Autumn Madness

Several years ago I hand dyed lots of fabric.  I just couldn’t cut it up for a quilt.  It sat for a long time in a bin.

IMG_0297I saw a quilt pattern called October Weekend and thought of the dyed fabric.  It would be just right for the project.  The pattern was diagramed like a cross stitch.  Some of the squares were whole.  Some were half square triangles and some were three pieces. I cut each piece separately, and arranged them on a flannel sheet so they would be in the right position on the quilt.  It seemed to take forever to make this quilt. This was made when I worked on one quilt at a time.    Not at all like today when I have four or five going at once, not to mention dozens of ufos.

After the quilt was pieced, I did find three mistakes.  There are probably many more, but when leaves fall on the forest floor, it doesn’t matter.

The leaves are hand quilted with veins.  The black background is hand quilted 1/4″ apart.  When it was finished, I renamed it “Autumn Madness”. Looking back, I really did enjoy making this quilt.

Have a great day and happy quilting,

 

Big Bed Quilts

All the babies in my family receive a quilt when they are born. The quilts are loved and well worn.  As the babies grow older and transition to a big bed, they often get a big bed quilt.

archive 11One of my daughters had a set of twins, a boy and a girl.  I used a panel to make them their crib quilts.  The quilts were alike.  Very quick and easy.

 

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When the boy went to a big bed, he received a red, white and blue log cabin quilt.  This quilt was made from cotton fabric.

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The girl also received a log cabin quilt.  I had bought all the left over fabric from a quilt shop that went out of business.  Some of the fabric was shiny satin and other delicate fabrics.  This was a wrong choice.  The 1/4″ seams frayed and the quilt was unusable after a few washes.  Live and learn.  I should have made bigger seams.

I have two more little boys that are going into big beds soon so I should get busy and make quilts for them.

Have a great day and happy quilting.

 

Quilts

IMG_0317This is one of my favorite quilts.  I made it when I first started quilting.  It is machine pieced and hand quilted.  For some reason, it is very comfortable to sleep under.  For years, I took it to the Vermont Quilt Festival to place on my bed.  It is my home away from home quilt.

IMG_0312I collected the teal, blue and green fabrics in this quilt for several years.  There was something missing.  At the time that I was planning this quilt, I was teaching some of my co-workers how to quilt. As I was showing the students the fabric, one of them said “See what I bought at Keepsake Quilting ” and threw the pink fabric on top of my pile.  It was the spark that this quilt needed. I called Keepsake and read the information that was on the selvage to them.  A few days later, I had the yardage that I needed to make this quilt.  This one is also machine pieced and hand quilted.

These two quilts are still in my collection.  Someone once asked me why I had so many quilts.  My response is that some people collect salt and pepper shakers, I collect quilts.  It just takes more space.

Have a great day and happy quilting.

Miss Rosie

miss rosie open doorThe sixth quilt in the Miss Rosie Spice of Life book by Carrie L Nelson is called Open Door.  Carrie made her quilt in blue, brown, and red.  The colors in this picture are not accurate.

 

 

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My daughter called her quilt Tribute to Dad.  She used pictures of her Dad along with a fishing theme for the large center pieces.  IMG_0776She drew from her stash of fishing fabric for the rest of the piecing.

 

 

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My quilt centers were cut from a panel of a bog.  I cut the panel into nine pieces and sewed them back in the same order.  IMG_0775

 

 

The quilt looks complicated, but it is made of half square triangles, snowball blocks and cut off quarter square triangles.  Most of the quilts in this book are easy to make as long as the block is broken down and pieced in sections. Next week you will see the exception to this statement.

Have a great day and happy quilting.

Gaa Barge

A lot of the gaa barge was just scraps that fell on the floor.  I quite often make blocks with the Tucker Trimmer.  A small piece is trimmed from each  oversize block.  For this block, I must have trimmed white fabric because I had a lot of it.

The very small strips are sewn down with a stipple stitch.  There is no tulle so the strips are floating.  A few red flowers were embroidered on top.IMG_0462  It is a very simple piece.  It’s not my favorite piece of gaa barge but it did use up lots of little white scraps .

Have  a great day and happy quilting,.

mile a minute quilts

When you have a lot of scraps left over from making quilts, you make a mile a minute quilt.  When sewing, the seam allowance can be what ever you wish.  It doesn’t  have to be 1/4″.  It just has to be straight. It is a good way to use up leftover bobbins and spools of thread.  It doesn’t matter what color thread you use.  The mile a minute is made by not looking and just grabbing the next piece of color, although some people like to match the  colors or themes of their fabric. Either way is o.k. The color of the quilt is determined by the color of the sashing.  For instance, if you use a blue sashing, it will pick up the blues in the mile a minute block and the quilt will read as blue.

The technique is easy.  Sew small scraps to a strip.  Cut the pieces apart, press and then add the pieces to a second strip.  Keep sewing in this manner until there is a piece big enough to cut out a square that is the size that you want.  I use a 6 1/2″ square ruler to cut the square.  It is put on the diagonal, not straight.  This 6 1/2″ block can be used in any block pattern that has a piece that size in it.

