Monday, January 28, 2013

Moving right along

I managed to catch back up again on the Bible Studies block of the week. This evening I did my block that represents "Numbers." Naturally, the fabrics that coordinated with my focus fabrics were in the tub on the bottom of the stack. At least it was in the bottom tub of the first row of tubs, and not in the back of the closet! (I have three rows of tubs, which can be both a blessing and a curse!)



I'm pretty happy with the way it turned out. The lighter fabrics have more blue in them than the lighting showed. I ended up drafting a pattern for it in Visio, because I wanted to foundation paper piece it to make sure everything came out the right width. I am linking to the pdf file of the foundation paper here, in case anyone has a burning desire to make a Log Cabin block!


Sunday, January 27, 2013

Fortune is fleeting

I actually got caught up on the Bible Studies quilt-along for all of three seconds today! This week's block wasn't that difficult, so I managed to get it put together with a minimum of effort and un-sewing.

Just as I lifted the presser foot on the last seam, "ding" went my email. It was the new block for this week, a day early! I was crushed- I had been looking forward to luxuriating for a day in being caught up. Oh well. The new block requires extra fabrics, so I am going to have to do some more stash-shopping or actual retail-shopping to find some more coordinating fabrics. Eeek. I suppose that on the bright side, I can work in a couple more fabrics for sashing and borders, because I definitely do not have enough yardage of my focus fabrics for the borders and sashing. I'm going to sleep on it.



Saturday, January 26, 2013

I'm making progress! I took the Very Hungry Caterpillar quilt to the long-arm-quilter this afternoon. I should get it back in plenty of time for the impending baby- there are only three other quilts ahead of me in line. I bought fabric for the binding today. I was planning on doing just plain black, but I lucked out! They still had some of the fabrics from that line, and I was able to get some blue fabric that will work well as a binding. Hooray! I showed everyone the crazy slice-and-dice backing, and we all had a good laugh over how life can turn out crazy.

In the mean time, I've been working on my Bible Studies block this evening- "Exodus." These are part of the quilt-along that we are doing at my local quilt shop, Quilter's Loft Company. Here are my blocks so far:

Here are the "Genesis" blocks:


Here is the "Exodus" block. These are 6" blocks, so the geese are only 1" tall finished! I've never done anything so small. They really ought to be called "Flying Goslings," they are so tiny. I am not sure whether I have the fine motor skills to make miniature quilts....



I'd start on the "Leviticus" block except that my printer cartridge seems to be running out of ink, therefore I can't print out the instructions. I've learned through hard experience that I need to keep the instructions next to my cutting board or else everything gets all mixed up in my mind! Tomorrow my goal is to buy a new printer cartridge while I am running errands and then I can get started on the block. Wouldn't it be funny if I could finish the Leviticus block before Monday evening? Then I'd be actually caught up! Awww, who am I kidding? I have waaay too much planned tomorrow to do that (I need to bake bread and make my yogurt for the week.)

It's late, so I've been fiddling around in my sewing area, putting away the cutting mat and other things. The tubs of fabric that I was auditioning and rejected are back in the closet. I even got out the batting and yardage for the next quilt sandwich I need to make. It is sitting on the armchair where I can't miss it. I need to cut the yardage to size and stitch it up. I waffle back and forth on whether to stay caught up on the Bible Studies blocks as long as I can, or to finish the old UFOs. Sigh. When it all comes down to it, I'm the quilting version of a social butterfly- I flit from project to project as the mood takes me. At least I'm staying inspired, right?

Monday, January 21, 2013

Unintentional design

Today has just been one of those days, sewing-wise. (So was yesterday.) I am making a crib-size baby quilt for a friend of mine who is expecting. I am using the Very Hungry Caterpillar fabrics.

I don't know if I washed the fabrics wrong, somehow, or ironed them wrong, or if they came that way from the factory, but the fabric is horribly off-grain. I ended up ripping the fabric half the time, because that at least gave me a straight edge, but this caused more problems downstream. Because of trying to straighten the edges, I ended up like the proverbial table with one leg too long that ends up sitting on the floor as the owner tries to even the legs out. The fabrics weren't long enough any more to meet my design as I had originally drafted it.

