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Saturday, December 12, 2020

2020 31 Day Blog Writing Challenge - Day Twelve - Favorite Color

 My very favorite-est color is GREEN!

I dare say there is green in almost every quilt I have ever done. Can only think of a few where they have no green. My very first quilt (shown on the introduction to this blog challenge) was red, blue and ivory.

A table runner for Valentine's Day.  Done in two different Valentine fabrics - I did a couple of blocks of a mystery quilt at Retreat one year.



A baby quilt in yellow, orange and white. Those are my second favorite-est colors!


 My very first paper pieced 'quilt' (its so small its hard to actually call it a quilt!) A wee Amish block. Hand quilted with doubled black thread (I quickly learned that was a no-no!)


An embellished heart that was done in orange, black, brown and white. This was a fun one to do.



A pink and white pillow top that I did in Shadow Trapunto. I was in a class for this technique and my hopping foot kept squeaking louder and louder. I finally figured out to coat the part that was rubbing up against the needle bar with some glycerin soap.



A Quilt of Valor for my Dad. He served during the Korean War - was stationed in Argentia Naval Station in Newfoundland, Canada when I was born.


Link to the Muppin Blog Writing Challenge

Friday, December 11, 2020

2020 31 Day Blog Writing Challenge - Day Eleven - Most Impactful Class

 I have had several classes that I consider impactful. 

My very first class covered hand quilting but I cannot remember the lady's name who taught the class. I took that class at a nearby quilt shop - The Tattered Rabbit. We gathered round her Q-Snap frame and took turns learning the rocking stitch. I came home with a small Q-Snap frame to practice. 

Martha Nordstrand - the best applique stitch

I have taken several classes with Martha Nordstrand. The first one was on making prepared applique shapes. Her technique for making them was to either trace the shape or print it on un-scored sticker paper which was then adhered to the right side of the fabric. Then you flip the piece over and use glue stick and two tiny screwdrivers to manipulate the edges against the pull of the sticker. The second one was a technique using a 8 x 10 sized picture inside a page protector to build your applique - you traced the major shapes onto the sticker paper and turned the edges using the glue stick and tiny screwdrivers. But the BEST thing I learned from her is the applique stitch - come up from the back, right thru the fold and go back down thru the fabric you are appliqueing to 1-2 thread(s) behind where you came out. Reason being that if you go forward, the stitch is always going to be visible, but if you go backwards, the stitch will sink into the edge of the applique.

This is the flower piece from the first class.


This is the piece from  landscape class - I used it as the center of a round robin for embellishing so 3 other friends worked on this piece - one did all the lovely ribbon roses, another did the embroidery on the house, the fields and the two pots on the left and another did the trees. I added the sheep (those white blobs!) and the wee horse button. The picture was of the very famous scene in Val de Or in Tuscany.



Rosa Rojas - Apliquick tools

Martha's mini screwdrivers foreshadowed the invention of the Apliquick tools by Rosa Rojas. I got to take a class with her last year at Road To Ca. At first I was not too convinced that I would like the tools, but I do. Took a class from Diane Kirkart where we used the tools, but then decided since Rosa was going to teach at Road, that I would take the class from the inventor herself.

This is 'Little Boy' from the class. And those wee buttons on the bottom...those are turned with the tools and it is almost magic how they turn out. Rosa can do even smaller ones (but she has had a LOT of practice!)




Jenny Bowker - tool to 'see' color value

The class I took from Jenny was one of her techniques where she does an applique 'center' then uses traditional blocks to build out the quilt until it is the desired size. First you have to decide on a center! Print it in color. Then you trace the essential elements onto a piece of plastic using a Sharpie. That gets blown up using a projector, which you throw up onto the wall where you have taped a piece of paper that is at least bigger than the block you are making! Trace the projected outlines with pencil, then go over it with Sharpie so the lines are dark. Then tape a piece of muslin over the pattern. Then the fun part starts - picking fabrics that will fill those shapes, In order to actually 'see' the colors, Jenny has this neat tool you make from an index card. Snip a small diamond in the bottom of the card and one or two  larger ones nearer the top. Laying the small diamond on the original photo, you can use the larger diamond to audition fabrics. Corrects for the biases we all have when looking at something recognizable.



