12.25.2015

FO: Block O-hio Star Quilt

It's finished!  And wrapped, and given.  Witnesses report that the recipient was happy about it, but I was holding it up and couldn't see the reaction.  The recipient is not a huge quilt person, but is a huge Ohio State person, so maybe that worked. 


I bound it in a black print after realizing that I didn't have nearly enough dark gray to do the job.  Borders just didn't happen, but I did finish this early in the day on Christmas Eve, so that's a win.  I failed to measure it before giving it away, but I had to stand on the glider footstool to get this picture, and I'm 5'4", if that gives you some idea. 


I've mentioned that naptimes recently have been hit or miss, and the last naptime before we got on a plane looked like this:  

That is a child under the fabric that was to become binding. 

Cute and terribly unproductive.  So that night after the kids went to sleep, I got the binding cut and sewn on, then grabbed time as I could sewing it to the backside.  In the car on the way to the airport, late at night instead of sleeping.

For the quarter-square triangles for the Ohio Stars, I used a technique that is kind of strip piecing and kind of chain quilting.  I made half-square triangles by the seat of my pants. 


If I had to do this again (which, please, no), I'd use a more limited range of values in the red, keeping it medium-to-dark. 

I'm very, very proud of the drop shadow, and the range of grays I used to create it. 

Right now I'm enjoying this moment of after-Christmas freedom, thinking about all the wonderful things I can plan for next year. 

Bonus FO: Owl Mittens
These owl mittens were a special request - also in Buckeye colors, perhaps you are sensing a theme - and were given for a mid-December birthday. 


I'll link up to Crazy Mom Quilts on Monday.  

I hope your gift-giving went well, with met deadlines and delighted recipients. 

Happy crafting! 

12.06.2015

Drop Shadow, Baby!

Things have been kind of weird lately!  For a while, when I recommitted to exercise and work went crazy, I wasn't quilting at all. Some nights I didn't even knit.  Sad times.  Then, work settled down, but the kids went crazy, and I found myself, a few nights ago, gearing up to exercise at 10:40pm.  Not great!

Then yesterday, we were home for part of the day, and I made significant progress on this quilt while also minding the children.  They are big enough that they can entertain themselves for some stretches of time now.  Before, I might get a seam here or there, but really the only significant progress was during quiet time/nap time, and sometimes even that went by the wayside.  Also sad times.

I read several quilting blogs of people with young children, and I can't fathom how they churn out finished quilts. 

Block O-hio Star Quilt


Above is where we were yesterday, and below is where we are this morning. (I also may have stayed up waaay too late working on it.)  


Drawing this out was pretty easy.  Making the blocks has involved a LOT of thinking with my tongue sticking out.  And seam ripping.  It should probably get a border, just a couple of solids around the outside, but I'm not sure if I'll be able to hack that. 

After Thanksgiving, I'd pretty much given up on getting this done by Christmas, but now it's seeming possible.  If I do little else.  And if work and the kids remain under a certain calmness threshold.

Fabric
In what's becoming a very enjoyable little tradition, I got some super-cheap yardage at the Connecting Threads Black Cyber Sale.  The green big-print will probably be used for backing, and the gray may be used in this Ohio Star quilt or maybe not.  I also got a couple reds for it, but those went straight into the washing machine, then into the quilt.


The green right under the gray was a little Local Fabric Store purchase on my Thanksgiving trip.

Christmas Aaugh
In some ways I'm in good shape for Christmas - finished several things early.  Then I hid some of them very well, so well that I'll spend precious Making Stuff time tearing apart all the places I might've hidden them because I cannot find them.

Breaking News!!1!
I found one!  And now I remember the kiddo "wrapping" it and hiding it there.  While writing this, I spied a box under the table and thought to myself, "ooh, did I order fabric and then forget about it?"  Sadly no, but I will still chalk this up as a win.

Happy crafting, and may you always find your ridiculous hiding places before your gift-giving occasions. 

