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Thursday, June 21, 2018
Hurricane Stars on the Long Arm
Thursday, June 14, 2018
Blogging Zen. Not.
Quilt Art: A Zen Hangout
It was time to hang something significant at the top of the long stairway to my studio. I think this star is so enticing. Does it say, "Good things lie beyond this step?
Is Blogging Zen?
Those who fantasize about writing a blog may be erroneously led to believe the blogging process is a zen moment in the blogger's day. Said blogger sits in the early dawn with coffee, sleeping babies or dogs, and pours out accumulated wisdom to readers that await every post. (Insert sinister laughter.) Perhaps it is not so, say I.
Labels:
blogging,
quilt,
wall hanging
Thursday, June 7, 2018
Vintage Drunkard's Path Finish

Combining the Old with New
Summer has been quick ins and outs at the studio with many little changes that mean more space for opportunities to come. Hours have been spent sifting, reorganizing, and happily rediscovering lost items. I am still sticking to working through the Pile of Unloved Projects, and it's getting sooooo small that I nearly lost it the other day. Okay, not really, but it's no longer as big as a piece of furniture, and easy to misplace. That's pretty amazing to me! There is officially light at the end of the tunnel.
So how about this quilt story now?
Monday, June 4, 2018
Half Hexie Flimsy & Backing
Labels:
baby quilt,
half hexies,
hexies,
quilt,
stash buster
Saturday, June 2, 2018
Whirligig Half Hexie Quilt
Half Hexie Whirligig
In the last post, Stolen Moments for Stitch & Play, I was playing with my scraps. Play is good. I traded the scraps for more moderate fabrics, and in a short afternoon put together the lower half of this sweet quilt. It's slightly under 45" from edge to edge here, and with a border/background will flesh out to a nice baby or toddler quilt a little larger.
Labels:
half hexies,
hexagon,
hexies,
quilts,
vintage quilts
Thursday, May 31, 2018
Stolen Moments for Stitch & Play

Vintage Log Cabin...Again
I am still plugging away at this quilt. I have to be in a special frame of mind to work for long periods, but I've determined to finish it this summer. A little bit each day brings good progress, and maybe I'll have it done before I've had it a whole year.
When my husband needed to do some work far out in the country, I grabbed my project gear, and off we went. Cell phone service is good in town, but once you get into the hills around here it's hit or miss--mostly miss. I was the safety in case there was an accident. Poor me! I had to just sit there and quilt.
Friday, May 25, 2018
Kaleidoscope: Quilts at the Kentucky Museum

The Kentucky Sun Quilt
My husband and I made a whirlwind trip to the Kentucky Museum last weekend on the Western Kentucky University campus in Bowling Green, KY. The Kaleidoscope exhibition opened earlier this year featuring 30 Kentucky quilts, and the first public viewing of the spectacular Kentucky Sun quilt. I had seen pictures of it before, but nothing could take the place of standing there in front of it. I was overwhelmed. This quilt was made nearly 140 years ago, and it was old yet so amazingly modern, and I couldn't stop staring. To put in in a chronological perspective, it was made 15 years after the Civil War ended in the time of Billy the Kid, Wyatt Earp, and the O.K. Corral. It's funny how it puts me in the mind of the western frontier, and I wonder if that had any influence.
The Kentucky Sun Quilt has a fascinating story behind it, and was on the cover of the Kentucky Quilt Project's publication. Read more about it through the link. The Kentucky Quilt Project was the first of all the quilt documentation projects in the U.S., and organized in 1981.
Saturday, May 19, 2018
Mermaid Baby One Patch Finish
Mermaid's Song
Song
Go and catch a falling star,
Get with child a mandrake root,
Tell me where all past years are,
Or who cleft the devil’s foot,
Teach me to hear mermaids singing,
Or to keep off envy’s stinging,
And find
What wind
Serves to advance an honest mind.
~John Donne, 1613
Check out the rest of the poem, and a brief analysis at Interesting Literature. If you've heard bits of this without knowing the rest, it will make much more sense.
Labels:
baby quilt,
choosing fabrics,
color theory,
one patch,
print theory
Thursday, May 17, 2018
Mermaid Baby One Patch Quilt
"Mermaids & Seahorses, Oh, My!"
Way back in January I ran a post called 27 Quilt Finishes in 2017. I spoke up for fewer commitments to free myself up. This has been good. I've really plowed through my Pile of Unloved Projects. I would say half are done. That gets a quiet little woohoo from me to myself. I'm staying on track with my goals.
I also said, "Make what you love, and use what you have." So in the midst of pulling out fabric for my last class, Chain Piecing & Webbing, I happened upon this piece of mermaid fabric, and a bit of Mendocino seahorses. Not from the same designer or even stylized the same, but I still liked them together. Golly, I don't think any fabrics in this quilt came from the same company let alone designer, but the variety was interesting.
Labels:
baby quilt,
one patch,
quilt
Tuesday, May 15, 2018
Chain Piecing & Webbing Class Available
Trips Around the World
By the end of last week I had several quilts finished, and more pulled out to resume. There has been a good deal of pushing this year to finish up the old, but I've also dropped a few new projects into the line up when I could. I had The Sewing Group coming to the studio Monday for a class on my unique method of chain piecing to webbing to accurate block construction, and we were using the Trips Around the World quilt to learn the process. Many of these quilters had never made a TAtW so we had a lot of ground to cover in a short time.
Labels:
classes,
one patch,
Trip Around the World
Friday, May 11, 2018
A Veteran's Quilt Finish & Panto Problems
Labels:
feathers,
quilts,
Veteran's quilt
Tuesday, May 8, 2018
A Veteran's Quilt & Making Pantographs

