Showing posts with label Quilts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quilts. Show all posts

Monday, March 25, 2024

Square Parties: Monday Mess Making

Since the last post, I've finished two more quilt tops for Loving Stitches:

Name:  "Biscotti"
Author:  Heidi Cook
Source:  Villa Rosa Design Card.  Copyright 2022










This is a modified Rail Fence quilt pattern.  These strips were in a box in the church closet,
so all I had to do was figure out the puzzle and put it together.


I've also made progress on the yarn scrap project:

"Kittens in a Row"

This is an adaptation of Happy Yellow House's "Criss Cross" pattern
found here.

The 12-inch square pattern is called "Pinwheel."  It is by Dayna Audirsch.
Unfortunately, it is no longer available online (I downloaded it in 2009).


I've even had time for a couple of painting parties:

This is the second year I've had the privilege of leading a class with the
WINGS (Women In God's Service) group at Lakewood Church of Christ


Miss Betsey stopped by to paint with me this weekend.


Monday, February 5, 2024

Scraps and Tools: Monday Mess Making

Name:  Rotation
Author: Sandra Clemons
Source:  McCalls Quick Quilts Dec/Jan 2016
Also found here.




The first 2024 meeting of Loving Stitches found me working from home.  Mid January dove Colorado into dangerously frigid temperatures, and getting out--even to quilt--was not a wise move.  I texted back and forth with the ladies at the church who braved the elements and kept them abreast of my progress.  A few days before the meeting I finished all the squares for this quilt, so I spent most of Saturday assembling the top.  This pattern was difficult and taught me new skills, but I am so proud of how it turned out.  At some point, I may consider making this one again with a different color scheme.

 

Pattern information unknown.

The rest of the weekend was spent finishing up this quilt and the pillowcases that went with both. This was a kit cut and put together by Miss Pam, so piecing it was simple.  I've also improved on my pillowcase making skills.


Months ago, I purchased this triangle ruler.  I'd seen something like this used in a YouTube video.  Though it wasn't the exact same ruler, I thought that they pretty much worked the same way.

They don't.

The half square triangles I made had to be cut three different times to be close to correct.  Ok, so this doesn't simplify anything.  First off, the printed instructions that came with the ruler were insanely confusing.  I scoured the internet to find some intelligible directions.  I found this on YouTube:

My first attempt with the adapted instructions.
OK.  Before I go into this, hear me out.  I'm well aware that as a novice quilter, my ignorance may be hurting my technique.  In other words, I may just be too dumb to use this tool correctly.  With that being said, though the instructor's directions were much clearer than those that came with the ruler, when I followed her, I ended up with a rectangle that was 4 x 3.5 inches.  So, I ended up having to cut the square again to get the right measurements, plus the placement of the diagonal seam wasn't quite right.  I tried moving the ruler to the 3.5 inch mark.  That seemed to work much better.

Yes, some of the placement is still a bit cattywampus, however, adapting the directions simplified the process tremendously.  I just need more practice.  This is a scrap project, so I'll work on it as I finish other projects.

Speaking of scraps: I have a box full of unused partial skeins of yarn from previous projects.  My goal this year is to use up those scraps before starting any new large projects.  This preemie blanket is the first large project I've finished out of that stash.

Well, see you at the next mess.

Monday, July 10, 2023

Quilt in a Day...Well - Episode 3: Monday Mess Making


 

We left our last episode with my successfully completing my first baby quilt.  

 

I finished this quilt a month before I left for Colorado (so the kid I made it for is almost six years old now--wow). 

Fast forward to fall 2022.  I finished a quilt from start to finish.  It's an Eleanor Burns pattern called "Hole in the Wall."  Of course, her video tutorial on YouTube made it look easy.  

Of course, it wasn't.

Although I was pleased with finishing it, I was immensely frustrated with how many mistakes I made in creating it.  No, I'm not going to tell you what they were, but let's just say I wasn't anxious to try making another quilt any time soon.

Fast forward again to a few months ago.  I was at an event on campus and Christa from our academy invited me to her church's quilting group, Loving Stitches.  The group creates quilts to give to those who have a new baby, been in the hospital, are grieving a death, etc.  Though this group was right up my alley, I quickly let her know that I'm a novice (or worse) at quilting, which she promptly saw as no problem.

