I've finished the row I was quilting. The markings are still there but you can see the quilting pretty well in this picture.
Since the picture was taken, I've rolled and have started quilting on the top half of those blocks.
There are 3 rows of blocks and they quilt fast. Will I be finished quilting this quilt by the end of January? Guess I'll find out in a month.
The name of this pattern is Cabin Fever but I don't think it fits this quilt. I'm going to change the name to Spring Fever. If you want look at the pattern, click here.
Linking to Sunday Slow Stitching.
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Sunday, December 31, 2017
Saturday, December 30, 2017
Last Finish of 2017!
2017 was my first year to participate in the Rainbow Scrappy Challenge and my first RSC quilt is finished! I sewed the binding on the 4-patch summer quilt yesterday. She's finished except for the label which I forgot to add. I'll get around to it sometime.
She is a big king sized but I like them to completely cover the mattress and reach down the sides. I had planned to curve the corners, but I forgot and didn't remember until after the binding was sewn on.
A summer quilt doesn't have batting, just the top and backing. Tammy Payette of Three Sisters Fabric, New Paris, Ind, was the long arm quilter. She did an overall simple medium stippling. I asked her if she had any problems and she said she had to watch the tension closely but it wasn't too bad. This is a picture of the back. The quilting shows on the front of the quilt but didn't show in a picture.
I needed to piece the backing. I was trying to make the back have an off side plus but it didn't turn out quite right. This backing caused me more frustration than the quilt front did!
It feels good to have this quilt finished even if I won't be able to use it for six months. I hope you enjoyed the pictures, it is cold and windy outside!
Linking to - Scrap Happy Saturday, Quilting is More Fun than Housework, Show & Tell Monday With Bambi, Love Laugh Quilt, BOM's Away, Quilter's Monday, Let's Bee Social, My Quilt Infatuation, Finished Or Not Friday, Confessions of a Fabric Addict, TGIFF!, Finish It Up Friday
She is a big king sized but I like them to completely cover the mattress and reach down the sides. I had planned to curve the corners, but I forgot and didn't remember until after the binding was sewn on.
A summer quilt doesn't have batting, just the top and backing. Tammy Payette of Three Sisters Fabric, New Paris, Ind, was the long arm quilter. She did an overall simple medium stippling. I asked her if she had any problems and she said she had to watch the tension closely but it wasn't too bad. This is a picture of the back. The quilting shows on the front of the quilt but didn't show in a picture.
I needed to piece the backing. I was trying to make the back have an off side plus but it didn't turn out quite right. This backing caused me more frustration than the quilt front did!
It feels good to have this quilt finished even if I won't be able to use it for six months. I hope you enjoyed the pictures, it is cold and windy outside!
Linking to - Scrap Happy Saturday, Quilting is More Fun than Housework, Show & Tell Monday With Bambi, Love Laugh Quilt, BOM's Away, Quilter's Monday, Let's Bee Social, My Quilt Infatuation, Finished Or Not Friday, Confessions of a Fabric Addict, TGIFF!, Finish It Up Friday
Sunday, December 24, 2017
Hand Quilting
This week I've concentrated on hand quilting and I've made good progress.
The narrow white border has been quilted and the first long inside border that divides the blocks has been completed too.
I've started quilting the blocks. Three of the blocks have been half quilted!
I know the quilt looks a mess with the blue marking pencil. I'm looking forward to washing this quilt and seeing what she really looks like.
I also took a picture of the side quilting.
The border seams have been stitched in the ditch. The light blue thread doesn't look blue at all.
The thread is a variegated King Tut thread. I don't like the way the thread quilts. I have to watch it constantly, I keep getting little loops or knots. I had thought I would try King Tut once but never again! I'll finish this quilt with this thread for consistency but I'm sticking with YLI thread from now on.
Sunday, December 17, 2017
Slow Sunday Stitching
I was gone a week to visit our daughter and son-in-law in warm, sunny, beautiful Phoenix while northern Indiana was getting its first real blast of winter.
I embroidered during my time in Phoenix. Several months ago I was working on small designs for needle book covers and pincushions but didn't finish all of the squares. I'm still not finished with them, but I'm making progress.
The designs came from these books, patchwork loves embroidery and Christmas Patchwork Loves Embroidery, both by Gail Pan.
Here are some of the blocks I've completed.
