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Showing posts with label getting stuff done. Show all posts
Showing posts with label getting stuff done. Show all posts

Saturday, December 21, 2024

A shop-hop finish!

This year I had a goal to finish at least one           old shop-hop                                                                                                                                                   Here in Washington we have a yearly event called a Shop-Hop.                                                      

Where 20-30 stores, along the I5 corridor and west side of the sound, all participate in picking a theme.

Each store makes a pattern to that theme 

which draws in quilters for miles around, even internationally!

We have two weeks, 

to gather in groups of excited revelers, to visit all the shops we can get to, 

gather the patterns and any extra fabric we may "need" 

get lunch and eventually, put together a quilt.

Don't try this in one day!     

It's loads of fun and we gather together to take turns driving  the rout.

Sometimes we go for the day sometimes we do more, It's an arduous journey 

that takes you from Bremerton to Vancouver on the east side to Port Townsend    

Lots of beautiful scenery and lots of yummy, yummy fabric!   

This is my completed 2022 Shop-hop top

I didn't get to all the shops in this one so 

I made up some of the blocks myself      

                                                                                                          And here's my sewing space after a couple days of fooling around

It's bound to get worse I've two more sets of blocks to get to!                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 

Friday, December 22, 2023

Goldwork froggie

 Here's the Finish


Well almost


Hes not to lumpy






Front view









Top view



He will be a pin someday

Monday, October 16, 2023

The Baltimore Album Quilt


I also finally put this together, thAt only took 27 years....0.0!

This was my third applique quilt.

I made a Noah's ark quilt from a kit, for my son, 3 years before which, I have no Idea what happened to,

and a Sunbonnet Sue quilt, that I drafted the Sue's myself, while on a family driving trip in 1994.

I started this whilst pregnant with my second child.

And it's not done. I wasn't expecting it to be so tiny! It measures in at only 36" x 48"

I think it needs 2 more rows or maybe a top and bottom row..........I don't know.

9 of the blocks were sewn between 1995 and 1997, the last three, blocks the baskets were sewn in 2000 And the Ship which I also drafted a year later. All the blocks come from one of Ellie Sankowicz Baltimore album quilt books.

Monday, May 15, 2023

Cardinal corner applique finished.



so here are mr. and mrs. Cardinal Keeping look out on their holly tree.


Those leaves took a bit of doing!

But I must say I am much better at turning nice tight corners now.

I need to do a bit more and I may need to add some embroidery to it but over all i'm pleased with it.


This was a BOM from a few years ago, I got it from an online quilt store, i can't remember just which one right now.


Time to start the next corner


Will it be the bunny corner or the bluebird?


 

Wednesday, May 10, 2023

Cardinal corner


 The cardinal corner already in progress,


those holly leaves really improve your point turning skills! 


I have done a little more than half of them here


And because I'm me it looks too plain 


so I may add some embroidery for more pizzazz


Easy in my vocabulary only applies to housework!

Sunday, December 5, 2021

Projects in flight

 Sounds more elegant than UFO's doesn't it?

whelp skelly is moving along, 4 beads at a time. So this is going to take a while.

I put up on the long arm, for picking & pulling, The log cabin scrap quilt my maternal grandparents made 40 years ago, before my grandad died at 88, . 

I need to pull out all the old matted ties, made from that fuzzy poly ribbon we used to put in our hair in the 70's.

Pick out the shredded and patchy bits and sew in new ones, then quilt it as I go along. 

This one is fun I can see a clear delineation between my grandmothers fabric style and my mother's. they both used old cloths for the scraps so I recognize a piece of dress here and a square of shirt there. Now I get to add my own layer to it.

It's slow going on this one too but I stand to do it, so if I combine it with skelly 

where I sit for hours otherwise, I should be good. 

there's a new fancy Jacobean embroidery to outline. It's mUch smaller than the first one I did but that one turned out so well I couldn't resist starting another.

I'm on block 14 of the farmers wife, which I really should try to make one or two a day until that is done, or I will never finish it, and because sOmeone got me the other book It means I will be making a bigger piece than I expected.

The applique I started this summer on a trip to ocean shores in June, I really recommend going in the off season, we went the week before the 4th and had it all to ourselves.

4-5 quilts to bind (ungh) I hate binding but I can do it on the other machine which is not being used just now so......yeah. 


then there are the 
 4-5 quilts to samich and long arm, which will give me yet more binding, to let sit around for a couple of years before I get to them.

There is also a luscious pile of fabulous new cotton and linen fabric to make dresses and stuff out of. 

But first I must clean off my sewing table because I picked up a nasty leather working hobby, in the meantime and it's full of scraps of leather, tools and rivets. whew! 

I am not showing you a picture of that, everywhere else is a simple mess, that table is a disaster!

Now that I've made a list I realize, I have a VERY short attention span! 

No wonder it seems like I get nothing done.

Thursday, May 20, 2021

Jacobean Embroidery done!

Here are the better pictures I promised you
 
 
 
 
 
 
I finally finished this thing 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
and now I get to figure out what to do with it.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 This is very slow stitching
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Some of these motifs took as much as a month each to finish
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 So if you do decide to take it up













You have been warned
















I will tell you it is so satisfying to be done





And a little sad too

Monday, May 17, 2021

The Farmers Wife and the reason for a Simple Question

 I am starting a new project

No, I have not finished with the last one yet but that's how I roll.