 

 
We usually meet twice a month at the church (Grace Fellowship in Lakewood), or at the home of one of the members to construct projects, as well as have a devotional and a time of prayer over the quilts.  

The first week I attended, ironing fabric was my task (no, I didn't burn myself).  Christa's mom, Mama Pam, handed me a package of cut fabric with instructions on how to put it together.  Ah, a kit.  Perfect!  It took me a while, but I finished my first quilt top for the group in May.

Since then, I've finished another top...

...and started another (I'll post a picture when I'm done).
 
So, have I cracked the quilting code yet?  Not quite.  My goal is to again attempt to make a quilt from start to finish while focusing on my weakest areas (things like cutting straight lines, binding, sewing straight lines, making sure my squares are...well...square, etc.  Along with doing all that without throwing things, saying ugly words, or having to rethread my sewing machine 5,465,812 times because I didn't start stitching with the needle down).  

Let's see where this goes.
 
Episodes in this series (so far):
 
Episode 1 is here.
Episode 2 is here.
 

Thursday, July 13, 2017

Quilt in a Day...Well... Episode 2 [Thursday 13]



If you remember from our last episode here, I chronicled my journey into (and back out of) the world of quilting.  Well, I may have cracked the code...maybe.

Here are thirteen steps to making your first real quilt:
  1. Take sewing lessons in high school and learn nothing useful besides threading the machine and backtacking.  Thanks angry, hateful, impatient "teacher" who will remain nameless but everyone who went to Jacksonville High School (AL) in the 80's and took Home Ec will know who I'm talking about.
  2. Watch several years of quilting shows on PBS and get lots of information and inspiration you can't do anything with (see #1).
  3. Take a beginning level adult quilting class that isn't one.
  4. Buy almost $100 worth of quilting supplies you don't know how to use and really can't afford.
  5. Take a couple more sessions of "beginners" class that still isn't one.
  6. Cuss a lot and make absolutely nothing.
  7. Quit the class before you punch someone in the throat, and stuff expensive quilting supplies in a closet to gather dust.
  8. Watch more quilting videos on TV and later, the internet, for about a decade.
  9. Dust off your supplies and make butt ugly quilts you wouldn't take to a rat killing, but donate them anyway because the fabric was expensive and the items were needed.
  10. Find other uses for quilting equipment.  Examples:  Use your cutting mat as a mat under your painting easel, use your rotary cutter and lip-edged ruler to cut paper cards, and use your quilting thread to patch and sew buttons back on clothes.  Oh yeah, and use your sewing machine to make diaper bags.  Hey, it's something.
  11. Give up on real quilting and resolve to make crochet quilts (as mentioned in episode 1).
  12. Make a new friend who quilts and gives you the best advice ever given--to take your time and do what works for YOU.
  13. Throw out the rule book of "ought"s and "should"s and finish a real quilt.
And here it is.

Around the World Baby Quilt
























The back label.


So what's next?  More study and practice to improve on the techniques I've already learned. And MORE REAL QUILTS!

Episodes in this series (so far):

Episode 1 is here.
Episode 3 is here

 

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Quilt in a Day...Well...Episode 1

Quilting has always fascinated me.  Taking tiny cuts of cloth and stitching them together to make functional art has been a staple of American society.  From  the intricate quilts of the Native Americans, to First Lady Martha Washington to the freedom quilts of Gee's Bend, quilts have warmed bodies and souls, told stories, and become family heirlooms.  I have longed to make fabric art of this magnitude. 

My first foray into sewing was in 7th grade when I took Home Economics (which, sadly, isn't taught in many schools now--but that's a rant for another day).  Between high pitched insults and rants about how much she hated kids, the teacher (name withheld to protect the guilty) at least taught us how to thread the machine and to always backtack at the ends of a stitch.  After a semester of sewing C-grade items, I was glad to move on to something else...like 8th grade! 