I use a Frixion pen when I marked the designs. Gail tells you to use a permanent pen but I'm not talented enough to cover all the markings. I will press with a hot iron when all the embroidery is completed and the markings will disappear, unless, of course, you stick the blocks in a freezer which I won't do.
I've used regular DMC embroidery thread to embroider these blocks.
I rolled the border of the quilt I'm hand quilting just before I left for Arizona and forgot to take a picture. I'm working on the next borders now and I have 4 needles going. Three needles are stitching in the ditch along the white edges and the 4th is to quilt the design in the border.
The thread is a variegated blue King Tut thread. It will be interesting to see how much the blue thread shows after the blue markings are washed out.
I am right handed but I quilt from left to right. I didn't used to quilt that way but several years ago I started having shooting pain in my right wrist. Since I've started quilting towards myself this way, I have my wrist bent in and no longer have the pain. Whatever works!
Linking to Kathy's Slow Sunday Stitching, Show & Tell Monday With Bambi, Em's Scrapbag, Love Laugh Quilt, Design Wall Monday-Small Quilts, BOM's Away, Quilter's Monday, Esther's Wednesday WOW!
I embroidered during my time in Phoenix. Several months ago I was working on small designs for needle book covers and pincushions but didn't finish all of the squares. I'm still not finished with them, but I'm making progress.
The designs came from these books, patchwork loves embroidery and Christmas Patchwork Loves Embroidery, both by Gail Pan.
Here are some of the blocks I've completed.
I use a Frixion pen when I marked the designs. Gail tells you to use a permanent pen but I'm not talented enough to cover all the markings. I will press with a hot iron when all the embroidery is completed and the markings will disappear, unless, of course, you stick the blocks in a freezer which I won't do.
I've used regular DMC embroidery thread to embroider these blocks.
I rolled the border of the quilt I'm hand quilting just before I left for Arizona and forgot to take a picture. I'm working on the next borders now and I have 4 needles going. Three needles are stitching in the ditch along the white edges and the 4th is to quilt the design in the border.
The thread is a variegated blue King Tut thread. It will be interesting to see how much the blue thread shows after the blue markings are washed out.
I am right handed but I quilt from left to right. I didn't used to quilt that way but several years ago I started having shooting pain in my right wrist. Since I've started quilting towards myself this way, I have my wrist bent in and no longer have the pain. Whatever works!
Linking to Kathy's Slow Sunday Stitching, Show & Tell Monday With Bambi, Em's Scrapbag, Love Laugh Quilt, Design Wall Monday-Small Quilts, BOM's Away, Quilter's Monday, Esther's Wednesday WOW!
Wednesday, December 6, 2017
Zippy-Strippy Variation
At the November retreat I sewed a crib sized zippy-strippy top. This week I quilted her with my Elna 720 sewing machine.
I divided the quilt into 4ths diagonally by marking with a X, drew a + for the pivot points then quilted her with inverted V's one half inch apart.
I think she turned out pretty well.
She measures 43" by 50-1/2", a nice sized crib quilt.
I have a small assortment of stripped fabrics. This stripe wasn't a perfect match but it looked the best of what I had.
The fabrics used were a pack of 2-1/2" strips of Candy Swirls from Connecting Threads. There were 20 strips in this pack. The white fabric is Bella solid - white bleached.
Last summer I bought fabric from Connecting Threads that was on clearance including the fabric I used on the back of the quilt.
In the picture the loops look gray but they are blue. The fabric is from Amanda Jean Nyberg's Good Neighbor's collection.
Linking to - Sew, Stitch, Snap SHOW, Let's Bee Social, My Quilt Infatuation, Finished Or Not Friday, Confessions of a Fabric Addict, TGIFF!, Let's Make Baby Quilts, Finish It Up Friday, Free Motion Mavericks
I divided the quilt into 4ths diagonally by marking with a X, drew a + for the pivot points then quilted her with inverted V's one half inch apart.
I think she turned out pretty well.
She measures 43" by 50-1/2", a nice sized crib quilt.
I have a small assortment of stripped fabrics. This stripe wasn't a perfect match but it looked the best of what I had.
The fabrics used were a pack of 2-1/2" strips of Candy Swirls from Connecting Threads. There were 20 strips in this pack. The white fabric is Bella solid - white bleached.
Last summer I bought fabric from Connecting Threads that was on clearance including the fabric I used on the back of the quilt.