11.07.2015

Little finish

Baby Bear needed a baby quilt:



and I needed to try out the right-angle stipple I wanted to use on the THERE. quilt.  


The reddish purples, the ones on the diagonal across the nine-patch, were all birthday fabric.  I have a quilt in mind for them, but because it was becoming clear that I won't be getting to that one for a while, I took them for a little spin here.  


The backing is birthday fabric, too, and I seriously love it and had no idea what to use it for before this opportunity presented itself.  I get to see it a lot this way, which is a nice bonus.  Baby Bear is getting a lot of covering-up love these days.   

That early-October holiday is a day off for me but not my kids, and I usually quilt my ass off.  This year, I spent the time regaining control of the crafting space/dining room.  It's nice and organized, but I piled a lot of stuff on the table and haven't been able to get up the momentum to get it off again and dig back into my big quilting projects.  I want to, and there are deadlines, but. ...  

So for now I'm knitting - two more friends are having babies (and soon!) and babies need blankets.  (I love it when friends have babies.  Friends, I will speak with you by phone approximately once every two years, and promise to visit sometime and then never do it, but by gum I will make you blankets when you have babies!)


The chevron blanket will be made of leftovers - the parents-to-be are going to find out the sex of their little one at birth, so I'm sticking to very neutral colors.  Not loving the gray and green together, but next will be blue, which may pep it up a bit.  And, depending on the blue I use, make it not-so-neutral any more.  The background wafflely blanket is in KP Swish in Twilight, which is a very nice blue, for a little baby boy #3.  

I've stuck a few things back up in my shop - just some socks and a pink folded-flower quilt.  So if your size-medium-women's feet are cold, or if you can't get enough of pink (or, uh, both?), check it out.  

Happy crafting!

10.09.2015

FO: Woodland Baby Blanket



The Woodland Baby Blanket is finished!  Mom-to-be declared it a great match for the woodland-themed nursery (a happy coincidence).  

These are pre-washing pictures.  I used white thread to piece and then quilted with brown thread on the top and white on the bottom.  The complimentary colored squares were all from stash. 


Yes, I'm standing on the couch. 
A tiny bit of yellow showed on the left and not the right of the expander strip.  Good thing I'm not OCD. 


And post-washing, with daylight and small helping hands:
 

I quilted straight lines along the edges of the horizontal brown sashing and then around the other sides of the squares, just lifting the needle up and moving to the next row down.  Then I cut all the connecting threads and buried the ends and there were 19 squares x 4 corners and 12 squares x 2 corners + am I seriously still working on this + am I SERIOUSLY still working on this = maybe I should have just backtracked a couple of times and called it good, but it turns out I can't because maybe I am actually a little tiny bit OCD, despite aforementioned captions to the contrary. 


Anyway, I think the ends-burying took longer than the actual quilting, which was annoying.  I switched to a larger-eye needle after the first evening of ends-burying, which helped a lot.  

Woodland Baby Blanket
Finished Size: 45"ish x 37"ish (forgot to measure)
Batting: Hobbs cotton
Thread: C&C poly


In other news, we hit the Sheep & Wool fest last weekend and I used up some of my precious spending money on some pretty darn plain-looking wool yarn, sheep-colored. 
 

But the possibilities for colorwork that these represent are very exciting indeed.   I've got a bug to knit little colorwork mittens for the little hands in my house with winter coming up, and I was feeling a cold little foot this morning and then got a second bug to knit a parade of little wool socks, too.  If only every day were sit-around-and-make-stuff day.  

Linking up with Crazy Mom Quilts for Finish it Up Friday.  

Happy crafting! 

9.14.2015

working with panels

There are three babies on the way whose mamas I'm fond of, so I'm busy working on one quilt and obsessively thinking about how to come up with two more quilts or blankets without spending money or dipping into my precious stash of CotLin in Kohlrabi, when the two people whose color preferences I've asked about have said "green."  Kohlrabi's discontinued!  I wanted a sweater!  Yes I haven't made myself a sweater out of Kohlrabi in the four or so years it's been in my stash but still!  


