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Thanks for dropping by to take a look at some of my thoughts and ideals. Hope you will let me know if this has been helpful, useful, inspiring or whatever, and remember to come back soon.
Showing posts with label scrap quilts.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scrap quilts.. Show all posts

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Double Knit??

Boy isn't it a lovely day!  I can remember many years ago, now I'm going to tell my age here, when we first started seeing polyester double knit fabric.  Well we thought this was the best thing since zippers or maybe even the best thing since buttons.  You didn't have to iron it after it was washed and dried!  Oh my wasn't this a time saver and it gave us more time to do other things, like sew!  Everyone loved it!  Today the most amazing thing about this fabric is that it never wears out!!!  I mean never!  It is also very heavy! 
 
Well believe it or not I had a customer call me about quilting a top for her and I don't even remember where she said the top came from, but it was not something that she had made.  She wasn't even born I don't think, when they were making this stuff!  You guessed it the top was entirely double knit polyester! 
 
 
If you have never worked with this material, it is very stretch-------stretch-----------stretchie!  Extremely hard to quilt is the translation of that sentence!  But like Larry the Cable Guy, I "got 'er done".  I don't think Larry would have anything bad to say about the finished product either.  A lot of our older generation made quilts that were designed for a regular full size bed and the quilt was not the spread and they did not allow very much drop off of the sides of the mattress.  Many of the older quilts will just cover the top of the mattress with no drop down the sides at all!  This can make it difficult to use them as a regular part of the bed linen unless they are on a bed that is being slept in by one person only.  If more than one then you will hear the accussations of "cover hog" flying about frequently.  
 
At any rate I got this quilt and got it quilted.  Here it is!
You can tell in this picture that the person who made this handsewn quilt loved the 9 patch block because that is what it is!  All 9 patches sewn together without sashing or borders!

 Someone had a lot of scraps to get rid of and I don't know if they were all her's or not, but if they were all her scraps, she was a very prolific seamstress!

The person who brought me this quilt had picked out the backing and binding and I think she did a wonderful job.  All of the melon colors were just beautiful and the backing really brought out the color in the scraps.  As you can likely tell I just did a meandering quilting technique all over the top.  Sometimes that is just the best quilting pattern to keep it from looking too fussy or busy.

Now I love the binding and just wasn't able to get a good picture of it from the top.  Sorry I'm not better at photographing my projects.  The binding really made those colors pop out on the top!
 
 
I really enjoyed doing this very stretchy quilt!  It did turn out lovely.  I will give you a hint if you start to quilt a quilt top that has some stretchiness be sure to lay it out and quilt down the outside first!  This will help you manage all that in-between stuff and you can ease and stretch as you go to make things turn our properly!  They may never be perfect, but then neither am I.
 
Remember quilting is a very fun thing to do!  If it stresses you to the max then lets figure out why and see if we can turn this into something that is fun and relaxing.  I have found if something just really causes me to be anxious that I will do less and perhaps never even finish the project.  I need to stop and figure out why I am so very anxious and see if there is a way to de-stress it!!  Sometimes it's just one part that gives me trouble and if I can work through that the rest does fine.   Are you having a problem with a quilting project?  If the answer is yes, try to figure out which aspect is giving you the most problems and if you want my input just let me know.  I'm always happy to help a fellow quilter!
 
Ya'll have a great day.  Happy quilting.


Saturday, January 7, 2012

This and that and some of my favorite things

This is a night for reflection.  Looking back on my past projects and things I have really enjoyed and things I have learned.  When I started quilting many years ago people did not have computers in their homes.   One of the places where I had worked had a "computer" and let me tell you it did not resemble what we call computers today at all.  Any patterns we had were those that were published in the local paper or when a friend passed us a pattern, usually pieces cut out of an old newpaper which we would use.  I feel really privileged that I have some of these old patterns still on the old newpaper.  I have a "Dutch Doll, girl and boy, that my aunt had and they were lovingly saved and put in an envelope for safe keeping.  I have inherited several old patterns from different people and I cherish those.  Today's quilters really have a wealth of information they can retrieve at will on the internet.  I have several sites that I really like and go to often to get ideals and look for new items or new gadgets for my sewing room.  I want to take the time to share a few of these with you. 

"Missouri Star Quilts" is a real favorite since they have videos showing you how to make different patterns.  Their videos are really a great tool and they have some quilts that are really quick and easy to make and you can look at the things of their site and your mind will just take off as you see possibilities galore for the things they are teaching.  It is really wonderful to have this resource at your fingertips.  This is a great place to search for new ideals when you just don't know what you want to do next.  Check them out at http://www.missouriquiltco.com/  a really great place to browse.

Another great site if you are hunting a block pattern of any kind is http://www.quilterscache.com/  Check this site out for free quilt patterns for you to use in making your next quilt.  It is so neat to go on this site and then you can just take off with blocks of whatever size you want and make yourself a sampler quilt or just a quilt with all the blocks the same.  There are even patterns where they start with one pattern and then show different patterns that build off of the first one and add additional elements.  Check out the Go Alone Star #1 and #2 and then the other patterns designed by some of her friends and hostesses of the Arizona Quilting retreat.  Just think of the possibilities!!  Martha gives cutting instructions and tells you how much of each fabric you will need to complete the block.  I really think a quilt using all of these star patterns would be fab and a real eye catcher if you lined up the large stars and then used the smaller stars as a secondary pattern running through the quilt.  I see another project for 2013 on the drawing board.