In the picture the loops look gray but they are blue. The fabric is from Amanda Jean Nyberg's Good Neighbor's collection.
Linking to - Sew, Stitch, Snap SHOW, Let's Bee Social, My Quilt Infatuation, Finished Or Not Friday, Confessions of a Fabric Addict, TGIFF!, Let's Make Baby Quilts, Finish It Up Friday, Free Motion Mavericks
Sunday, December 3, 2017
The Pleasure of Ordinary Days
It was with a sigh of relief that I turned the calendar to December. November was absolutely too busy! I'm glad to see there are very few commitments for this month. For me, there is great pleasure in the sameness of routine.
We don't have any large family gathering to attend this month, my extended family gathered in November and the Farmer's family hasn't gotten together in years. We will have our local son and his family here for a large breakfast on the 23rd.
We don't get into the hustle and bustle of Christmas shopping and definitely don't do the black Friday thing. I admit I did attend Wana Night Out in Shipshewana last Tuesday but waiting in line at Yoder's isn't anything like waiting in lines at Wal-Mart or another large box store.
I do have some special days planned: Advent services at church, Grandparents Day at our grandson's kindergarten class, coffee with a neighbor lady(s) and a special shopping day with my DIL at local stores. Some baking is also going to happen here at home.
I'm going to spend the monthly slowly working on the many projects I worked on at the Jane Stickle Retreat including this small quilt which measures 74" long and probably 60" wide. I know I have the measurements written somewhere but can't find them now!
I had originally made the this quilt at the April 2017 Jane Stickle Retreat and added a white outside border. All summer I thought, "I don't like that white border!"
The fabric had come from Yoder's so I checked there and fortunately they still had some yardage from this collection.
At the fall retreat, I cut the white border to a narrow border and added the blue border, much more pleasing to my eye. I also sewed the backing fabric and the binding.
And now she's marked and in the hand quilting frame.
When I was quilting my blue & white churn dash quilt, I was often asked how I marked the quilt. I took pictures while marking the outside border.
I've never had a professional marking lesson so this is the method that works for me that I have come up with over the years.
For the various marking tools I use, check out the post I wrote on March 12, 2017.
First I marked the 4 corners. That is your starting point. Make sure you mark all 4 exactly the same.
Next I marked the long sides. Laying the stencil on the border, I pin each measure of the stencil. I need to see how many times the design fits or repeats.
I have 3 repeats of the stencil. I have 3 1/2" space I need to adjust for.
What I do is move the pins. I moved the first right pin 1", the 2nd pin 2 1/2" which left 1" for the 3rd pin. Carefully I add an extra feather to the design and carefully make the curve on the bottom. You will never notice the addition. Then I repeat this on the other long border.
Now for the short borders. I do the same thing, seeing how many times the stencil fits.
For this border, it is 2 times and I need to fit in 6".
I measured the stencil. It is 6" from the center feather on the right side to the next center feather on the left side.
All I need to do is trace that 6" onto the border. Turn the quilt and mark the other side!
For the all white border, again I marked the 4 corners first but just the left part, not the right cable.
Once the corners are marked, I start making the rest. I don't measure how often this stencil fits like I did with the feathers.
When I'm about 10" from the corner, I slide the stencil shorter or wider the make it fit.
This corner looks slightly different than the above picture. No one is going to ever notice once the marking is washed out.
I used the same marker for the next border. I am going to mark those blue squares as I quilt them using the white chalk marker. My experience with the Sewline white markers has been the mark doesn't last a long time so it is less frustrating for me to just mark them as I am ready to quilt that block.
I taped the stencil onto the inside squares so it won't slide around as I am marking. I used the blue marker on the white fabric and then marked the blue fabric with the silver pencil.
After awhile my blue marker ink was getting very faint so I pulled a newer different blue marker. It makes wider lines and it actually showed up on the blue fabric so I used that instead of the pencil. In the white corners, I marked straight lines 7/8th" apart. Where did I get the 7/8" measurement? That is how far apart the lines are in the stencil hearts.
I don't have a separate picture of the marked square but I'm sure you'll see it as I make progress with my hand quilting.
I've started quilting and this is how far I've gotten.
You will notice I am marking straight lines every 1 1/2" to give stability to the unquilted fabric in the border. I'm also doing it because I don't like baggy quilted quilts!
A close up view of the corner.
When I'm not quilting, I keep the quilt covered to protect from direct sunshine and little fingers.
