The Nested Flying Geese top is finished, except for pressing. I will do that just before I quilt it. This quilt top was started in a class at the Vermont Quilt Festival with Birgit Schueller. It was the first class that Birgit taught using the nested flying geese technique. Her instructions were accurate except for one item, which was a miscount of setting blocks. It was easily fixed. I just cut 11 instead of the 10 that she told us to cut. She was a great instructor. The class was fun and I did learn a new technique.

I learned more than the technique. Last year, I bought a jelly roll of Kaffee Fassett fabric. It was on sale and was very pretty on the roll. It seemed to have lots of interesting colors. I though that it would be perfect for this project. My problems with the jelly roll started when I noticed that the edges were pinked. That cut into the 2 1/2″ size that we needed. Then the fabric was loosely woven with a small thread count. My background fabric had a much higher count. This led to puckering and incorrect sizing of the pieces. As most pieces were cut on the bias, the fabric shifted too much. The colors were all grayed and not as pretty when the fabric unrolled as they were on the roll. The quilt is dull. I think that I’ll call it “Geese In The Foggy Rain.” Maybe a bright quilting thread will brighten it up.
The blocks were supposed to be trimmed to 5 1/4″ x 10″. Due to the bias stretch and shifting, I could only cut a 5″ x 9 1/2″ block. This led to some of the geese wings being clipped. With all these problems, the quilt is still pretty. When it is quilted, a lot of the problems can be quilted away. It will make a great quilt for the beach.
Sometime in the future, I might make another Nested Flying Geese quilt. I will heavily starch the fabric and cut it from my stash. Then my geese will be able to fly without clipped wings.
Have a great day and happy quilting.
When we dyed the fabric, there was dye left in the bin. We placed half yard pieces hin the bin to use the dye. The pieces were not ombre dyed, but ate very pretty anyway. Some of the names of the colors are, watermelon, sage green, butterscotch, wine, very green, and raspberry. They are on a black table. Wouldn’t they be nice in a quilt with a black background.

My climbing rose outdid itself this year. It’s a good thing because both my bush roses didn’t make it through the winter. Brambles have taken over. They are all big thorns and have no flowers. Very hard to pull out. The primroses are blossoming in New Hampshire.

For the past ten years, a group of six ladies meet at VQF. We have started to make a challenge quilt each year. This last year we all used the same pattern and made a five yard quilt. It used one yard of five different fabrics. All the quilts were different. There was a large gathering when we revealed the quilts. Next year we are going to make a one color quilt. There will be no white or black, even in the background. The quilt can be any size or pattern. We can choose any color we want. I know what I want to make, but making it is down at the bottom of the list right now.
I took two classes while in Vermont. The first was Ombre dyeing with Cindy Lohbeck. Cindy has developed a technique for dying a single piece of fabric from light to dark. My fabric is still in process. When I finish the process, I’ll show some more pictures.
I took two small partially hand quilted to Maine with me. I started both of them many years ago. They both have been sitting around for a long time. I decided to focus on one of them and finally finished it. Hand quilting is very relaxing. It just fits on the center of my dining room table. It will be my decoration for the month. This quilt pattern is one of my favorite patterns. It is easy with all straight sewing.
It’s June and Annie Louise needs a new dress. Last month, my Maine chapter of the Pine Tree Guild had a teacup raffle. My numbers were drawn for a few doll and doll dress patterns. I also won a bag of fancy fabric. Because it is June, Annie Louise had to have a bridal dress. One of the doll dress patterns is for an 18″ doll. It was perfect. Thank you, Shirley. There was some white brocade in the bag of fabric. Thank you, Brenda. Putting them together made a very nice dress.