This is the center I did and the picture that it was based on. It is pretty amazing seeing these centers built. Original picture at bottom.



Link to the Muppin Blog Writing Challenge

Thursday, December 10, 2020

2020 31 Day Blog Writing Challenge - Day Ten - Top Five Books

I had to think about this topic for a while! I presume these are my five top quilting books...but maybe not...though I did find 5 quilting books that I like. (I have a lot of books, not just on quilting - though there are a lot of those too!)

This is a cute book of useful things that you can make with English Paper Piecing besides hexies - I bought the kit for the Thimble holder...just need to make it! 

This is one of the best books on how to piece by hand.  It is 'the' authoritative book!


This is a fun book on how to do tessellations.

Landscapes (and flowers and birds) are my thing...Love this book.

This was one of the very first books I bought when I first started quilting. I love looking thru it. But have I made one of the quilts? no...not a huge fan of patchwork, but maybe someday. The pictures though make me smile. I really love the cover quilt! I would even make this one in the same colors.

I have a whole shelf of quilting books. People give them to me. Or I get them off the recycle table at Retreat. I have bought a few!

Link to the Muppin Blog Writing Challenge

Wednesday, December 09, 2020

2020 31 Day Blog Writing Challenge - Day Nine - Favorite Tip

Favorite Tip:  Red Feather in the 4th!

Kind of tongue in cheek...but whenever someone asks me for a tip, that is my reply! (I think it came from a comedy routine about horse racing...but that is lost in the annals of time - could have been Jack Benny?)

I suppose you really want a tip about sewing or quilting though.

Not sure if I KNOW a favorite tip - but how about we cover paper piecing by hand?

Yes, you CAN paper piece by hand!

There are a few 'rules' for stitching. 

First, use a largish needle so it pokes nice big holes in the paper - this makes tearing the paper off  a whole lot easier. The holes will not be visible in your finished product, especially if you launder it.

Second, never stitch into the seam allowance - reason being you do not want to risk accidentally cutting off the knots. Start and end your seam exactly on the line, using lingerie or knicker knots - these are flat knots that will not cause lumps.  

Third, every four to six stitches, make a small back stitch to lock the seam - this helps keep the seam flat when you tear the paper off.

Fourth, when you tear the paper off, get it a bit damp (not soaking wet, just damp!)

This table runner was hand paper pieced:




And this hummingbird was too:



Link to the Muppin Blog Writing Challenge

Tuesday, December 08, 2020

2020 31 Day Blog Writing Challenge - Day Eight - Skills I Wish I Had

There is not much in quilting that I have not tried. Some techniques I do very well, some not so well.

I could be better at actual patchwork - I've thought about someday, when I am retired, possibly doing one of Bonnie Hunter's quilts just to get better at patchwork. but it does not seem like a very useful skill for the kind of quilting I actually like doing. Besides which, you end up with a quilt that looks just like a thousand (or more) others if you follow her color suggestions.

The major skill that I really need to work on is machine quilting. I have seen some really really fantabulous examples. I really need a bigger machine setup. I have done FMQ on Jenny Lind  and its ok, but I don't have enough cleared off space to do anything big. I also have done FMQ on Aurora (the Red-Eye treadle) - that is pretty fun! But there again, Aurora is not set up to work on anything big. There was a guy - Tim Latimer - that did marvelous FMQ with a treadle, but I haven't seen him post in a while.

This is probably the best machine quilting I have done so far - Quilt is 'Fire Mountain' - from a quarter of a bargello quilt along at Retreat in 2016 or 2017. I worked on the applique vine at work during lunch for months. But. its only a wall hanging. I have yet to do a larger quilt with machine quilting that I think was done right.





Another example is Embellished Linen - it's pretty tiny too. Most of the quilting on this one is actually holding the lace and the antimacassar linen piece onto the quilt - there is a bit of FMQ in the center of the linen piece. It looks better in real life. There is a hole under the silk flowers and a few of the lace scallops had damage as well that got covered up by the buttons. 

This piece was done after I saw how lovely a handkerchief could be quilted. Mine is nowhere near as well done as the one I saw. 

Monday, December 07, 2020

2020 31 Day Blog Writing Challenge - Day Seven - Dream Project

Today's prompt is 'Dream Project'.