The pattern for this quilt is Cabin Fever, a five fat quarter fun project from Jedi Craft Girl.
Linking to - Slow Stitching Sunday, Show & Tell Monday With Bambi, Em's Scrapbag, Love Laugh Quilt, BOM's Away, Quilter's Monday
We don't have any large family gathering to attend this month, my extended family gathered in November and the Farmer's family hasn't gotten together in years. We will have our local son and his family here for a large breakfast on the 23rd.
We don't get into the hustle and bustle of Christmas shopping and definitely don't do the black Friday thing. I admit I did attend Wana Night Out in Shipshewana last Tuesday but waiting in line at Yoder's isn't anything like waiting in lines at Wal-Mart or another large box store.
I do have some special days planned: Advent services at church, Grandparents Day at our grandson's kindergarten class, coffee with a neighbor lady(s) and a special shopping day with my DIL at local stores. Some baking is also going to happen here at home.
I'm going to spend the monthly slowly working on the many projects I worked on at the Jane Stickle Retreat including this small quilt which measures 74" long and probably 60" wide. I know I have the measurements written somewhere but can't find them now!
I had originally made the this quilt at the April 2017 Jane Stickle Retreat and added a white outside border. All summer I thought, "I don't like that white border!"
The fabric had come from Yoder's so I checked there and fortunately they still had some yardage from this collection.
At the fall retreat, I cut the white border to a narrow border and added the blue border, much more pleasing to my eye. I also sewed the backing fabric and the binding.
And now she's marked and in the hand quilting frame.
When I was quilting my blue & white churn dash quilt, I was often asked how I marked the quilt. I took pictures while marking the outside border.
I've never had a professional marking lesson so this is the method that works for me that I have come up with over the years.
For the various marking tools I use, check out the post I wrote on March 12, 2017.
First I marked the 4 corners. That is your starting point. Make sure you mark all 4 exactly the same.
Next I marked the long sides. Laying the stencil on the border, I pin each measure of the stencil. I need to see how many times the design fits or repeats.
I have 3 repeats of the stencil. I have 3 1/2" space I need to adjust for.
What I do is move the pins. I moved the first right pin 1", the 2nd pin 2 1/2" which left 1" for the 3rd pin. Carefully I add an extra feather to the design and carefully make the curve on the bottom. You will never notice the addition. Then I repeat this on the other long border.
Now for the short borders. I do the same thing, seeing how many times the stencil fits.
For this border, it is 2 times and I need to fit in 6".
I measured the stencil. It is 6" from the center feather on the right side to the next center feather on the left side.
All I need to do is trace that 6" onto the border. Turn the quilt and mark the other side!
For the all white border, again I marked the 4 corners first but just the left part, not the right cable.
Once the corners are marked, I start making the rest. I don't measure how often this stencil fits like I did with the feathers.
When I'm about 10" from the corner, I slide the stencil shorter or wider the make it fit.
This corner looks slightly different than the above picture. No one is going to ever notice once the marking is washed out.
I used the same marker for the next border. I am going to mark those blue squares as I quilt them using the white chalk marker. My experience with the Sewline white markers has been the mark doesn't last a long time so it is less frustrating for me to just mark them as I am ready to quilt that block.
I taped the stencil onto the inside squares so it won't slide around as I am marking. I used the blue marker on the white fabric and then marked the blue fabric with the silver pencil.
After awhile my blue marker ink was getting very faint so I pulled a newer different blue marker. It makes wider lines and it actually showed up on the blue fabric so I used that instead of the pencil. In the white corners, I marked straight lines 7/8th" apart. Where did I get the 7/8" measurement? That is how far apart the lines are in the stencil hearts.
I don't have a separate picture of the marked square but I'm sure you'll see it as I make progress with my hand quilting.
I've started quilting and this is how far I've gotten.
You will notice I am marking straight lines every 1 1/2" to give stability to the unquilted fabric in the border. I'm also doing it because I don't like baggy quilted quilts!
A close up view of the corner.
When I'm not quilting, I keep the quilt covered to protect from direct sunshine and little fingers.
The pattern for this quilt is Cabin Fever, a five fat quarter fun project from Jedi Craft Girl.
Linking to - Slow Stitching Sunday, Show & Tell Monday With Bambi, Em's Scrapbag, Love Laugh Quilt, BOM's Away, Quilter's Monday