot the baby blanket, I spent an evening piecing the back from light-colored remnants, and then I forgot it again and this happened:
This involved lots of spray baste, which you're supposed to use in a well-ventilated space. I'm pretty sure a cozy little house in the dead of the aforementioned frozen hellscape totally counts.
I plan to quilt it with close parallel lines running horizontally - not close enough to be matchstick, but maybe 1/4". After I finish knitting the blanket. Yeah.
Happy crafting!
The purple and green quilt is coming along - three blocks are together and more are laid out.
I'm working hard to accept that this quilt will be a slow plod - I'm working really hard to match up points and edges, and the third block looks better than the first. Once I finished the first block, I considered making it bigger by a block in each direction, and then I considered the work it would take to do that and gave right up. When I realized how slowly this one was going, I went with a whim and started a new quilt.
And then when I forgot the baby blanket, I spent an evening piecing the back from light-colored remnants, and then I forgot it again and this happened:
This involved lots of spray baste, which you're supposed to use in a well-ventilated space. I'm pretty sure a cozy little house in the dead of the aforementioned frozen hellscape totally counts.
I plan to quilt it with close parallel lines running horizontally - not close enough to be matchstick, but maybe 1/4". After I finish knitting the blanket. Yeah.
Happy crafting!
2.13.2015
Finish: A Little Pretty
My office does a Secret Admirer swap in February instead of a Secret Santa at Christmas, and the person whose name I drew once said she hoped I'd knit her something someday. With only a week to get it done, I wasn't sure I could finish a handknit project, so I made a little pincushion/office ornament for her using this tutorial.
If I'd had more time, I probably would've made a fabric-covered button to match the dark pink background fabric, but was lucky to find a suitable bead/button thingy for the middle in my bead stash.
I'm making two again, and was happy about how much my folding improved from the first to the second.
Though I'd intended to put the teal and yellow-green across from each other, I luckily messed it up on the one that wasn't folded as well.
Bwaaww, little tiny blanket-stitched label! It's really there to distract from the Frankensteinian whip-stitched turning hole. Not even invisible thread can help that one, so distraction seemed to be the best way to handle it. Usually, doing the one I'm keeping first allows me to get all the stupid mistakes out of the way and it's nice to just have a practice run so the second one can be a little better. Because I didn't have much time left, though, I had to finish this one first, so it could be a bit more polished than it turned out.
I stuffed this with fabric scraps - piles of thread ends and threads clipped from the edges of fabric after prewashing make the best stuffing. Leftover wool is really great too, springy and squishy.
I feel like I'm putting myself out there a bit with this one. I'm sure the recipient will appear to like it, because my coworkers are almost uniformly lovely, gracious beings, but I hope that she hangs it on her wall and it gives her a little bit of joy to look at every day.
Linking to Finish it Up Friday at crazymomquilts.
Happy crafting!
If I'd had more time, I probably would've made a fabric-covered button to match the dark pink background fabric, but was lucky to find a suitable bead/button thingy for the middle in my bead stash.
I'm making two again, and was happy about how much my folding improved from the first to the second.
Though I'd intended to put the teal and yellow-green across from each other, I luckily messed it up on the one that wasn't folded as well.
Bwaaww, little tiny blanket-stitched label! It's really there to distract from the Frankensteinian whip-stitched turning hole. Not even invisible thread can help that one, so distraction seemed to be the best way to handle it. Usually, doing the one I'm keeping first allows me to get all the stupid mistakes out of the way and it's nice to just have a practice run so the second one can be a little better. Because I didn't have much time left, though, I had to finish this one first, so it could be a bit more polished than it turned out.
I stuffed this with fabric scraps - piles of thread ends and threads clipped from the edges of fabric after prewashing make the best stuffing. Leftover wool is really great too, springy and squishy.
I feel like I'm putting myself out there a bit with this one. I'm sure the recipient will appear to like it, because my coworkers are almost uniformly lovely, gracious beings, but I hope that she hangs it on her wall and it gives her a little bit of joy to look at every day.
Linking to Finish it Up Friday at crazymomquilts.
Happy crafting!
2.02.2015
When in doubt, knit.
My favorite part of the whole quilting process, I think, is when it's time to start the laying out of actual fabrics.
I sewed eight segments together, sewing the wrong edges together on one and then running out of bobbin thread and not noticing on the last three. Then I swore a lot, fixed it, and walked away for a bit, partly because quilting is supposed to improve my day, not make it worse, and also because the little one is going through a transition right now and it is a loud and time-consuming process, and incompatible with seam matching and correctly orienting anything. (And sleeping, and thinking straight.)
