Last January, I went to the Dear Jane Club at the Quilt Shop. A quilter in another group was making a Temperature Quilt and it was fascinating. Each block was a flying geese. The goose was the warmest temperature of the day and the sky was the coldest. How hard could that be, making one flying geese a day.
Temperatures were charted in 5 degree increments and a fabric assigned to each 5 degrees. The temperatures were written on baggies and a fabric inserted in each baggie. I had a lot of batique scraps and put a different color in each baggie.
The baggies are kept in order in a bin.
Each morning, I check the temperatures on my I phone and pull the correct baggies from the bin. It takes one minute to cut the three pieces with Kimberly Einmo’s Flying geese ruler. Her method uses 2 1/2″ strips, so if I had used that temperature before, there is usually a 2 1/2″ strip already cut in the bag. Sometime during the day , when I am sewing, I sew the one flying geese. It is a beginner and ender block. There are just three seams, Two to add the sky and one to place it on the strip. I press the seams when I’m pressing something else. It’s like making a quilt and not knowing it.
The joining seams are pressed open.
This is a year long project. If I’m not near my sewing room, I can keep the temperatures in the message app in my phone and make the geese later. If I forget to do this, there is a temperature app online that tells me the information that I need.
I have the temperatures of five different states in my phone. Utah, California, North Carolina, New Hampshire, and Maine. If a Temperature Quilt was made for each city, they would all be different, even if the fabric was the same.
The quilt is very busy, Some of the fabrics don’t play well with the adjoining fabric, so I’m thinking of making a 1″ black Kona sashing between the months just to rest the eyes. If I add the sashing each month, it will keep the months in order. On the months that do not have 31 days, I can add rectangles of black at the end of the month. The center of the quilt would be 62 1/2″ L x 59″ wide. The geese are 2″ x 4″ finished. (12 x 4″ = 48″ & 11 1″ sashing 11″ = 59″)
It will be interesting to see the colors change to summer colors and then back to winter colors. The sides of the quilt should be about the same colors.
Have a great day and happy quilting
My welcome wall hanging is by my front door. It is the only pattern that I repeated as it make a great gift. I appliqued the pineapple and ribbons before I had an applique class with Nancy Pearson. The later welcome wall hangings were much better, but we do get better with practice and knowing the right techniques.
My granddaughter gave me the lovely depression ware wind chime. My kitchen walls are green and it didn’t show it’s beauty. I made a wall hanging to go behind it. Silver Angelina fibers are stipple quilted on the border to bring out the silver in the glass piece.
I found the pattern for the wire fox terrier at a quilt show. The body of the dog was fussy cut from fabric that had several different dogs. I still have that fabric but it has holes. Maybe I will need more fur for another piece sometime. The hair is placed going the right way so the dog looks real. I machine quilted around the dog and then quilted the background from the back. The backing fabric had a wavy pattern and I machine quilted the waves up to the stitching around the dog. When shopping for new fabric, I often look for fabric that can be quilted upside down.
On this piece I laid the thread, then fussy cut flowers from fabric that was in the trash can and made a picture. It looks like an abstract painting.
The picture was covered with tulle from the tulle box. The box contains different colors of tulle. Each one is placed on the piece and somehow, when the right one is there, it makes itself known. Most of the Gaa-Barge designs itself.
Several years ago, I belonged to a group known as the Tuesday night quilters. We made a round robin using the following criteria, Triangles, applique, squares or rectangles, curves, and anything goes for the last border. I wondered how it would be if I made two centers, passed one on to the other quilters and pieced the other with my ideas.
The quilt that was made by others turned out to be a very light quilt. It is about one inch smaller that the other. I liked the added buttons,. The light blue fabric must have been what I included in the bag as it showed up again in both outer borders.
The quilt that I made, is much darker and the applique is not in the right sequence.
French Toast Casserole – Butter a small casserole dish. Add 1 Tbsp.. butter and 2 Tbsp. brown sugar, Microwave for 20 seconds or until butter is melted and sugar is dissolver. Cut two slices of bread into one inch cubes and place on top of melted butter and sugar. In a bowl, mix 1/4 cup milk, 1 egg, 1/2 tsp. vanilla, 2 Tbsp. sugar, 1/4 tsp. cinnamon and a pinch of salt. Pour mixture over bread crumbs, pressing pieces to help absorb liquid. Sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar. Drizzle maple syrup over casserole. Cover and refrigerate over night. In the morning, preheat oven to 375 degrees. Bake for 30 minutes. Drizzle a small amount of maple syrup over casserole before eating.
If you use bacon only on occasion, divide the remaining bacon in package into single servings. Place in snack baggies and place snack baggies in a freezer bag. Label it with the date and place in the freezer. If you want bacon at a later date, take out one small package and thaw. If you have company, take out two packages.
I wonder why I have so many UFOs. There has to be a reason. This week, I made a table runner from a stripped piece that I had spiraled. I learned this technique in a pocket book class in Vermont. I’m not sure why we did this. I never did make a pocket book from that class.
This is how to spiral. Fold a piece of fabric down at a 45 degree angle. Place the machine needle 1/4″ from all sides at the point of the top fabric.
turn fabric so sides meet and sew to the end.
cut up one side and the fabric will now be on a diagonal.
ne of my favorite spring flowers is the poppy. The colors are so beautiful. Unfortunately, it doesn’t last too long. But, there are other beauties that follow.


This quilt was made in a class at the Vermont Quilt Festival. Dave LaValley from the Bittersweet Fabric Shop provides Janome machine for the class. It is much easier to sew in a class with a machine that you are familiar with. There is a lot of twisting and turning of the blocks in this quilt. A design wall was definitely needed to arrange it.
Kimberly designed this row of the month wall hanging for AQS magazine. I didn’t use her colors and it is a much different quilt than hers. It was necessary to have an accurate 1/4″ seam as the block sizes were different. If the measurement was off, the rows would not be the same length.
I first make fabric with tiny bits of scrap fabric. After laying the scraps on a base, I overlaid it with tulle. I auditioned several colors of tulle until I found the right one. Then I free motioned black leaves over the made fabric. I cut the new fabric into circles and cut the circles in quarters. Laying the quarter circles on a square of blue, I stitched it down. After sewing the squares in a sixteen patch, I sewed around the made fabric with a close, black zig zag. The whole piece was then stippled quilted with silver thread. It looks like a church window. It’s amazing what can be done with very tiny scraps that should be thrown away.
I have finished the Canadian Women 150 quilt. It was started in December 2016 and finished in February 2018. I made three blocks a week for 50 weeks. The quilt was hand quilted in two rows of twelve blocks and then the panels were sewn together. The interesting part of this project was the stories of 150 different Canadian women, The quilt has been inspected by Miss Molly, my quality control inspector, and she has deemed it fit to sleep under.
I am working on a Grandmother’s Garden quilt which I inherited from my mother. She had pieced twelve blocks and basted paper on several hexagons. There were no instructions on how to put these blocks together, but after a time, I figured it out. I also bought some fabric that look like the era of the fabric that she had used. The quilt is hand pieced.
It is the quilt that I piece when I go to meetings or friends houses. I keep the pieces in a bag with the thread, etc. so that I can pick it up anytime I’m ready to go. My friends are asking me how many more blocks, when will it be done. I think that I should make it a priority and finish it.
Even Miss Molly says “Get it done!!”