Now I am trying to distract you from my selfishness with a picture of a quilt top - did it work?  This is my first attempt at a quilt using a panel - this panel, which I got from Hawthorne Threads as part of my Birthday Fabric Extravaganza.  

To my surprise, the little animal squares did not measure any kind of standard measurement, at least not by imperial standards - it did not occur to me until this very second to have tried metric, although that might have worked.  So, to cut out blocks all the same size, I measured a standard amount (7/8", I think) from the edge of the middle square that the animal is in, rather than measuring the whole square or trying to measure out from the acorn or leaf borders.  

This worked pretty well, although there were a few squares where the fabric was pretty biased/distorted/not square, and you can see an example of this in the third row from the bottom, where a deer square loses a tiny bit of its border.  Whoops.  

I was also less than precise when putting the top together about lining up the rows exactly, so sewing the borders on the right and left side was a leeetle touch and go there, but God knows I'm not unpicking anything.  

I wasn't sure about brown as the background fabric - brown?  really?  - but the organic cotton is a kind of natural color and white would just not have worked and I thought about army green but ugh so brown it was.  Had to order more when the half-yard went really fast, but I like this print so much I might order even more. 

Here are some herringbone mittens (take that, Christmas 2015!!) for my SIL, pictured on the backing fabric.  This was taken before blocking, and after blocking they're so flat and even that I kind of want to wrap them up pressed between two pieces of cardboard.  That's probably weird.  


 And finally, in honor of my parents' trip to London, I'm knitting myself mittens with the gift they brought back for me from their last trip to London.  DK mittens go fast! 


Happy crafting! 

8.30.2015

Double There!

I finished some socks.  

I have very little recollection of knitting any of these, except for the one on the far right, which I knit in two days, over the course of 16 hours of training this week.  

In other news, I finished this quilt, which I need a name for.  Maybe I'll just call it "THERE."  That sounds good.  I feel much the same way about finishing the quilt as I do finishing the top.  This took forever, time that I should have been spending on other stuff.  I just can't quit you, THERE Quilt. 



It's in the wash right now, in fact I should go move it to the dryer before the red parts bleed onto other fabrics.  BRB. 



Here's the back.  I used two half-yards of Connecting Threads fabric that I've had in my stash for a long time and that really only match each other.  I like them, but didn't really have a plan for them, and sewn together, they were just the right size for the back.  The label is done on the border fabric, which is a nice "low volume" (back in my day that was just called "light," get off my lawn) I got last year and didn't have any other plans for.   



 Designing this one was interesting, because I don't feel like I have a good design sense - when people talk about making choices for reasons, it strikes me that I have very little sense of direction with this.  So, I did whatever I felt like doing.  Is this a good design?  I dunno.  The gray parts were a huge PITA - it would have been much easier to just float everything in a sea of white.  The border - does it help?  Detract?  No idea.  It's just what I felt like doing.  My instinct was to do a dark gray for the binding, but I'm not sure how much of that I have left, and I went with a scrappy binding of mostly fabrics I hadn't managed to get into the squares for one reason or another. 


I did a squared-off stipple for the quilting, and I do feel that this nicely complements the boxy, right-angularity of the scrap squares.  It was difficult to do and definitely is not perfect.  I'd read a long time ago that it's helpful to kind of pause for a stitch or two before changing direction, and this definitely helped make the changes more square than curved.  


Explorer Bag

I finished attaching the nylon webbing to the explorer bag I started and then let sit for a long time.  


The front flap is a piece of light oranges I'd put together for the background of a scrappy quilt that ended up being too nondistinct from the other orange.  I freaking love it, and it was just the perfect size for this.  


Don't look too closely at the zipper.  


 Happy crafting! 


8.12.2015

THERE.


GAWD. 

7.03.2015

Pouch, Bag, Wall Thing

A pouch!

 Mom needed pouches for travel.  I gathered up some old knitted pouches and decided to employ some of the bitty piecing to make a nice shiny new quilted pouch to surprise her with.  