Then I also noticed that I had made the top design too wide to meet the requirements of the person who will be doing the long-arm-quilting on it. (She needs the batting and back 4" bigger on all sides.) So I had to redo the design, to make it both shorter and thinner. It didn't get smaller in a proportionally even way, though, unfortunately. Now I am disappointed that there aren't squares on the sides, just rectangles, which are too narrow sometimes to show a whole design element. (I am a bit obsessive about symmetry, sometimes.) Here is what I ended up with:



I finally finished the top, and went to start the back. Well, the kids were playing in my sewing room today. Between climbing over their activities, somehow the numbers got mixed up in my head between the ironing board and the rotary mat. I sewed the backing together, and went to measure it, and realized: now instead of being just the right width and height, it was too wide and still too short.

At this point, I was NOT going to going to take the fabric apart and put in a panel, because I didn't want to have to cut more fabric or find the middle of the length any more. So, I tacked on some strips of 4" wide lengths of scraps at the bottom and top. I figured that would get me through the long-arm-quilting process, and I could just chop them off later when I went to do the binding.

Wrong! The long-arm-quilter (with whom I had been corresponding by email this afternoon to set up a time for me to deliver it to her) gently reminded me that I needed to factor in more than the 4" for takeup as things get quilted. Forehead slap!

No problem, I thought. I pulled up my Big Girl socks and figured out the math of how much I needed to insert into the back to make it tall enough. Then I made a strip of coordinating fabric (thankfully I had plenty left) to insert into the quilt back. I carefully folded the quilt back to fit my cutting board, placed my ruler, and sliced away with my rotary cutter with a brand new blade. I unfolded it and realized: I had cut it into three pieces, not two. At that point I called my mother to commiserate, because I was ready to ball it up and stuff it in the back of the closet. My friend would be none the wiser, right? She doesn't read this blog. I could just send a cute outfit, right? Who was I fooling? Certainly not myself. There was the pesky point of me having just committed to taking the quilt sandwich to be machine quilted, and I am one to honor my commitments. I sewed the first strip in between two of the remnants, and then cut out another strip to bind up the mistaken cut.

On the bright side, despite all my repairs to fix mistakes done while repairing previous mistakes, it has actually turned out for the better. When it first started out, it looked like someone had randomly sewn a random strip of fabric up the middle of the quilt back. Now it truly looks just plain random. I feel like I am in some sort of disappearing nine-patch or mystery quilt-along. 


Sunday, January 13, 2013

One down!

Yay! I finished the Dargate quilt last night. I finished stitching the binding on with the football game in the background. I wasn't really paying attention, and I am neither a 49'ers fan or a Packers fan, but it was background noise. Plus I was getting up and going to check on my candied orange peel a lot, so it didn't make sense to watch something that required rapt attention to avoid missing plot points. So here it is:


My next project is one that I didn't even include in my inventory at the beginning of the year. I have decided to make a baby quilt for a girlfriend of mine who is having a baby. It is coming up soon, so I need to get to work. I have the fabric already in my stash, but I need to work out a design.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

The binding is going on the Dargate quilt! It is the narrowest binding in the world, though, I think. I made my strips 2" wide, but I think that going forward I am going to make it 2 1/4" wide. I think that I like a slightly wider binding, visually. Also, I can barely pull it around to the other side far enough to hide the stitching lines from sewing it to the front.

Monday, January 7, 2013

Oxymoron, or moron not to do it?

I'm working on making the binding for my Dargate quilt that I am finishing up right now. I trimmed the edges of the quilt and basted the edges last night, and now tonight I am pressing the binding. I haven't been starching the binding, because I had to remove spray starch to inaccessible locations ever since my DS kept trying to starch everything in our house. (I eventually gave him an empty spray bottle filled with water, and he "starched" his fat quarter and scrap collection with that.) My Amish with a Twist quilt recommends starch, and I've been dutifully starching it, but the quilt is turning out very badly. I don't know if it is the use of starch that I'm not used to, the use of a new (better) type of thread that I'm not used to, or a lack of skill on my part.

