Friday, January 16, 2015

Continuing the Scrap Pursuit



I finished up the two tops that I was working on using scraps and fabrics from my stash today.  This is the top using bug fabrics (see this post for close-ups of the bug fabrics):
And I added the end borders and the corner pieces to finish up the monkeys top (posted about here):
These are now in the ever-growing and about to be over-whelming to-be-quilted pile.  I’m going to have to quilt next week for Project Linus (I try to do two a month for them), so I’ll get a few of these tops done then.

And this is the source for the next project on the drawing board (I think this issue was Jan/Feb 2013):

I often put post-it flags on pages of quilt magazines for projects that I want to work on in the future and literally have hundreds of pages marked.  Well, 2015 is the Year to get going on those!  So I selected this Quiltmaker magazine baby quilt – the ongoing series at the time was to take a block from a previously published quilt and enlarge it to make an easy Big Block Baby Quilt.

These are the fabrics I have pulled from my stash.  Cutting and sewing begins tomorrow … drum roll, please!


Check out what others are doing with their scraps!

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Nuts About Bugs!



Wednesday’s Work in Progress is a small Trip Around the World quilt featuring bug fabrics from my stash.


ladybugs
dragonflies

butterflies

I sewed the squares together Monday night and then the rows together on Tuesday night, so I expect the borders to go on tonight and another UFO will have been created.  Looking at the photo, I might change my mind about the orange border and make it blue ... hmmm ... or maybe a thin border of both ... still thinking ... have to check the stash.


Time to get some of these UFOs on the frame and quilted up (I seem to say that a lot!).

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Just Monkeying Around!




One of our local quilt shops was having a pre-inventory sale with good prices for end-of-the bolt sales, so I ended up with an extra large piece of this cute monkey fabric.


In my recent efforts to use what is in my stash, I pulled out this fabric and began the hunt for bits and pieces that might go with it.  I wanted to use a pattern called Anthony’s Star from an older Quiltmaker magazine, and I found a few fabrics I liked and I auditioned them as I went:


And this is the design as it grew (not sewn together yet).


I think it will end up 40 inches wide, but I didn’t want it square so I am still adding to the top and bottom.  So what I’ve really created is another UFO!

Oh, and we did have an early cold snap in FL last November – this is the proof in the Fall Foliage!


Usually, we don’t get many red leaves, just faded green and yellow, but this one looks pretty in the back yard.  And it did get cold last week:
 
not frost on the windows, but condensation!
But the cold is gone now and rain is expected.  The poor tourists can't catch a break!

Edited:  I linked up with Oh, Scrap! at http://quiltingismorefunthanhousework.blogspot.com/
I always seem to be at least a day late - maybe I'll get the hang of the Friday update soon!

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Work in Progress Wednesday




My inspiration pattern was a fabric line called “Emma Grace” by Kathy Brown for Red Rooster Fabrics:

And this is the progress I have made on my blocks using 1930s reproduction fabrics:


Still pulling from my scraps and stash, but I am not that good at totally scrappy.  I’d have to identify with the group that calls themselves “controlled” scrappies!

Monday, January 5, 2015

Let the “Oh Scrap!” Begin!



I have been wanting to use up my smallish stash of 1930s reproduction fabrics and 2015 is the Year.to.Make.It.Happen…

I saw an advertisement in a magazine of a pattern to come in 2015 and decided that I liked the look so much that I would just wing it with the dimensions.  This is my starting stash of 30s:


And these are the blocks that I have begun making for the Oh Scrap linky party over at Quilting is More Fun Than Housework.
 
framed 9-patches
I would have made a few more this morning, but somebody who shall remain nameless was insisting that it was time for lunch.


She is not allowed up in the sewing room – not because she is too furry (which she is) but because I drop too many pins and she likes to roll around on the Berber carpet – must feel good.

But I will be back at making more 30s blocks this evening and should have enough for a reasonable size kid’s quilt soon.  Thanks for the chance to link, Cynthia!

Sunday, January 4, 2015

First Finish of 2015



Another quilt using that Tropical Fish printed fabric and the Warm Wishes pattern.  I have one more to go and that fabric will finally be used up.  It’s nice and colorful, but it’s getting old!