(Re-)Enter the baby dots/dot pattern blanket that I started oh, back before she was born. It is a gigantic pain in the ass to knit, but I like the effect and it's giving me something to focus on. Kiddo, I can't make you stop crying, but I can knit you this blanket.
Happy crafting!
I sewed eight segments together, sewing the wrong edges together on one and then running out of bobbin thread and not noticing on the last three. Then I swore a lot, fixed it, and walked away for a bit, partly because quilting is supposed to improve my day, not make it worse, and also because the little one is going through a transition right now and it is a loud and time-consuming process, and incompatible with seam matching and correctly orienting anything. (And sleeping, and thinking straight.)
(Re-)Enter the baby dots/dot pattern blanket that I started oh, back before she was born. It is a gigantic pain in the ass to knit, but I like the effect and it's giving me something to focus on. Kiddo, I can't make you stop crying, but I can knit you this blanket.
Happy crafting!
1.30.2015
FO: Rainy Quilt
Rainy Quilt is finished.
We got these pictures when it was nicely lit but very windy out - the thing actually does lay flat if put on a flat surface, swear.
I used the last big hunk of Quilter's Dream Cotton Request (the thinnest one) for the batting, and quilted the whole thing with "organic" vertical lines to kind-of look like raindrops rolling down a window. Hadn't used my free-motion foot in a long time. Quilted a few raindrop shapes in as well, on the dark fabrics. I auditioned white, gray, light blue, and dark blue thread for quilting, and Other liked the dark blue.
The back is another Connecting Threads print, gotten in astonishing quantity from their Cyber Monday sale. The finished quilt is noticeably soft, which is a nice surprise. I bound it with the dark blue mirage that came with the Rainy Day fq pack, as well as some of the tiny white-on-blue polka dot that Other said was his favorite.
The finished quilt is about 36"x42".
Linking up with Finish It Up Friday at crazymomquilts. Happy crafting!
We got these pictures when it was nicely lit but very windy out - the thing actually does lay flat if put on a flat surface, swear.
I used the last big hunk of Quilter's Dream Cotton Request (the thinnest one) for the batting, and quilted the whole thing with "organic" vertical lines to kind-of look like raindrops rolling down a window. Hadn't used my free-motion foot in a long time. Quilted a few raindrop shapes in as well, on the dark fabrics. I auditioned white, gray, light blue, and dark blue thread for quilting, and Other liked the dark blue.
The back is another Connecting Threads print, gotten in astonishing quantity from their Cyber Monday sale. The finished quilt is noticeably soft, which is a nice surprise. I bound it with the dark blue mirage that came with the Rainy Day fq pack, as well as some of the tiny white-on-blue polka dot that Other said was his favorite.
The finished quilt is about 36"x42".
Linking up with Finish It Up Friday at crazymomquilts. Happy crafting!
Rainy Quilt WIP
I just glanced at my traffic stats, and either my mom is very bored and has become weirdly obsessive about checking my blog, or there are actually some people who aren't my mom looking at this. Hi, people! Hi, Mom!
Eager to cleanse my quilting palette from the preceding Fugfest, I started chopping up some fabric for a little quilt for my husband. Everyone else in our little family has a little quilt (and some even fit all the way under them), so it seemed like time to even things up.
At Connecting Threads's cyber monday sale I got a FQ set of Rainy Day for a ridiculously small amount of money. (Also got two large cuts for crazy cheap, which will be mostly quilt backs.) The fabrics above are the ones that made the cut, plus a fq that I dyed in a class many years ago.
These didn't make the cut. The grays surprised me, but I was hoping to pinch a bit of each for a different quilt of much gray, so that worked out well.
Hand dyed |
I go back and forth on this one, but it does match the color scheme really well, so it's going in.
In other random news, my iron finally turned on me and was spitting water - really, really hot water - at me and everything, and then it gave up the ghost. Just now I considered saying that I'm surprised it never did significant amounts of damage, but I haven't thrown it out yet, so I'd rather not tempt fate like that.
Here's the replacement, long may it reign.
Happy crafting!
1.16.2015
Can't Wait to Eat It
I have a finish!