On of my best diaper bags
After not touching a sewing machine again until I was an adult (flashbacks, you know), I picked up where I left off.  I made a few C-grade clothing items for myself and some truly butt-ugly baby quilts for donation--one of the few times I was truly ashamed of my work.  Over the years, I got pretty good at making diaper bags, but still the beauty of a quilt eluded me.

An area church's quilting club offered free beginner classes.  Unfortunately, it was full of a bunch of seasoned quilters and me.  The leader (I can't call her a teacher) conducted the "classes" as if everyone already knew what they were doing, which isn't beginner level at all.  After several sessions of less sewing and more cussing under my breath, I left the class in utter disgust.  But I still wanted to make a quilt.  I read books, got advice from people at fabric shops and craft stores, watched videos, went through I don't know how much fabric, and wore out two old sewing machines (or was it 3?).  But no matter how hard I tried, I never succeeded in sewing a decent quilt.

9-patch sampler
A friend taught me to crochet granny squares in 1992.  I made several granny square blankets, but I'd never thought of making quilt-type afghans, or quilt-ghans, out of them.  The idea finally came years later when I saw a pattern online for a 9-patch sampler quilt-ghan made of 3-round granny squares.  I made the pattern and loved it.  The only trick to it was learning to make the two-color squares.  Once I got the hang of it, the rest was pretty easy--tedious, but easy.

School bus cuddle quilt
I made several other quilt-ghans over the years, but I still watched quilting shows on TV, and later the internet, in hopes that something would click and I could finally make a "real" quilt.  I longingly viewed images of Nancy Zieman, Georgia Bonesteel, and Eleanor Burns, among others, blissfully making smooth strips, squares, and appliques with their rotary cutters or other tools, whipping the fabrics together on sewing machines with more buttons than the helm of the U. S. S. Enterprise, and alluding to this thing called binding that I have YET to figure out.  How DO they do that?  Sigh.

So what was Auntie to do?
Patchwork fans

Right after Christmas, my desire to quilt started gnawing in my craw again, but I didn't feel like wasting more fabric and still not getting what I want.  Then the thought hit me to work with what I had instead of mope.  I didn't want to simply repeat past patterns, but to try to design my own, or at least gain some inspiration from "real" quilts and the stories behind them.

My first quilt project for the year was called "Peony."  It was inspired by a project featured on Eleanor Burns Quilt in a Day:  Egg Money Quilts show.  The basic pattern was already established, but certain crochet elements, like the lattice work between the squares, I had to figure out for myself.  The finished product took about two months and was donated as a door prize for the Senior Citizen's dance.


My interpretation
The inspiration
My second and most elaborate project to date is another Eleanor Burns inspired quilt-ghan.  The birdhouse quilt was different in that I had to make the pattern completely from scratch.  I couldn't just look at the screen capture and make squares that make an exact copy the pattern.  I also had to add, remove, and reposition various elements to get the results I wanted.  I also had to comb through books, printouts, and computer files for patterns for the different flower and insect appliques, many of which I liked, but had to modify to get what I wanted.  This project took four months and I auctioned it off online.  It actually sold, and I am extremely proud.  Maybe my quilt-ghans are "real" after all.

So what's next?


Photo courtesy of Google

I've admired the quilt pictured here by Nancy Zieman since I saw it featured in her ombre fabrics series.  I tried a couple of different versions of the square, but couldn't figure it out.  I found a fabric pattern that may help me figure it out.  We'll see.  I'll most likely be settling in to making the project in the fall.  So be on the lookout.

Episodes in this series (so far):

Episode 2 is here.
Episode 3 is here.

Saturday, February 7, 2015

Peonies in February




December 2014 was a busy month at the Workshop.  It was my first go at a multiple vendor craft show.  I didn't sell nearly what I'd hoped, but I did learn a lot and had fun.  I've got new ideas for next year's attempt.







January had an early show of geraniums just in time for that month's senior citizens' dance.  This is my first experience painting this flower and there are many more varieties of this beautiful floral cluster.  So, be on the lookout for more later.






This month's dance door prize was inspired by a quilt created by Eleanor Burns.  She is famous for her Quilt in a Day series of books and videos.  This quilt-ghan is called Peony.  It's a reminder to me that spring is coming.