I used a panto I hadn’t tried before called Bubbles (different sizes of circles) and I’m not sure I like how it looks on the quilt, but done and bound is always good …
 








This one qualifies as my first finish for the Stashbusters Yahoo Group.  It was No. 8 on my list and that was the first number they pulled.  Now on to squaring up that No. 35!

Did You Know?



Today is the Birthday of Louis Braille.  Braille?  That name sounds familiar …


Louis  Braille was a teacher and advocate of the blind in France in the early 1800s.  He was blinded himself at the age of 3 by an accident in his father’s leather shop, but despite this handicap, he excelled when his father sent him to school with sighted children.  He was also a gifted musician, learning to play the cello and organ at an early age.  While attending the National Institute of Blind Youth, he was inspired by a lecture he heard about a new system of embossed symbols, called sonography, invented by Captain Charles Barbier [although some say that Braille learned about the Barbier system in a newspaper account].  Barbier’s system was a method for soldiers to communicate silently during wartime field operations using dots and dashes embossed on leather.

Braille’s experiments and refinements of an embossing technique resulted in a six-dot code based on the letters of the alphabet that could be felt with the finger-tips.  After working with the number and placement of the dots, Braille was able to code not only letters, but also common words, symbols, and mathematical and musical notations that could be quickly read, stored compactly and useful for both reading and writing.


Braille was only twenty when he published his coding system.  His second expanded system was demonstrated at the Paris Exposition of Industry in 1834 and received praise of the French King, Louis Philippe.  The system was not well-received though by sighted instructors of the blind and school board members who feared the loss of their jobs to a well-educated blind populace and continued to advocate for the existing embossed-letter system.  That embossed-letter system used heavy paper with raised Latin letters that students found to be cumbersome and slow to read and was in no way suitable for writing.

Braille was an admired and respected musician and teacher at the National Institute of Blind Youth when he fell seriously ill with tuberculosis.  One of his former students, a blind musician, let the audience know after her performance in Paris that she had learned using the Braille system.  Renewed interest in the system grew and persistent advocating by blind students resulted in a revival of the system, but it was still not fully accepted until 1854, two years after Braille’s death.

Braille’s revolutionary invention has now been adapted for a multitude of languages and is now in use world-wide.  It has been modified periodically and the newest innovations include Braille computer terminals, a Braille email delivery service and further developments in mathematical and scientific notations.
 
Braille's childhood home in Coupvray  
Because he was a very young man when he developed his system, Braille is often hailed as a children’s hero.  Let us celebrate the life of Louis Braille today on the anniversary of his birth - this incredible innovator remains a creative inspiration to young and old alike, no matter their abilities.
 
For additional citations, see:

Friday, January 2, 2015

Busy as a Bee in the Sewing Room



I’ve been happily sewing away in the New Year.  I have vowed that 2015 will be the year that I use my fabric stash and scraps to make interesting quilts for children.

This is a low-contrast top I made on New Year’s Day from fabric I’ve had for several years.  The two colorways of the floral fabric look brighter in person and I like the design called Chain Reaction from a recent Fons and Porter Magazine.



I  joined the Stashbusters Yahoo Group for more incentive to dig into that stash of mine.  My first step was to officially join their 2015 UFO Challenge … and I actually dug out a few of those UFOs and counted them and sent in my entry.  Wahoo!  That’s progress already because I know now that I have too many UFOs (well, you would have thought I’d have known that before now, wouldn’t you?).  But now they are organized and readily available for me to sew them up.  And I joined the Numbers Game whereby they draw numbers and you work on that number from your list should you choose to do so.

The first numbers drawn were 8 and 35.  My #8 was a homemade kit for a kid-size Warm Wishes design using fabric printed with tropical fish.  It was in pieces before and I sewed up the top today:


And my #35 was strips that I had cut to make Mary Johnson’s Quick Strippie.  She says it is her favorite quick donation quilt and it really is so easy that I can’t imagine why mine is still a UFO.  Anyway, I sewed the strips all together today to make this quilt top (it’s actually straight, but I didn’t take the time to straighten it out on the rug):
 
The star print and the checkerboard are actually a dark Hunter green
I have desperately wanted to get rid of that checkered fabric that makes me dizzy looking at it – what was I thinking when I bought it?!!  They have to be quilted and bound before they are considered finishes for the UFO Challenge, so I have some work to do.