I have always wanted to make a Giant Dahlia and even joined a group that was making them but got side tracked with the Penrose Posey - which is a 'sort of a dahlia' but not quite.  (All about the Penrose Posey) I still have the fabrics for the Giant Dahlia in a project bag. The pattern I have is from Quiltpox.com but the Giant Dahlia pattern is not available from that site anymore...good thing I printed it out when it was!


Would like to at least do one of the rosettes of the La Passacaglia quilt. Might do that soon, but need to order the papers and the plastic templates for the fussy cutting. I was going to take a class at Road to Ca with Diane Kirkart and even bought some fabric that I thought would look nice. But alas, she did not convert the class over to the online format that Road to Ca will be using this year. Here is her beautiful quilt that the class was going to be based on.



I seem to have a thing for flower shapes!


Link to the Muppin Blog Writing Challenge

Sunday, December 06, 2020

2020 31 Day Blog Writing Challenge - Day Six - Oldest UFO

My oldest quilting UFO....is missing! I went looking for it yesterday. Its been in time-out for so long, it probably is in a time-out of the time-out.

Anyway - I will describe it. 

Hot off my successful completion of my first quilt, I thought I would jump right in to designing my 'own' quilt. Such is the hutzpah of a beginning quilter!  So I got some grid paper, drew some lines, dug around in my fabric stash which at that point was fashion design stuff and home décor stuff, found some fabrics that I thought would do and proceeded to whomp up Quilt #2. A Christmas Tree and a Star with Snow. I have the design somewhere but that would probably be buried in my quilting room somewhere too. I tried to recreate the design. All half square triangles and squares,

Kind of stiff green home décor fabric for the tree. Blue stuff for the sky, brown stuff for the tree trunk. Yellow perma press for the star and white sheet material for the snow.  A wee green border of the home décor fabric with red cornerstones. At least...that is my recollection. Might turn out to be different when I see the actual errant top. But I do remember the green stuff as being pretty stiff!

All in all, a rather dismal quilt, though I think with the right quilting, and maybe adding something (what though?) under the star, it could be ok. My Sis said she liked it and if I ever wanted to give it away, to give it to her. The star is WAY too big, but I just had a thought about appliqueing a smaller darker yellow star in the center to see if the brighter yellow would be perceived as a halo. Eh. Hope I remember this when I do unearth this odd quilt.

I do have OTHER projects that are long term UFOs besides Quilt#2.

For hand quilting, its this project: there are 4 panels that I thought I would connect. But..I've lost interest in finishing them.


One of the longest term hand piecing project UFOs is a pattern from my friend Marcia Hohn's Quilter's Cache website called Prairie Flower. The date of copyright on that pattern is when I started making these blocks - Feb 22, 2004. Marcia published that pattern and I jumped on it! I had just gotten several purple and green Fat Quarter packs from WalMart and I had some sparkly white fabric for the background. I envisioned quilting in silver so I have several spools of silver thread in the project bag. I still really love these colors. Gotta work on this project. It deserves to be finished. Most of the finished blocks were done when we were on the very first So Cal Quilter's Run that my quilting buddies and I went on in 2004.



And I still have a pre-Quilting UFO. This fabric (and a white t-shirt that I was supposed to affix the motifs onto) are still in a project bag.


Still like the fabric. Not sure I want to put it on the t-shirt anymore though! Might be time to put the fabric into the regular stash and see what it becomes in a quilt. Could be a great Broderie Pierce project.


Link to the Muppin Blog Writing Challenge

Saturday, December 05, 2020

2020 31 Day Blog Writing Challenge - Day Five - First Project (Sort Of!)

 The prompt for today is First Project but we already learned about the project that turned me into a quilter and the second project is my oldest UFO (that is tomorrow's prompt). So I will tell you about one of my quilts that I have not fully covered already on this blog.

Susan Magnolia

This started as an ink painting in a class from Patt Blair at Road To California. Most of the class made their magnolias the same color as Patt's sample, but I happen to love Susan magnolias and they are pink! The final picture shows the pink better - its really a bit darker than the first picture shows. I love how it turned out.

