Monday, March 24, 2008

Afternoon project

The lesson I learned about handling bias edges while working on this project


were completely forgotten a short two weeks later while constructing this small table topper. The flying geese units were made using the Square in a Square method and ruler and the outer edges are "bias", handle gently, no pressing with hot iron, use a wooden iron only until top is complete...


It took three tries to get the bottom row attached with the seams lined up and then just as I was going to attach the borders, I realized that I had attached it upside-down. Aghh! Another two attempts to line up the seams and I had to call it close enough. Next project with Flying Geese I will make using the Quilt in a Day method and ruler.

Here's the completed Table Topper ready for donation to the CQA for Quilt Canada 2008 in St. John's, Nfld.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Rows complete

After a few changes in fabric blocks, the rows are sew together. I have had to fit the stitching in around painting the newly renovated bathroom. The priming and first coat of paint are finished. Tomorrow, the final coat and then by Sunday I will give the room a final cleanup and start putting everything back on the walls and move our stuff back in.

Saturday is a workshop day - Lone Star with Patti Carey - so, it might be another few days before I get back to this project.



Or , if the painting goes well tomorrow, I may get the first few rows assembled. I received the machine quilting DVD I ordered in the mail today. Doesn't it always look so easy when someone else is doing the quilting?


It was entertaining as well as educational. Time to get out the ol' whiteboard and start practicing. You can see video samples at http://www.pajamaquilter.com/ and maybe order a copy for yourself.

Monday, February 18, 2008

Up next....




The Shoppe Girls have decided to get together and work on some machine quilting techniques. We will each put together a simple quilt top and practice our free motion quilting. The quilt I chose is simple square and rectangles with a half-square triangle border. The pattern is from the January 2008 issue of The Quilter - Isn't it Rich?

I have cut all the pieces and laid out rows to distribute the colours evenly throughout the entire piece. I kept moving pieces around and will probably make a few more changes as I sew the rows together. Some of the colours look brighter in the photo than in real life, so I hope it all works. It will be 110" x 110" king size quilt when finished.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Finally finished


It took more than a year, but it is finally finished. It is a quilt made using the Magic Tiles pattern by Kathleen Bissett. My satelllite group, the Shoppe Girls, decided to each make quilts using this pattern. We got together a couple of times to piece the blocks and them finished them up on our own. We all used a 'quilt-as-you-go' method, so lots of hand stitching. I don't think I would do it that way again, but it was a learning experience.

I am sure they have flowers in Victoria already!


But in Ontario? Nooooo... We just had our third snow storm in less than a week! Thank goodness I have a son who is big and strong and willing to shovel the snow for his dear old mother.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Quilting Blogs


Some exciting stuff in February! As I follow links from blog to blog, I come across some pretty cool stuff. My latest discovery is Sew,Mama,Sew! February is quilting month at Sew,Mama,Sew! and there will be lots of giveaways and interesting stuff to keep me entertained during the coldest month of the year. Go here to get all the details. There will also be a Quilt Block Sew-along each week with a photo group on Flickr. Well, that might be another good way to use up some of my stash. The first block will be posted on February 1st.

Over at Crazy Mom Quilts, you can participate in a Quilt-a-long. It is almost over now, but the block instructions you can look at the archives and find the instructions for the earlier blocks. Hmmm, maybe we could start a blog for the Guild's B.O.M. program. Something to bring up at the executive meeting, anyway.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Some people are so darn creative!


I, of course, am not one of them. This was painfully obvious to me at a workshop I attended on Saturday put on by my quilt guild. Oh, I have managed to dream up and execute some pieces when participating in various challenges put on by my quilt guild, but I can't think up things on the spot. Case in point: I purchased the fabric kit for the quilt challenge for our 2007 quilt show in January of 2006, I finally came up with an idea and a plan to execute it in October 2006 - 10 months! It wasn't even that complicated a design! But, back to the workshop...

It was called Painted Fusibles and the idea is once you have painted some type of fusible web in your choice of colours and design, let the paint dry and then fuse to a light coloured background fabric and then embellish with thread, yarn, buttons, beads, glitter, feathers, ribbon, netting, silk, etc., etc., etc. to create a small work of art. I used some of my daughter's acrylic paints that she left at home when she went off to University. I brought primary colours red, blue, yellow and white. I should have brought the black as well, but I was in a hurry when I was gathering my supplies for the workshop and didn't want to drag too much stuff with me.

I started blending colours and painting on my Heat 'n Bond not really sure what I was doing. I just kept adding rows of colour. The first piece ended up looking something like a brilliant sunset over a green meadow... hmmmm. After a couple of pieces painted in the same left to right stripes, I tried some on the diagonal, this time leaving some white space. Next, I started painting a piece of Stitch Witchery (a fusible without paper backing). Initially, I had the same straight lines and then decided to go wild with some 'S' curves... woohoo! Followed by some random blobs of paint. Then after watching a classmate who was applying paint to her Stitch Witchery with her hands, I broke loose and smeared the paint across the surface of the fusible. It ended up being my favourite piece. I was trying not to make too much of a mess, but dripping and splattering paint onto the fusible web was strangely gratifying.

Now all the painting was complete and dried, it was time to fuse to fabric and create our works of art. Total blank... well, that piece kind of looks like it might be underwater... I need some fish. Of course, I did not bring anywhere close to the amount of stuff needed for this art project but my classmates were generous and gave me some tropical fish fabric, some wool strips I could use for seaweed and some sequins which could serve as bubbles. I added some small buttons for bubbles as well and then the whole lot gets covered in netting and fused again to hold it all together. When all is said and done, it looks like a grade 3 art project. I thought it might look better in digital form... hhmmm... not so much.

At least I finished one piece. Well, it's not actually finished. It still need to be layered and quilting somehow. I think I will just skip it. I went through the process, I know how to create an art piece using this technique. I think I will just wait until inspiration strikes me to use one of the other painted fusible pieces. Or not.