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Friday, February 7, 2020
Scrappy Trips Around the World Quilt with Borders
Sunday, January 5, 2020
Domestic & Long Arm Collaborative Quilting Process
Thursday, January 2, 2020
Digital Quilting Design #2: Ogee Bulb
Oh, Gee, Ogees!
Take 2 on my digital quilting design work. I think this new pattern was a great way to elevate a one patch quilt design to a fun, new level. It gave it great texture while still keep it soft and cozy, and added a lot of visual interest, too.
Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Amish Bright & A Gentle Shift
"Amish Bright"
26" x 26"
The New Year is knocking! Are you ready? Maybe you'll do the same thing I will, and greet 2020 with the first sunrise instead of the clock strike at midnight. Either way, Happy New Year to you, and a toast to our past, present, and future together! Julie Stocker Quilts at Pink Doxies is over 5 years old now, and ready for a shift. Notice I said shift and not change. Shift is my word for 2020. More about that to come.
Thursday, December 19, 2019
First Steps to Digitizing Long Arm Designs
A little restaurant at the Las Vegas Wynn, Parasol Up Parasol Down, has an intriguing draw. As you watch from the balcony, decorated parasols creep both up and down in rhythm while suspended from the ceiling. It's mesmerizing and calming--a change from the typical Vegas scene of lights and noise. I had the same sensation both designing this geometric pattern, and watching it stitch out.
Digital design is a seductive blending of creativity, software design, and physical mechanics, and my tools to battle the dreaded meander. There are moments and quilts that a meander satisfies, but it takes such little extra effort to use a decorative edge-to-edge pattern.
Monday, December 16, 2019
Long Arming Christmas Quilts
"It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas"
While most people spent the last months of 2019 thinking about how to decorate their homes for the holidays, my decorating thoughts have been all about how to finish my customers' holiday quilts! Stacks of quilts big and small passed through my studio these past 2 months. I felt like the Head Elf after so many marathon sessions, and all--but my own--were finished as promised. You know how the cobbler's children always go without shoes. Mine will get finished, but perhaps not in time for Christmas this year.
Would you like to see some of the Lovelies I've been working on?
Labels:
charity quilts,
long arm quilting
Wednesday, November 6, 2019
Roll of Quilts & Shredding Thread
Things have really been moo-ving around here since I hung out my shingle as a longarm quilter. I'm learning there is a fine line between busy and swamped, and that can change in a breath if I'm not careful. With Christmas around the corner, I'm in the swamped camp with most other quilters. Time management is important, but I'm enjoying the pace.
Blog posts have been few and far between, but I have dog sitting duty today, and thought I'd show you some of the fabulous quilts by customers brought to me for quilting.
Labels:
longarm quilting
Sunday, November 3, 2019
Update: 1930's Depression Era Quilting
Quilting Revision
Imagine this: You're laying in bed in the middle of the night wondering if you should have added more quilting to a project. The batting package said, Quilt up to 8-10" apart. You wonder, "In every direction or does it count if there's 2" and then a channel?" The dog whines. You let the dog out, and you---dumb, dumb, dumb, you check your phone. And someone on your quilting list says, "I wonder if she put enough quilting around those plates?" That is cause for a hot flash, and you are wide awake, sister! Not to mention the quilt has already traveled half an hour back to the store for pick up for binding. Now aren't you glad this isn't you, but me?
Labels:
1930's quilt,
Depression fabrics,
Dresden Plate,
quilting distance,
vintage quilt,
washing vintage quilts
Friday, October 25, 2019
Longarming a 1930's Dresden Plate Quilt
"Oh, What Shall I Quilt on Monday?"
Just a tiny tongue-in-cheek, but not really true in this case. I just actively began taking in outside quilting. Not enough to be bombarded, but figuring 15-20 hours a week would be a nice pace for me. It's been most enjoyable so far, and I've met some talented quilters. But the person who pieced this quilt top is gone, and she or he left behind a legacy for future generations. Lucky me, I was asked to finish it.
Labels:
1930's quilt,
Dresden Plate,
feed sacks,
Handi Quilter,
HQ,
ProStitcher,
quilting motifs,
vintage quilt,
vintage quilt top
Friday, September 20, 2019
Fall Themed Charity Quilts
Labels:
charity quilts,
Harbor House
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