Dave's Quilt
Several months ago I was asked to make a quilt for a friend of the family. We'll call him Dave.
Dave's had two requests for his quilt. The first would have made the quilt non-washable so we scrapped it, but the second was for it to be big enough that his feet not hang out. Now that I could do!
Labels:
feathers,
pantographs,
quilts
Saturday, May 5, 2018
The Farmer's Wife 1930s: Blocks 3 & 4
"Ann"
The Farmer's Wife 1930's Block No. 4
If you go missing too long around here, people will ask, "Did you fall in?" And my reply today would be, "A little bit." Busy has new meaning. The grass is growing by the minute. Three college diplomas were earned in the past months by a few of our children. Two of those were just this week, and were master's degrees. I am a proud mama! Kids have moved in, moved out, and buying a real moving van would have been a great investment years ago. My role as a member of a large family is changing, and there are daily adjustments. No worries. It's all good, but different. As spring settles herself down to a manageable pace, I'll be more regulated, and my posts as well. Your comment went unanswered, you say? My deepest apologies. Just bare with me until I can catch up. I'll dig my way out of the email pile, and I'll have lots of goodies to show you, too! I keep sewing to stay sane through the chaos.
Tuesday, May 1, 2018
Change or Transformation: The Endeavourers
This month's challenge prompt for the Endeavourer's art quilt group is
Change or Transformation.
Change or Transformation.
How do you interpret change or transformation with cloth and thread?
Art is meant to appeal to your past experience, emotion, and senses. An art quilt is simply art made with fiber transformed into cloth and thread, and a batting sandwiched between the layers. How does one convey the meaning of something so abstract as change or transformation through fiber?
Tuesday, April 24, 2018
Modified En Provence
En Provence: Tweaked
Bonnie Hunter is a favorite of mine. I love her books, her blog, and when her En Provence quilt along came around a year ago, I convinced a friend to join me. It was a mystery quilt along, too. Ooo-o-o! Exciting! So off we went collecting our fabrics. I did not choose the suggested palette, but used what I had the most of in my stash and scraps. Lots and lots of warm colored pinks, oranges, and violets, low volume background in a wide range, and navy-like blue. We sewed our little hearts out each week with the new clue, and it was fun to feel the camaraderie of the big group. When the big reveal came out, I thought, "Meh. My values are completely reversed." A little broken hearted at that point, I packed my thousands of pieces away, and said I would figure it out another day. (I'm lying. It just felt like a thousand, but there were a lot of pieces!)
Labels:
design wall,
En Provence,
quilt
Friday, April 20, 2018
Giant Rose Star Quilt Finish
Good Kite Weather!
What a blustery week we've had! Snow, thunder, rain, and even barefoot days. The weather blew in with heavy winds each time, and I was lucky to have a day with both sun and calm skies to get a picture outside. I wanted you to see the true colors of this quilt at least once. I was shocked at how hard it was to photograph the color violet inside, and this quilt has the full range.
Labels:
hexies,
kite shape,
longarm quilting,
MCC,
Ohio MCC Relief Sale,
quilt,
quilts for children,
ruler work longarming
Monday, April 16, 2018
Giant Rose Star Quilt
The Kite Shape:
Working with 60 Degree Shapes
The kite shape was never on my bucket list of "Have-to-make that!", but likely because I didn't know its capabilities. I hadn't had much experience with it, and needed to know how it related to other shapes in the 60 degree family.
Did you know the kite shape is a combination of a hexagon and a small triangle married together at one of the six sides? Many of our first shape experiences are as children, and most of us did not encounter it. It's rarely included in shape sets or math books, and we have limited exposure.
Did you know the kite shape is a combination of a hexagon and a small triangle married together at one of the six sides? Many of our first shape experiences are as children, and most of us did not encounter it. It's rarely included in shape sets or math books, and we have limited exposure.
Labels:
60 Degrees,
baby quilt,
hexagon,
kite shape,
quilt,
quilts for children,
Y-seams
Thursday, April 12, 2018
Big Hapi Quilt Top Finish

Hapi Quilt
My design wall has been dominated by this large quilt for a few weeks while undergoing a slow design process. Slow design is just that at times. Slow. But when you do figure out what a quilt is asking for, you'd like it to happen right then--that day, and have it done! Unfortunately, big quilts take a long time simply because they're much bigger. This one finishes at 92.5" x 93.5". That's the same size as about 4 baby quilts. I asked myself how long 4 baby quilts might take to finish, and relied on patience.
Labels:
Amy Butler,
Design On the Fly,
eight-pointed star,
Hapi,
quilt
Saturday, April 7, 2018
Fussy Cuts Tips & Template Play
Machine Pieced 60 Degree Star in
Digitally Printed Fabric
After my short experience with English paper piecing, I decided I needed a better method to achieve 60 degree piecing. See 60 Degree Shapes. Measuring with standard quilting rulers was successful with 60 degree diamonds, but my interest piqued in specialty templates for more complicated shapes. I was travelling light for a few days, but 2 new Marti Michell template sets, G & H, were small enough to pack in my carry-on. Both sets are based on 60 degrees shapes, but in different sizes. I'd bought them several months ago, but had no time to really spend getting to know them since. Now I had a weekend ahead wide open for play. Off we went!
Labels:
60 Degrees,
fussy cutting,
hexagon,
hexies,
templates
Wednesday, April 4, 2018
Quilts, Groups & Little Dresses for Africa
Labels:
60 Degrees,
design wall,
Little Dresses for Africa
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