Tuesday, March 3, 2026

girly quilt for a colleague

A coworker is expecting, and I know her well enough to feel comfortable asking if she would a) enjoy having a small quilt from a coworker and b) if girly colors and patterns were ok to use. Happily she said yes to both so I got to have a lot of fun putting this piece together. Pulling fabrics was, of course, the best part. I started out thinking I was going to use an entirely different cat fabric with bright colors, but as I pulled both from my bag of scraps I've precut into charms plus some of the pinks and floral fabrics in my stash, I gravitated more towards the softer palette here with purples, yellows, soft pinks, and neutrals. 


I knew I wanted to make something relatively simple because I didn't have much time (said coworker was going to be in town for just a week). Some creative googling led me to a tutorial on the Diamond Chain pattern at Missouri Star and followed that (loosely) to make the center panel. It looks the same, but I didn't follow the specific sewing instructions since I wasn't starting from the precuts that were shown. 

Despite including lots of yellows and purples, it was still feeling VERY neutral and kind of washed out, so I played around with some of the prints and decided to add stripes at the top and bottom. That really changed the character of the whole quilt. The purples popped much better and the yellows sparkle around the pattern instead of blending in. Very pleased with that decision!


I had exactly enough of this wonderful ric-rac stripe print for the binding. If that's not the universe saying "great choice!" I don't know what is. Aaaand it's pretty perfect. I'm finding that working with fabric collections is fun, but my real joy is in these types of projects where I can assemble something cohesive from different fabrics I've collected over time, even better if I use scraps! Some of these are offcuts from trimming quilts after quilting, one is a blender my mom sent from her stash (so quite vintage!), and of course because it's me there's some unconventional texture in there in the form of flannel. Usually it's linen, but here there be flannel kitties. 


The backing is just a couple of large leftovers of a couple of the prints that are pieced together. I quilted it with gray thread and a simple cross hatch in the center panel and "in the ditch" along the stripe seams on the top and bottom. It ended up being 32" x 44". It was a gorgeous morning today, so I snapped a couple pictures outside before heading to work with quilt in tow. I'm pleased to report that it was well received. 

Sunday, March 1, 2026

octavia glamour shots

Behold Octavia in much nicer lighting! I should explain the name. Last year's Bay Area yarn crawl "mascot" was an octopus named Octavia. This yarn was the largest purchase I made on that fun crawl, with the explicit intent of making this sweater. I must have subconsciously had the octopus in my head picking out these colors because they are definitely a call back. 


I am impressed with myself that I finished it so quickly, even with the month and a half or so languishing in the corner once I bound off. Fingering weight sweaters are not for the faint of heart! I have another worsted weight one on the needles right now and boy those may be my jam. But the nice drape and lighter fabric that can be achieved with fingering weight is so different, it is probably worth the effort to keep trying some more patterns. This one is seamless and has very little in the way of stability in the upper parts which may be my least favorite thing about it besides the neckline, but the a-line shaping and the fun hem are elements to keep in mind.


What else can I say about her? I love the colors. There's a small part of me that wishes I would have made the entire thing in this beautiful tonal navy, but I can't resist a fun color combination at the yarn shop. Also, I really enjoy coral as a color but it's tough for me to wear, so this nautical pairing both makes sense in terms of the yarn crawl theme and makes the coral wearable for me since it's farther from my face. 


Being totally honest, I'm not 100% satisfied with how the underarm end-weaving-in went, but I expect that to sort of work itself out over time and with wear. I'm looking forward to seeing if this merino/linen/rayon blend is one that I can tolerate well against my skin. The person at the yarn shop suggested it may be, so it felt worth a shot. It's fitted in the upper body and arms but not so much that I couldn't put a tank top on under it if I needed to. Probably not a T-shirt though. Hopefully something to enjoy wearing this spring! May it not get too hot too soon.