I bought the Farmers Wife books a few years ago looking for a pattern I eventually found in a magazine, go figure.

As with most impulse purchases, it's hit or miss as to weather or not I will get to them, or they will be something I move around the sewing room and thumb through occasionally.

I think part of the early "Meh" I had about this book, was that it's instructions are archaic.


they call for templates cut out for each piece and put the "ick" in piecing.

but a little bit of cleaver maths, (See my previous post below) and most of the patterns are converted into easy peasy modern methods.

all you really have to remember, is no matter what size you are sewing, every seam adds half an inch.

Ok, that may be to vague.

This may end up sounding like "Toon logic" to you but its how my squirrely brain works, so bear with me. 

Mind I haven't gotten to the more difficult blocks, with tons of parts or odd offset bits, so this formulae may only work out for the mostly easy squares and half square triangle blocks.

Anyhoo, It's my wisdom, such as it is, and It goes like this; 


#2 Autumn Tints

to get a 6.5" finished block with  4x4 pieces you have 1 seam which adds .5" 

this would make a single square 3.5", since its a 4x4 each square in the block should be trimmed to this size.

   3.5 x 2 = 7 - .5 (for the seam down the middle*) = 6.5"

*I don't count a 4x4 as 2 seams, which it obviously is because the maths are harder and I am lazy, so I only count the upper row. 

I have done about 10 blocks of the 111 in the book and this formulae has worked a treat so far!

Then we get to subcuts, same formulae, 2x2=4 - .5= 3.5

I can not stress how important trimming and ironing between every stage is!

#4 basket weave
 

 You also want to starch BEFORE you cut anything.

these little tips I give out for free, ha!

So that means the 3 seams per square in this block will be

1.5 x 3 = 4.5 - 1" = 3.5  Voila!

I'm a genius!

So this next one, is the block that got me to the Simple Question and it's attendant blogs.

I figured it out but not till cutting up a bunch of fabric in experiments and trying to explain to my hubs what I wanted.

My simple formulae works here too
#6 Big Dipper

even for half square triangles (AKA the HST)

This is how I worked it out;

You want a 3.5" block to get 2 HST you start with a 4.5" square 

if you want 4 you add 2" (Because triangles act differently than squares, mumble, mumble square root of 2) this gives you 

a  6.5"square, sew 4 seams around the outside edge all the way around (-2"=4.5) cut this from corner to corner this gives you,

4/  4.5"HST cut those in half.  Sewn together > gives you 

4/ 3.5" hourglass blocks.

now all of this does leave you with bits to trim off to the proper size. but it does work out.

I was giddy with my accomplishments, when I put it all together 

Addendum: I am not sure how well this works out if the blocks get over 12" The square root of two does some wonky things in the macro.

Take thAt mr. Marion! The worst H.S. algebra teacher EVER, The man completely put me off math for decades and not just because he flunked me out freshman year.


For those of you not inclined to follow me down the rabbit hole of "I DO IT!" 


You want this lady and fellow, better blogger than me, Karen Walker, who has done all the hard work of teaching other people in classes on youtube and sells her method of piecing at her shop Laugh into Stitches. You have to scroll all the way to the bottom to find the farmers wife lessons and she has broken it up into 12 bite size bits, to get all 111 blocks, at about 12 - 15 at a time for about $9 a lesson. 

I may inveigle myself of her services when I get to some of the harder blocks but right now I am having fun figuring it out, and lets face it, I'm cheep. 

Friday, April 30, 2021

More Jacobin

Back to my hole,

Oooh look! An artsy photo!



But It's a fun hole, full of embroidery technique to practices your skills on.

 

 

And now that it is back to gloomy I can prove that I actually went outside for a while

 with this lovely pinkish color I have picked up! 

 

 

Battlement couching, burden stitch, flyleaf and raised stem
 

 Why is it I never take photos of a thing 

till I'm halfway finished with it?


pictures are best in sunlight though.

 

Anyway having fun here so it don't matter



Progress!

 

 

 Lest you think this happens overnight 

I have been working on this thing since November.




So many stitches here from Padded buttonhole with bullion picots, to more battlement stitch, satin stitch, Flyleaf stitch, a crapton, (I  have it on good authority, that is a valid measurement!) of french knots.



I an determined to finish this someday........



Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Tiny House Livingroom

 

The Living room needs help

 

 

 

 

I have discovered that yes

 I do need to cover that doorway with wall paper 

 

 

because you can see it from the front 

AND the window

I wish I'd figured that out  

BEFORE I glued the walls together!



It's not a difficult job but would have been faster to do if I hadn't

Glued everything together first. *Sigh*

 

 

 

 So here it is with some garden furniture for scale

 

It's very pink

 

And It needs furniture 

but I haven't decided how it should look

 

I haven't decided who lives here yet either

 

 

 

 

 

I think the who would inform the what 

 

but I haven't gotten that far yet




 

Friday, October 9, 2020

Where is Alice?

So the rabbit was first though I'm still looking for a tiny pocket watch to put in his hand
  The Mock turtle came next, With her eternal tears
       Then came the Dodo, elegant and wise
The calm Griffons wisdom

 
looks like she just left
 The Caterpillars curiosity
 
 The doormouse in his pot

and the painting of the rose trees
More time and more tea
Flamingos for our game of croquet
 But where can Alice be?

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