And I just desperately hate it. Hated it so much that I considered balling it up and putting it away forever, but the recipients liked it, so I pushed through. I did not try very hard. The techniques I used to finish it cannot be found in any quilting encyclopedias, Craftsy classes, or incredibly misinformed blogs. I crossed the streams, made specific and detailed public statements about Fight Club, and put Baby in a corner on this quilt.
For this quilt, I used the palette builder at Play Crafts to pick fabrics and then sketched up several different ideas and had the recipients pick which one they liked. The palette builder worked well - the general concept did not. I love this picture, and the sunflower itself was pretty cool as well. Maybe it will grow on me, but I'm not holding my breath. Hey, self: next time just get a big print of the picture you like.
Feh.
Linking up with Finish It Up Friday at crazymomquilts, because a finish is a finish, even if it's fugly.
Happy crafting!
And I just desperately hate it. Hated it so much that I considered balling it up and putting it away forever, but the recipients liked it, so I pushed through. I did not try very hard. The techniques I used to finish it cannot be found in any quilting encyclopedias, Craftsy classes, or incredibly misinformed blogs. I crossed the streams, made specific and detailed public statements about Fight Club, and put Baby in a corner on this quilt.
For this quilt, I used the palette builder at Play Crafts to pick fabrics and then sketched up several different ideas and had the recipients pick which one they liked. The palette builder worked well - the general concept did not. I love this picture, and the sunflower itself was pretty cool as well. Maybe it will grow on me, but I'm not holding my breath. Hey, self: next time just get a big print of the picture you like.
Feh.
Linking up with Finish It Up Friday at crazymomquilts, because a finish is a finish, even if it's fugly.
Happy crafting!
1.11.2015
A mitten story
For a harrowing and difficult eight days, I couldn't find my right Owl Mitten. (Pictured below, right)
Worse, the eight days fell during the small window of time during the year that I focus, finally and in a panic, on making gifts for my loved ones. I was in a sea of I'll-never-be-knitting-anything-but-felted-slippers-again-much-less-quilting-omggg.
I got through this dark time by carrying mitten yarn with me and winding it into balls while making phone calls at work.
I also asked for some more mitten yarn (Jamieson's Shetland Spindrift) for Christmas. Then I found the mitten at work.
Two pairs of felted slippers later (yeah, it was only two pairs, but one pair was team-knit in three days), I dove right into a new pair of mittens with the new Christmas yarn.
Two rounds into the new pair of mittens, I decided that next Christmas will be the Christmas on which I will give all my loved ones colorwork mittens. Not this pair, of course, or the ones from the green and black yarn above, because all that yarn was given to me as a gift, so it doesn't feel right to give it away. I'll just knock out this blue and black pair first, then knock out 5 more pairs, then do the green and black pair. Never have to worry about not having backup mittens again.
Oh, and also, the stupid plastic mittens that we bought for the bigger kid are an ordeal to get on and can't be any fun to play in, so she'll need a pair of handknit ones, too. So that's eight pairs, then.
And there is now fabric and a rough plan for two more quilts.
Tune in Christmas, 2015 to see how this glorious Mittens for Everyone! Plan turns out.
Happy crafting!
Worse, the eight days fell during the small window of time during the year that I focus, finally and in a panic, on making gifts for my loved ones. I was in a sea of I'll-never-be-knitting-anything-but-felted-slippers-again-much-less-quilting-omggg.
I got through this dark time by carrying mitten yarn with me and winding it into balls while making phone calls at work.
Turns out I don't spend so much time on the phone at work. |
I also asked for some more mitten yarn (Jamieson's Shetland Spindrift) for Christmas. Then I found the mitten at work.
Two pairs of felted slippers later (yeah, it was only two pairs, but one pair was team-knit in three days), I dove right into a new pair of mittens with the new Christmas yarn.
Two rounds into the new pair of mittens, I decided that next Christmas will be the Christmas on which I will give all my loved ones colorwork mittens. Not this pair, of course, or the ones from the green and black yarn above, because all that yarn was given to me as a gift, so it doesn't feel right to give it away. I'll just knock out this blue and black pair first, then knock out 5 more pairs, then do the green and black pair. Never have to worry about not having backup mittens again.
Oh, and also, the stupid plastic mittens that we bought for the bigger kid are an ordeal to get on and can't be any fun to play in, so she'll need a pair of handknit ones, too. So that's eight pairs, then.
And there is now fabric and a rough plan for two more quilts.
Tune in Christmas, 2015 to see how this glorious Mittens for Everyone! Plan turns out.
Happy crafting!
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