Here is as far as I got in the class:



I took the unfinished inking to Retreat that year. Here is what it looked like during the Retreat - with my start of 'Cape Blanco Light' in the background.- that was a different class with Kathy McNeil - before the Apliquick tools were invented! I think it might be a completely different class if I were to take it now. I have promised myself  - I.WILL.FINISH.THIS.QUILT!



I finished the background before I left Retreat but don't have any pictures of just the top. Found some really well matching fabrics to make the borders and binding in my stash. I hand quilted this with MonoPoly - including the stippling - which I had never tried by hand before, much less in MonoPoly - kept finding spots that had loops, though I swear I tried to look for those AS I was quilting! (MonoPoly is so clear it is hard to see.) A quick snip with the scissors and bury the tails if the loop were big, otherwise just bury the loop - I invested in a couple of those quick-thread - or - self-threading needles which made short work of the loops. The batting is wool - my favorite batting for hand quilting - the needle goes thru the wool like a hot knife goes thru buttah - just sayin'.


This quilt hangs on the wall in my living room.

Link to the Muppin Blog Writing Challenge

Thursday, December 03, 2020

2020 31 Day Blog Writing Challenge - Day Four - Favorite Tools

Favorite tools (and other notions)....this could be a very long list! But, I will try to just pick my top few!

I love the Apliquick tools. I have the turning rods, the medium sized three hole scissors and some of the glue. The glue I find a bit expensive so I have switched to using Elmer's School Glue Sticks - the one that goes on purple but dries clear. I have some of the Apliquick fusible too. I want to get the box to hold the tools that I saw on Kathy McNeil's store - maybe Santa will bring that for me!



Thread stand. This is just one of those things that makes my life so much easier when I am sewing on Jenny Lind. I think it was one of my earliest quilting related purchases.



Superior MonoPoly. I use this for a lot of quilting, both machine and by hand (its' a little trickier by hand - but I have worked out the kinks and it does quite well.)

InvisiFil thread - for applique, I use this stuff or Superior's Kimono silk...but mostly this because a friend and I bought all the collection boxes one year between the two of us and she spooled out half of hers for me on bobbins and half of mine for her so we have the full gamut of colors.

Martelli ergo rotary cutter - when I first got this, I didn't like it much and almost gave it away. But then I practiced with it and I almost can't use other cutters anymore - well, at least they feel more awkward!

InkTense pencils and Tsukineko inks - I love color and I love that both of these are colorfast. The pencils are a bit more portable, but I do like both. I have used other products like the PaintStiks but the overwhelming odor on those is too much to bear!


I LOVE clips! First I just had just the Clover ones but they are too expensive...so I buy the inexpensive kind by the bagful and don't worry if I loose one here and there...Only had one break so they are pretty useful.


And...I cannot do applique without this thimble! Comfort Thimble....it's getting harder and harder to find this thimble - I hope I never loose all of the ones I have! Only place I have found it lately is on the maker's website -  ComfortThimbles.com - they are a wee company in Oregon. There is another thimble with the same name that is put out by Dritz... but it's nowhere near as good as this one. Most plastic thimbles make my finger sweat and then the thimble falls off. This one does not.. I have a large collection of failed thimbles!






Link to the Muppin Blog Writing Challenge

2020 31 Day Blog Writing Challenge - Day Three - My Machine!

Well now...that a silly prompt if you think I only have ONE machine!! 

I have my main machine - Jenny Lind (because she is a Singer!) - a 9020 which is not a common Singer machine. My Parents got her at a special sale - I have not ever seen another one like her, except my Sister's - but then my Parents got one for her too at the same time! My Parents got buyer's remorse after they bought the two machines, wondering it they would turn out to be duds...but I have been using mine since I started quilting in 2001. And relatively easy to service (I do most of my own servicing)

She is a good basic workhorse of a machine - only thing I dislike on her is the reverse button - it's hard to hold in. If they had only kept the lever idea from the earlier machines!

Next up is my Treadle machine that I restored - Aurora - A Red-eye Singer. I was happy as a clam doing the restoration work. The guy I got her from said his mother used her as a plant stand (!) and that the treadle belt had been broken since he was a young boy. EEP!!! Somewhere in Aurora's history she was exposed to smoke - she is not quite old enough for it to be oil lamps so probably at least one person smoked. The amount of grime that came off during cleaning...not only on the machine head, but on the cabinet as well.