When I finished piecing the Mile A Minute blocks today, I still had a small pile of fabric left. I’ve put it aside and will use it for a three inch border when I get to that point. When I make a Mile A Minute quilt, I usually make three borders. The first is a small border. The second is a Mile A Minute and is a bit larger. The third is larger still.
With all that work, I have a little over 200 blocks. That is enough for several quilts. I have already planned two quilts on EQ7. Several more are in my head. That is for a later time. I will find fabric in N. H. to finish a few and make them the “Focus” of the day sometime later.

The Internet is wonderful. I downloaded images of several bird houses. I was able to enlarge the images and used the computer as a light box to draw the bird house. Ideas from several houses were used. The designing took most of the morning. I couldn’t make a fusible applique as the Misty Fuse is in N. H. Paper piecing was the answer. I paper pieced the house and then hand appliqued the whole piece down. That was all I did on that day, A piece started and finished. Focusing worked for one day.
Today. I finished the 12 fabric boxes. All the hand sewing is done. They just need the buttons which are in N. H. The boxes are in the suitcase, waiting to go South. Sewing the buttons on the boxes will be my focus for one day. Or evening while watching TV.
The pretty, little purple flowers are under the birch trees again. I don’t know what they are. I didn’t plant them. They come every June for me to enjoy. The lupine are almost ready for their display.
The lilacs are in blossom. The deer must have come into the yard as one of the bushes just have blossoms on the top. When the deer are hungry, they eat all the buds so there are no flowers. One year when the bushes were smaller, we had one blossom on the top of one bush. So far, they haven’t found the Hosta. Last year, they ate them down to the roots.
The crab apple trees are beautiful. The Lupine has started to bud and should blossom in a week or two.
I’ve been working on several projects. One of the projects that I brought from N. H. was a plastic bag of quilt pieces that I received from a friend. I had no idea what was in the bag but thought I’d do something with it and get it out of the UFO pile. I found over 100 six inch pinwheel blocks and some sashing material. Three rows of 10 blocks were sewn together. It is very hard to sew something that someone else has started. Her 1/4″ seam was not the same as my 1/4″ seam. I really didn’t want another large quilt to sit around waiting to be quilted. I unsewed the three rows and removed three blocks from each. I had enough blocks to make three charity quilts. Two were 5 x 7 blocks and the third was 6 x 7. The three quilts are in the suitcase waiting to go back to N. H. They need a border, batting and a backing. All of that is in my sewing room in N.H. I didn’t bring any extra material to Maine this year.
Another project was twenty four 10″ blue blocks. When I finished the Canadian 150 quilt, I cut the leftovers into 10″. 5″ and 2 1/2″ squares. I decided to make 12 fabric boxes. All 12 are sewn and turned. Once turned and pressed, each one has to be quilted. Then with a few seams, they turn into little boxes. I have three finished up to this point. They need some hand tacking and then buttons to hold the points down. Again, the buttons are in N. H. When they are all finished, up to the addition of the buttons, they will go into the N. H. suitcase. I can finish them there and not bring them back to Maine.
A1is called Pinwheel Gone Awry. The center is a pinwheel, but the surrounding pieces look as if the pinwheel was broken.
A2 is called One-Two-Buckle My Shoe. It was named because it was the 2nd block in row1, so after row 1 – block 2. Buckle My shoe just followed.
A5 is called Cathie’s Camping. There was no information in the CD to tell who Cathie was or why she was camping.
A6 is called Uncle Homer. The CD states that it was called that because Ruth used a piece of fabric in this block that had a farm on it and it reminded her of her Uncle Homer. I wondered who Ruth was. Brenda Papadakis, who wrote the Dear Jane book and drew all the patterns, listed all her quilting friends who made the Dear Jane quilts that were in the book. Ruth was not listed as one of her friends. She did mention Ruth Levin of the Bennington Museum. Maybe it was her. Although, it did not say that Ruth Levin made a Dear Jane quilt.
The sun is finally out after a long day of cold, drizzly weather. There has been a fire in the wood stove all day. Miss Molly has been sitting in the best seat in the house. She knows how to keep warm.