IMG_0898The easiest quilt to piece uses sashing and three borders.  The mile a minute block is in a straight set.  The middle border is a mile a minute piece cut 3 1/2″ and joined together to make a border long enough to go around the quilt.IMG_0901

IMG_0906Another option is to use a diagonal set.  Oversize mile a minute blocks are cut in half for the triangles next to the border.IMG_0903

Every time  I think I have finished my last mile a minute quilt and have used up all the scraps, I find bins of leftover scraps from other quilts.  I still have a big bag of Christmas fabric.  Some day, I will have a Christmas mile a minute.

Have a great day and happy quilting.

UFO

It has been a long time since I finished a UFO.  I’m way behind on my goal of one a week.  Springtime will do that to you when you spend lots of time raking, weeding, mowing and dividing overgrown plants.  I can catch up next winter.  Many of the UFOs will probably take more than a week to finish anyway so I won’t worry about that.

Many years and two sewing machines ago, I learned how to digitize.  It was long, hard work and I really didn’t like to do it.  I did digitize some labels, some embroideries, and this red work flower pattern.  When I found out that I could buy beautiful embroideries already digitized for a small amount, I gladly stopped.  My work had skipped stitches and just didn’t look professional.

a8I sewed out twelve flower blocks and put them aside as I didn’t like them.  While watching the Missouri Star Company on you tube, I saw a video of embroidered squares sewn together in a quilt as you go method.  This was interesting and I like to try new things, so I remembered the red work blocks and brought them out.  They are now together and will go in the give away bin.  No matter how many times I try new quilt as you go methods, I still Like Georgia Bonesteel’s method.  It does involve some handwork as this method is all sewn by machine.

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It did turn out O.K. and someone will like it.

Have a great day and happy quilting.

from the archives

These are a few of my beginning wall hangings.  It was fun learning new techniques and making small pieces.  I’m glad that I found the photo album of quilts that I had given away and can share them with you.

1b (2)I had a class with Harriett Hargraves and learned machine applique and machine quilting.  Making a wall hanging with curves made it easier to manipulate the applique.  This wall hanging was made quickly using Harriett’s methods.  Harriett was a great teacher.  I took two classes with her.

 

 

1a (2)The second wall hanging is made of two different nine patch blocks. White sashing is between the blocks with a four patch corner square.  The difference in fabric color make the piece look difficult, but it was very easy to piece.  I’m thinking that this would make a very easy and pretty full size quilt

 

 

1 (2)The third wall hanging was my first attempt in curved piecing.  I found that the drunkards path pattern was easy to piece using just three pins.  When I first started to quilt, I was self taught, using the Quilters Newsletter magazine as my textbook.  I was a solitary quilter and had no one to give me an opinion of what was hard and what was easy.  I have no fear of Y seams, curved piecing or partial seams because no one told me they were supposed to be hard.  I just followed the instructions and they were easy.

Have a great day and happy quilting.

 

Dyed Fabric

Two years ago, I bought three dying kits.  The colors were gradated from one color to another. Beautiful colors according to the samples.  Last summer, I finally bought the fabric and decided to dye the fabric.  I hadn’t read the instructions before and found that the amount of dye powder was for fat 16ths.  I would have lots of colors, but only small pieces of each.

a2I waited until summer to dye as I only dye fabric in the back yard now.  Previously when dyeing fabric, I dyed on a TV tray in the bathtub in the bathroom.  One time I was dyeing yellow fabric and it spilled everywhere.  It did not come off and didn’t look very good.

The dyeing process took four days as there was wait time between dyeing, rinsing, drying and pressing the pieces.  It took me a good part of the day to measure the dye powder and process all three boxes.  There were recipes for each color.  Amounts of the dye were increased or decreased in each baggie to make the color gradation.  That was the first day.

The second day was rinse day.  By the end of the day the rubber gloves were off. They were too much bother.  I was drenched from head to toe.  Each piece needed several rinses until the water ran clear.  I had marked each fabric so that I would know where they belonged in the gradation and with which batch.

a1The third day was easy.  The fabric just dried by itself.   Then after it dried, I ironed each small piece.  That took most of another day.  Now that that project is finished, I am glad that I did it.  The fabric is beautiful.  The next time I have the desire to dye fabric, I will only use one box.

These fabrics were made from left over dye.

Now, I just have to find a pattern to make something with the dyed fabric.  Years ago, I dyed a lot of fabric in different patterns and had to force myself to cut it up.  Then there was the summer when my daughter and I sun dyed fabric.  It was beautiful.  I did make a quilt for her in memory of the fun “quilt camp” week.

Have a great day and happy quilting.

Miss Rosie

501 is the fifth quilt in the Miss Rosie Series.  The Miss Rosie quilts are designed by Carrie L Nelson in her book Miss Rosie Spice of Life.

501Carrie made two quilts in this pattern.  One had a red background and the other a beige background.  This is an easy quilt, made very differently with different background fabrics.

 

 

 

 

501-3I thought that I had enough fabric in my stash to make the background the same color, but after I cut the pieces, I found that there were two colorways of the same pattern.  This made a design element, not an error.  After all, it is a scrap quilt and we had to only use our stash.  I machine quilted my quilt with my domestic machine

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501-2My daughter also used light fabric in her background.  Although the fabric is different, it looks like the same quilt because of the value in colors.  Her quilt was professionally quilted with a long arm machine.501-4

I enjoyed making the Miss Rosie quilts.  There are thirteen in the book.  I was very, very happy when I put the last stitch in the thirteenth quilt.

Have a great day and happy quilting.