Hello, I am a pouch. 
The pouch has two sides!  This is one of them!
My process was: make a square-ish piece of fabric.  Make another one really close to the same size.  Quilt fabric and batting together.  Make pouch using normal pouch construction sewing fabric, zipper, and lining together and then lining-to-lining and outside-to-outside and then turning through a turning hole in the lining.  

Here is the other side of the pouch! 
Contrast zipper because that is the zipper I had in the right length.  Mailed it without taking any kind of measurements, though you can get a general idea from the happy accident that I photographed it sitting on top of a 9.5" square ruler. 


A bag!


On a family hike, I realized that kiddo needs a bag to collect rocks in, because one needs rocks to throw into streams and rivers and once you've visited a stream or river enough, there are few remaining rocks at hand.  So I consulted the fuzzy bag-ish thoughts in my head and drew up a template and started working.  This is the only picture I have of it so far, and I'm stalled trying to figure out if I'm going to make a strap out of quilted gray material or go with some nylon webbing.  I don't have any nylon webbing, at least none that isn't being used by another bag at the moment, so the bag sits while I think.  

Oh yeah, I put in my first slit pocket zipper and whoo, that did not go well!  It's a hot mess, but I don't have a zipper foot and it's on the back and it's for a three-year-old, so we're going with it.  
 

A Wall Thing!

I have needed a wall bill/mail holder/organizer thing for a long time. It finally occurred to me that I can make one.  Oh yeah, I make stuff!  Googled for a tutorial, voila, I've heard of noodlehead, she has a tutorial, I have slightly fewer than half of the called-for materials, let's go!  

To be specific, I have a canvas (the wrong size, my Wall Thing will be one-pocket) and fabric.  Oh, and interfacing, although I feel like a stranger in a strange land when it comes to interfacing, never sure which interfacing is the right interfacing, not sure exactly how to use it, and pretty sure I'm going to ruin my iron and possibly my life if I do it wrong. 

My long-thwarted desire for a Wall Thing will outweigh my long-held distrust of interfacing, though, and I plan to learn things and hopefully not cry too many times and maybe find a stapler, the nice kind that swings open and actually holds stuff together, so that this whole project isn't dependent on Mod Podge.  We'll see.  

Happy crafting! 

5.23.2015

After Hours

After finishing Weathervane Island, I was ready for more of that sweet, sweet finish-y feeling, but without the commitment of several months of work.  I'd recently turned up a little quilt from when I was a kid (below, left), which gave me an idea for a shortcut to the payoff. 


The old little quilt is a true mess - some seams are hand-stitched and some are machine-stitched, there isn't a right angle or straight line to be found, and it's clearly seen a lot of love.  An evening's work produced the little quilt on the right from my purple scraps.  I pieced and log-cabined and cut and pieced some more, then sandwiched it with some flannel and a plain back and did envelope construction.  Machine-stitched the turning hole closed and top-stitched around the outside edge, no burying threads or hand sewing at all, and it felt great.  

Other remarked that Martin Scorsese would always shoot a little project after spending years on a movie - well, I get the impulse.  

I felt like I should get back to my next big project, which right now is all about varying shades of gray with some white thrown in, and lo, needed a leader and ender project to work on with all the piecing of the little tiny quilt.  I blew through all the gray stuff I had ready to piece and felt very proud that I'd gotten back into the big project.  

Aaand then, this happened:


And, then pillows: 


Churning out cute little mini things seems to be out of my system for now, and I've just finished a dozen gray Ohio Stars, which is good, but something about piecing together these teeny little scraps is very satisfying - there are probably more tiny little dollhouse quilts in my future. 

Linking up with Finish It Up Friday at crazymomquilts.  Happy crafting!

5.15.2015

BQF: Love Grows a Grove

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!

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.  
Before its wash
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. 


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! 

4.25.2015

Bloggy blog

Working on the Weathervane.


Decided to hand quilt it because I hate finishing stuff. 

Fussy cut tree in the center
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!