Now you all know I have a longarm quilting machine.  One of my favorite longarm quilters is Linda Taylor.  You can visit her website at http://www.lequilters.com/ and even if you don't have a longarm machine she has lots of tools and gadgets that work for everyone.  I know she sells a large square up ruler on her site that unfolds so you can cut large pieces of fabric and get the perfectly square.  She is an awesome quilter.  I have taken several classes from her and really love her work, which can be very modern and quirky, but always beautiful.  She is another of those awesome women who support other women in their quest to do something they love and make money.  She has helped people get started by carrying their items in her store and selling them at her shows.  There are people in Texas who now make an adequate living due to selling their things to Linda for her to resale.  Some of these women are older women who are trying to live on inadequate social security checks and some are ladies who for some reason are limited in the time they can be away from home so they can work in their home and get paid.  Now Linda doesn't toot her own horn, but I have heard the stories from reliable sources and I find this an admirable trait in a business woman.

Another wonderful woman is El.  http://www.quiltinaday.com/ will take you to El's site.  You can find anything you want here and if you are like me much more than you can afford and El is another woman who tries to help her fellow women by helping then get their ideals up and running and then by being a distributor for their products.  My bud (Peggy) and I call El out bathroom buddy.  We were in Paducah, KY and we went out to the fairgrounds to take a class with El and of course had to take a bathroom break and we were in the bathroom, Peg in one stall and me in another carrying on a conversation about the upcoming quilting cruise she was advertising and we didn't know she was also in the bathroom and listening to us!!  Too funny for words.  She admitted that she really wanted to know what people thought about the cruise and if they were saying it was too expensive and exactly what their reaction was to the posters.  Well she found out because Peg and I were talking about the pricing, etc and how we needed to see if we could save enough money to go on a cruise and how much we would love to go.  We even have a picture of Peggy and I with El standing in front of the bathroom door!! lol

Now I want to share another site with those of you who have a desire to use up all those scraps you have saved and you just don't know what to do with them!!  There are so many things and I found this one quite by accident. http://www.quiltville.com/ is Bonnie Hunter and I really love her site.  If you want to use up all those scraps, this is the gal who can tell you how to go about doing it!  Most of us quilters really hate to waste things and our fabic is not something that we just want to toss out.  Our greatest thrill is when we can cobble all of those little pieces together to make something really great and we feel like we got a quilt or potholder or whatever for free because we didn't go out and spend any additional money for the fabric.  What can I say, there is a streak of our pioneer ancestress' in all of us quilters.  Everything had to be used completely.  The only thing that was thrown away was the things that could not be used for any useful purpose, and there aren't many things that fit that catagory.  I think Bonnie and I both got a double dose from those women from our past who were thrifty and imaginative, well maybe Bonnie got a triple dose and I got the double.  I know I really have learned several things from her that I didn't know before I started looking at her site.

There are many more sites that I love to visit just to get new ideals or when my mind just seems like so much mush.  They never fail to plant new seeds in this old brain that just seem to sprout and grow until I have so many ideals I know I will never complete half of them.  I hope you enjoy checking out some of these sites. 

Now next on my list of things is that I am reflecting about is the fact that I feel we are here to help our brethren and sisters.  Now that help can take many forms but one of the forms that I particularly like is being able to quilt, which I love doing, and being able to share that quilting with others.  When the tornado hit Ringgold last year, many people were left without homes, and many more were left with damaged homes and had to seek shelter with friends and family while repairs were made and those friends and family didn't always have things they needed to make the opening of their homes to those less fortunate and easy thing.  Many quilts were donated to families who were sheltering others, and those quilts then went with the families who had lost so much of their material goods.  If you could have seen the love some of those quilts were given by children who suddenly didn't have their home and were thrown into strange surroundings with strange "things" and they didn't have their blankies anymore, I know it would have spurred you on to run right home and sew up more quilts to give.  If you spent a day in a chemo room and watched these people who are fighting for their lives come in and sit for hours in a chair, wrapped up in their snuggle blankets and quilts it will pull at the heart strings in ways you can't really imagine.  If you visit a large medical center and go to the pediatric oncology wing and see how those kids love getting their own quilt you will want to sit up all night sewing for them so you can finish that quilt before it's too late for them.  If you happen to be on the scene of a fire that totally destroys a home and see a firefighter or policeman pull out a quilt to wrap up a child, or a suddenly displaced adult and see them clinging to that scrap of material you know that scrap of fabric that someone quilted will be a huge piece of their lives from that point forward.  If you see a child that has had to be removed from their family and put into foster care and when they leave the shelter they are given a quilt to take with them that becomes their quilt and see them cling to that little quilt.  Well all I can say is there are so many worthy ways to give back to our communities that none of us should be able to say I don't know what I can do that would help anyone.  Just look.  Opportunities abound!!  Sew up those scraps and give back some of what we have been so blessed to receive.  If you don't know what to do then ask.  If you don't have a charity feel free to ask me and I'll point you to several, local, state and national!!  There are people hurting everywhere, they really aren't hard to find! 

I hope you have a wonderful day quilting and sharing!