Anyhow, I digress. I was working on pressing the bias binding for the Dargate quilt, and it occurred to me that the (unstarched) fabric was very soft. I had gotten used to the feel of starched fabrics under my fingers! I then wondered if, since bias binding is supposed to be stretchy, whether one is supposed starch bias bindings. I wondered if it was an oxymoron, but apparently quick research on the internet shows me that is is very common, and in many cases, desirable. (Such as to hold celtic braid-work in place.) I really like the tutorial here on how to make a rounded quilt corner, but I also follow the directions in "Your First Quilt Book," too.

In other news, I didn't have a name for the quilt before, but based on a conversation with two quilting friends today, I've decided to entitle it "Two kids, two careers, an associate's degree, and seven years later...."

Friday, January 4, 2013

Look what I found- more Dargates!

Just when I was giving up because I thought Margo Krager had moved on to other projects (like the Delaines), look what I happened to find on her website this evening: a page for Dargate Rubies! After some detective work, I found swatches at the website for Newcastle Fabrics.... It sounds like it is coming out in March or April.... That should give me some time to save up!

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Fresh Start

I don't have visions of becoming a famous quilt blogger, but I did think I might fire this blog back up. This post is a way of having some accountability to finish my UFOs. WeddingDressBlue posted an inventory of all her unfinished quilts to measure her progress through 2012, so I decided to do the same for 2013. My New Year's Resolution is to spend less time having screen time and more time doing things that "improve me," like quilting or exercising or my prayer time or my FlyLady habits, all of which have been sadly neglected lately. My goal is to finish the quilts from oldest to newest, but some I can't remember how long it's been, so the list is approximate.

Quilts in Progress, as of January 2, 2013
1. Women's Voices of American History quilt (a Dargate quilt, need to finish quilting it, and then bind it)
2. Teal Single Irish Chain (finished top, but needs sandwiching/quilting/binding)
3. Champions of the West (blocks finished, but not stitched together- I got creative block when it came to the border)
4. Civil War Sampler "cot" quilt (haven't finished all the blocks yet)
5. Liberty of Londons sampler quilt (I honestly can't remember where this is in the process, but I definitely haven't got the quilt top finished)
6. Golden's Journal quilt (haven't finished all the blocks yet)
7. Peggy Martin-technique sampler quilt (ditto)
8. Crazy quilt (not your usual crazy quilt, but it is crazy! Quilt top finished, but needs sandwiching/quilting/binding)
9. Roses for Shiloh quilt by Painted Pony 'n Quilts (haven't finished all the blocks yet)
10. Amish with a Twist (haven't finished all the blocks yet)
11. Space left here in case I've forgotten something, kinda like setting an empty chair at dinner for a possible stranger to show up. It's possible as I excavate down through my stash, that I may find more quilts I didn't know about. We are proud members of Old Salem, and one of the side benefits of membership is getting a new tote bag each year. The past few years they've been marvelous gigantic bags, perfect for filling with accumulated projects. A new year, another Old Salem bag with an unfinished quilt!

Quilts in the "Some Day" Stage, as of January 2, 2013
1. Olivia the piglet quilt
2. A Baltimore Album quilt
3. A hexagon quilt
4. A chintz panel quilt
5. A quilt with the Metro Blues fabrics that I got in New Braunfels and Belleville
6. Various Rosemary Youngs Civil War Diary and Civil War Anniversary quilts
7. Barbara Brackman's Civil War Sampler
8. Barbara Brackman's Grandmother's Choice women's suffrage sampler
9. A botanical album quilt that I've had designed in my head for a long time
10. Mill Girls and Away from Home by Nancy Rink
11. Mimi's Bloomers quilt by Erin Russek
12. Just Takes Two quilt by Sentimental Stitches
13. The Hazel Ilene quilts by Prairie Moon Quilts
14. Path to the Civil War: Aurelia's Journey Quilt
15. A Dear Jane quilt
16. A bed-runner designed by one of my kids