I also have a new button on my sidebar, Oh Scrap, that links to a blog that will have linky parties beginning on Jan 4th where people will share their creative ideas.    Cynthia Brunz sponsors the linkies and has a blog titled “Quilting is More Fun Than Housework” (you had me at the title, Cynthia!), also with numerous ideas for how to use those scraps.

So 2015 should be great fun in the Sewing Room!

Saturday, December 27, 2014

Took the Day Off

Finished up this quick little top for Quilts for Kids on Friday, then took Saturday off!

Had to play with the dog and her new Christmas present.

Hard to get a good picture since she wanted to show off her new toy, but didn't want anybody else to have it!  Everybody got a little something fun for Christmas ...

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

End of the Year Projects



Found some time today to get back into the sewing room and finished up the dog panel for Quilts for Kids.  I am getting a free roll of batting to use for quilting Quilts of Valor and Quilts for Kids so I am working up a few tops to have on hand when the batting arrives at the first of the new year.

This is the finished top – turns out the panel was printed wonky (as they are sometimes) and it was difficult to square up the top with the borders.  Might have trouble getting this one to lay flat when quilting, but I’ll do my best!



And, of course, I have to have multiple projects in the works, so this will be an  alternating 4-patch and novelty squares top – the yellow will be the first border:


And this kitty panel will be one of the next on the drawing board:



We’ve been having some lovely sunsets, but rain is expected tomorrow.


But if there is no lightning, then I’ll be sewing - Always something fun to work with around here!

Monday, December 15, 2014

Last Box and Last Delivery of 2014



My thread delivery came through so I finished up the last quilt for Quilts Beyond Borders and got it out the door:


panto called Feather Elegance

This is the last one to be mailed to the Navajo Nation in Bennett Freeze, Ariz.  The colors really appealed to me – I think the line was called Midwinter Reds by Moda.

And I quilted this last one up right away to give back to the Project Linus people here locally who will bind it and get it to a child in the hospital.  Great group!
 
panto called Hearts Surfing
But there’s no time like the present to start on something else:


I’m playing with blocks to try to figure out something symmetrical to go around that center panel and hopefully end up with a nice “boy” quilt for Quilts for Kids (another local group for kids in the hospital).

More blocks in the works … and maybe a whole new design … we’ll see!

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Working With Homespuns

I love the look of homespun fabrics - the plaids, the colors, how they get softer and softer in the wash, etc.  But I cannot love how the squares slip and slide and stretch during the sewing process!

Nevertheless, I am putting together this little quilt that has mostly homespuns mixed with a few flannels.  It will be very cozy when its finished and backed with snuggly flannel.  I am using scraps, triangles and leftover blocks that were sent to me by a fellow Sunshine Quilt Guild member.  It's just plain fun to work with someone else's stash sometimes!

I am adding blocks at the top and bottom to make it just a little larger, then it will be ready to quilt.

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Wait ... No Thread???!!!

What is this world coming to when a person can run out of thread for their longarm machine?  I thought I had one more spool and then would order (hopefully with an after-Christmas sale), but NO!

I finished quilting up this one for Project Linus.  It's similar to a previous one but this one has a light outer border and the other one was dark.  The panto was called Anne's Favorite and mirrored some of the flowers in the print:


And then I went to load another, and found that I only had red, gold and blue cones left (for Quilts of Valor quilts).  Big Bummer.  Off went the on-line order and now I wait.

Of course, I went back to working with the homespun fabrics that I had been sent by a friend and it is looking great ... but, still ... out of thread?  Who does that?!

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

And the Box Went Out the Door

I meant to pack up a box to Wrap-a-Smile last week and get it out before Thanksgiving, but I quilted another donated quilt and figured I could add it to the box - then another happened - I guess I was on a roll quilting and the box needed to be more full!

Here are the two extra quilts that went into the box.  First up is one pieced by Beth in NJ (a member of my Sunshine On-Line Quilt Guild) that I quilted with a panto called Floral Wave:


 And the second is another one from Beth's sister's MIL - quilted with a panto called I Love You [hearts and loops]:

The others in the box were included in this post.  And now the box is finally full and really in the mail!