Saturday, September 27, 2014

Home with TLC

I am participating in Paulette's Progressive Freebies Challenge for World Card Making Day!
So much fun!
Here is my submission for the first day.  


Paulette gave us this lovely house freebie, and invited everyone to create something with it.

Thank you Paulette for this lovely image and great challenge!

Friday, April 18, 2014

You Get a Gold Star

My newest quilt is entitled You Get a Gold Star.

In progress.

My parameters for the design of this quilt were:
1.  Use my "module" idea for one or more of the units of the block.
2.  Use the Tri-Recs rulers.
3.  Colors:  scrappy and cheddar/gold.

I really like the look of the 54-40 or Fight block, and I wanted a chance to use my Tri-Recs rulers, but ultimately decided I would like the block to look a bit simpler.  There's lots going on in this quilt, and I really wanted the gold/cheddar stars to stand out, so I substituted a plain block for the center of the star.


My two modules for this quilt are a simple scrappy 4-patch module, and the Tri-Recs star points module.  Both very simple.  The sashing will incorporate more scrappy 4-patches, and I'm thinking an outer border of 4-patches will be very effective as well.



4-patch module

I've been making these little (3" square, finished) scrappy 4-patches as part of my new quilt, You Get a Gold Star.

Very simple, very easy!

I raided my 2" strip bin for dark and light strips.  There needs to be enough contrast here to read as dark/light in the finished quilt.  I threw out some strips that were just too "medium" in value to fit in either category.

Sew them together as strips.

Press to the dark.

Cut in 2" units.

Pick two at random and sew together.



Spin the seams and press.

A few hints that help me:
1.  When sewing strips together, just pick a new strip of the value you need and add it in there.  If two strips run out at the same time, start with two fresh ones.

2.  Chain piece, chain piece, chain piece!

3.  When cutting 2" units, you may need to square up your edge from time to time.



Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Stringing Along

I made a few more string blocks over the weekend, and a few more (not pictured) last night.  I'm having a lot of fun with these--just going with the flow.


And I ironed some more recycled shirt fabrics to add to my growing stack.  These are ready to be cut into strip and strings, a la Bonnie Hunter, and go into the bins.  I've made my peace with this as just an ongoing process, and not something I'll probably ever be "finished" with.  Deconstruct a few shirts, iron some pieces, cut some pieces as the spirit moves me.


For some reason, I just really enjoy the process of deconstructing clothing.  I enjoy doing it with sweaters as well, reclaiming the yarn for future use.  There's something almost meditative about it.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Weekend Progress

I worked on my Star Struck blocks this weekend, perfecting my stitch-and-flip technique on those 2 1/2" corner triangles.  Here's the stacks of block parts, one stack with corner triangles attached, and one still awaiting the blue-green triangle.  And behind that, the big pile of chain-pieced units!


Of course, because I am an impatient quilter, I had to stitch together a couple of blocks and then put those together.  You can see them on the left-hand side of my messy  creatively chaotic bulletin board.

I also put together the four little string blocks I made--those are on the lower right.


Here's a close-up.  As you can see, I'm not too attached to the idea of the strings running parallel to each other.  Lots of my strings are angled, and if I run short in one area, well, I just smack something else on there!  In the lower right-hand block you can see that I used a "string" that was a leftover from the Scrappy Trip Around the World blocks you can see above.


These sure are a lot of fun to play with.  I foresee a whole quilt made up of these in my future.  

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Tidy and Untidy Stacks


Last night I worked on my Star Struck quilt--adding light corner triangles, pressing and squaring up bonus half-square triangles, and cutting out dark 2 1/2" squares for the opposite corners.  I've chosen deep teal and  blue-green for the dark triangles, to act as complement to all the warm colors of the stars.

I hope this turns out as pretty in real life as it looks in my head!


Everything looks so tidy in this picture, but turn around 180 degrees, and you get this:



Task for tonight or tomorrow:  Clean up this little area of my sewing nook.  It's such a small sewing space that even this amount of excess can really take over.

Monday, July 2, 2012

Weekend Stash Acquisitions

Lately, I've gotten into the habit of "giving" myself $20.00 to spend every weekend at garage sales on whatever I want, and of course whatever I want usually turns out to be men's shirts to deconstruct for fabric. Sometimes, however, I get lucky and discover a sale with actual fabric for sale, which was the case this past weekend.

I stumbled across a woman selling some of her grandmother's old stash fabrics and project remnants.  Woohoo!  Vintage fabric!





Some of these beauties are clearly small-scale calicoes from the '80's or early '90's, but I'm thinking other prints may well date back into the '70's or even the '60's.  Check out that wonderful orange, yellow, and purple floral on the left in the last picture!  I love it!

Then there were these fabulous blocks that Grandma had made for her granddaughters:




The young woman told me proudly that her grandmother had drafted this leaf pattern herself, and then made blocks for her three granddaughters.  These were the only three remaining after they had picked their favorites to keep.  I love this last one with the odd 1970's conversation print containing horses and carriages, dogs, cacti, mandolins.

I haven't decided what to do with these three blocks.  A quilt back? Pillows?  Seems like they deserve to be featured somehow; I'm just not sure where.  Someday I'm sure I will find the perfect place.

There was also this terrific little box of cut octagons:


These are in all kinds of vintage prints and dressmaking fabrics--a little bit of everything thrown in there!  There's the one block that is put together, and then the rest simply cut and grouped into groups of nine.  I haven't decided what to do with these, either.  They could certainly be English-paper-pieced into a quilt top just as they are (which would be pretty retro, for sure), or added to with my own scraps for even more octagons, or even cut into 2" or 2 1/2" squares.  Right now they are simply a little box full of inspiration and discovery!