Monday, August 26, 2024

Halloween quilt finish

I started this quilt Sept 2023 right after the baby quilt for my cousin, trying to keep the momentum going from having actually made something. I didn't get it done by Halloween but did finish the top by mid December. After that, of course, it hung around in the closet like the rest of the quilt tops. I saw something similar floating around on Pinterest, thought I had a good idea of how it was done, and decided I could try it out. I had a layer cake of gray fabrics and a long-collected stash of Halloween prints. The inspiration quilt certainly had blocks larger than layer cake size, but the convenience of having the precuts in my stash outweighed any inclination to try to get it exactly the same.


I sprinkled some khaki corduroy into the gray solid mix for some fun texture in the x blocks, and picked out my most moody prints to feature in the alternating blocks. For a Halloween quilt, it's quite subdued! In contrast, the back is bright and wild. I was laying things out on the floor just continuing to add scraps and shapes together (in columns, can you tell?) until it was about the right size. 


To brighten things up a bit on front, I added a bright orange damask print binding. It's kind of "gothic mansion" in flavor and frames the whole thing very nicely. I hand stitched the binding down instead of my usual machined zigzag. 


I am very pleased to have the first of my stack of sandwiched quilts completed, and even in time for this year's spooky season.

Tuesday, August 20, 2024

gettin’ one done

I started this quilt late last September and worked on it through fall. The top has been done since mid-December and having been a part of the recent quilt sandwich extravaganza, it was ready to be quilted. It will feel nice if I can get this one done before this year's spooky season, so I took this one out first. 


I had some bright orange thread in my stash and decided to take the simple route and just do diagonal lines through each of the blocks. I debated whether to skip going through the x blocks or not and I am glad I chose to do it because it makes an interesting secondary geometrical pattern where the print blocks and x blocks are framed in the crosshatch.

Friday, August 16, 2024

sassy tote for rehearsals

I have been going to a lot of rehearsals. In one symphony in particular I tend to want to take a bunch of things like my heavier instrument stand, a seat cushion (such hard chairs!!), and a stand light. It would be an easy solution to just grab a tote bag out of the stack I use for groceries, but why skip an opportunity to do something handmade? 


The pattern is called Tourist Tote and I discovered it from a YouTube video. It's a long one, but she nicely steps through the entire thing which is useful for a visual learner like me. I have been saving this hip and sassy girl fabric for a rainy day, so to speak, and while the scale vs bag size made it necessary to deliberately cut pieces to feature faces instead of feet, a larger project like this is a good use of a big print like this. I've also used it to back a quilt. 


This musical notation print was among a stack I brought home from my mom's stash this summer and isn't this the perfect use for it. I forget where I got the bright pink corduroy but my goodness it pops. All of the pieces are interfaced except the handle which I used quilt batting scraps instead. I wasn't sure the interfacing called for was thick enough for the type of bag I was envisioning, but it actually worked out just fine. I am glad I used a heavier fabric for the bottom, though. One could probably also do a quilted panel for any of these pieces and it would turn out similarly sturdy or better. 


Along the way I messed up a few measurements while cutting to make the girl fabric work so it is smaller by maybe an inch, no big deal. The musical notations as a lining is perfect - won't show dirt and topically appropriate for use. I initially was not sure about using the black and white on the outside for the handles given the lighter values in the main print, but with the electric pink corduroy as a complement that looks nice with both, I like the way it all works. If I were more adventurous, I could have added things like pockets, zippers, and other fasteners to hold things like a water bottle to organize the inside more. That didn't feel necessary or appealing to me. 


I do wish the handles were a little bit longer, so I may look for a way to extend them without deconstructing the whole thing. Maybe a piece of leather at the top, we'll see what I can find. It's an ideal size for my musical paraphernalia as well as a water bottle and snacks. Sassy and fit to purpose!     

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

motivation

Moving a couple of languishing quilt tops to the finished quilt column this year has felt pretty good. I still have more, and my new goal is to get all of them finished. I think it will feel like a clean slate and a great mental block removed! One of the quilting steps I like least is to make quilt sandwiches, so I decided to just have an irritating afternoon of smoothing, pinning, and obsessing over wrinkles so I could get the rest of the tops in the closet ready for quilting. 


I had purchased the backing to this gorgeous quilt as a 108, so thankfully there was no piecing required for this queen sized quilt. But no joke, it was a bear to put together. I ended up taping the batting to my (freshly cleaned) floor and then spreading the top out to line up those two layers, then transferring it to a cleared off (and also freshly cleaned) kitchen island to get it on the backing and pin it.


I am not totally confident it won't have some play in the back when all is said and done, but the only other solution I had was taping it all on the floor, pinning it there, and ruining my back and knees in the process. No thank you! This will do. 


Similar treatment was given to this smaller, though still quite large, solids quilt. I felt I finally got into a groove at this point, and stacking them on the couch looking so ready to go was really a thrill. 


At this point, given how large these two projects are, I ran into the bottom of my pin jar. Never have I ever! I remedied this by going out to get more, and I can't decide if I am embarrassed by having so many things on the go at once or pretty pleased with it. Regardless, I have TWO pin jars now. 

The next quilts I sandwiched were much smaller, just lap sized, and very quick to pin together. A piece of cake in fact! The pile grew in no time. I decided on the island because it was the largest spot I had for the big quilts, but I will definitely keep this in mind for any size. The counter height was so convenient, and really for a lap sized quilt or a wall hanging the surface is basically perfect. The backings hung off some and required some fiddling to get tight, but no worse than doing it on the card table upstairs. 




Looking at the pile of quilts ready to go is really quite something, and it was such a good idea to get multiple projects past this stage and into the "how do I quilt it" purgatory. Feeling motivated.