And her little sister - Alis (Borealis) - a Singer 99 - alternately, and mistakenly called a Featherweight - but its not a real Singer Featherweight (I want one of those too!) At 22 pounds, she is NOT light to carry. I restored her too. Looks like she might be due for a bit more polishing on the bobbin winder!

Then there is the serger - O Brother - and not surprisingly, he is a Brother 1034D. He kinda scares me, so he mostly stays in his tote bag.

Rockette - a Singer 500a 'Rocketeer' with the #42 cabinet - it needs refinishing and the top hinges on the machine are sadly busted. This was given to me for my wedding by my maternal Grandmother. Someday I hope to find a stool like in this picture - I think Grandma HAD the stool, but might have forgotten to give it to me when we went to pick up the machine. My Mom has one that might work but I think it might be a bit wider than the official stool. My cabinet is a bit darker than this photo - oak finish, I think.

And Goldie - a Singer Golden Touch and Sew 630 which has the dratted plastic camstack so it keeps going out of timing. I hold on to her because I really LIKE some of her features and I keep hoping someday I can either get a set of metal cams, or I could turn her into a felting machine. The most peculiar thing on this machine is the normal foot - it's got rubber pads under it that interface with the feed dogs - and the rubber disintegrates, sigh. But, I love the 'wind the bobbin in the bobbin case' feature.


Elvie - the Singer 15 that my Grandfather bought brand new for my Grandmother, passed down to my Dad and then leant to my maternal Grandmother who made quilts for the poor with her Dorcas group. She kept a stable of machines in her mobile home for the Dorcas ladies to use. When she passed away, my Dad asked me if I wanted it - silly question! OF COURSE I wanted it! (Seen here piled high with my pincushion collection) You might be able to make out some of the writing on the case - my Dad wrote how to thread the needle and some other handy tips for the Dorcas ladies in red pen. My Dad recalls his first sewing task was making sails for their sailboat in the 40's. My Grandfather also used the machine - I have several puppets that he made the clothes for with this lovely old lady. 

La Donna - a 431G machine that my friend bought to make baby clothes with when her hubby was stationed in Germany. I just was blessed enough to obtain the 'unicorn' throat plate for this machine - I might need a different bobbin case but supposedly, I should be able to make her chainstitch - I've been meaning to try it out!

And just for fun - a music box treadle given to me by my Daughter and a Lego sewing machine that I got as a door prize at the Retreat I go to annually!


You can just see the bag that covers La Donna under Aurora's cabinet behind the Lego machine. As we learned yesterday, I have TOO MUCH STUFF! 


Link to the Muppin Blog Writing Challenge

Wednesday, December 02, 2020

2020 31 Day Blog Writing Challenge - Day Two - My Sewing Space

My sewing space is pretty cramped. I most definitely have more 'stuff' than space!

My main space used to be my son's bedroom when he was living at home. I also have stuff in my daughter's old bedroom which does double duty as my office for work.

The main room houses a drafting table that I have had since my early college days that serves as my cutting board. There is a filing cabinet that belongs to G, on top of which is the storage for my excess wall hangings. A desk that used to belong to my son that has the household internet connection devices. A short bookcase that is piled high with my button collection. A rolling cabinet that has a printer on it. Two steel shelving units that hold books, batting, ribbons, an old fashioned sewing machine case that I probably should get rid of since no one in their right mind would want to haul a sewing machine in that case when they have a perfectly good rolling case stored under the drafting table. The pressing surface - my old ironing board with a wood Big Board that my Dad made several years ago, is snuggled up to the drafting board. My display wall - it originally was going to be my design wall, but its too hard to reach so I pin stuff to the flannel. And...an old computer table with the keyboard dropdown that my main sewing machine lives on. Sometimes I have to turn sideways to get into parts of the room!

In my daughter's old room, I have my extra sewing machines- we'll learn more about them tomorrow! And some projects on the bottom bunk of her old bunk bed.

Sorry its way tooooooo messy to photograph! I need to do a thorough cleaning but may not get to that until Christmas break. 

This is a project that was on my Big Board (with the edge of the drafting table)....it shows a wee bit of my sewing room!




Link to the Muppin Blog Writing Challenge