Monday, September 16, 2013

Starting on Christmas and surviving the IMPLOSION...


Anyone else out there getting nervous about Christmas?  I have gotten started...here are three little 6-inch applique blocks from a Lori Smith pattern.


I just love these little scrappy applique projects...such a good way to use my tiniest scraps, and they are very portable when I am on the run, which I always seem to be.


The quilt cave has suffered a self-imposed IMPLOSION...too much stuff crammed into too little cave makes me a grumpy, frustrated, unproductive, creative cave troll.  Something had to be done!

We have not moved in almost 20 years, which means things have accumulated...gravity tends to fill the quilt cave...ugh!

EVERYTHING was taken apart, gone through, and moved.  It was my summer project that never happened...hard to launch a pattern business with an unworkable space.  It doesn't matter how organized you are, too much stuff is simply too much stuff!

It was time for that hard, hard question..."am I really going to use ALL of this?!?  It seemed like a good idea at the time..."  

Well, unused books, patterns, fabrics, containers from tiny to huge, crafty ingredients, seasonal decor, household items, etc. have been culled.  Boxes, bags, and bins have been filled with precious booty and temporarily placed in the garage.  Ads have been placed and a quilter's garage sale has been planned with two other, equally crazy, overly-ambitious quilters/crafters in my area. 

If you are local to me and interested in coming, shoot me a comment or email to that effect and I will fill you in.

I will take pictures of the new and improved cave for the next post. It is not elegant, but it is organized, leaner and meaner, and almost ready for activity.  Yahoo!

Take the time to do the things that are important to YOU!  

In stitches,
Teresa  :o)

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

The "CONTENTMENT" Quilt - Block 3, when I started quilting...


As I come up with blocks for my "Contentment" quilt, I just have to include one that depicts my quilting passion.  I hope to include one with a sewing machine as well, at some point.


I had this great cheater piece from some Christmas fabric line that looks like tiny red/green applique blocks, so I decided to make a frame/outer border and call it a quilt!


Drawing myself, sitting on a stool, was a little tricky, and I chose to draw myself at my fighting weight back in 1983...


Since there were roses in the little cheater quilt, I decided that the block needed a red rose and some buds.

The block will finish 10 inches.  If I had it to do over, I don't think I would have gone with the yellow dress, but using the cheater red/green fabric sort of painted me into a corner.  I think the purple fabric choice for the numbers of the date were a little rebellious!

I hope you got a chance to sew over the Labor Day holiday.  Now that September has arrived, holiday panic is beginning to creep into the back of my mind...

In Stitches,
Teresa  :o)

Friday, August 30, 2013

The "CONTENTMENT" Quilt - Block 2, here comes the stork!!


Here is another "Contentment" block - this one noting the birth of our daughter.  "Contentment" is a story quilt I am designing for our 20th wedding anniversary this October.



I love the idea of the stork delivering the baby...a very traditional idea.  As I recall, this was a very appealing idea to me about the sixth hour of labor, LOL..."here, storkie, storkie, storkie...I have some hospital saltines for you..."

I had a long, single strand of orphan gold thread that I used to chain-stitch the delivery cap...it makes him look a little more official, doesn't it...maybe I should go back and give him a little bow tie, his skinny little neck looks so naked.


I studied a lot of pictures of storks and then tried my hand at sketching one.  Remember the stork that delivered Dumbo to his sweet momma elephant?  Leave it to Mr. Disney to gloss over the ordeal of birth...how many of us thought that OUR babies would be magically delivered by stork one day when we grew up?


I liked doing the feet and the knobby knees...


I'm still trying to decide how I feel about the lettering.  I like the presentation of information, after all, this is a story quilt.  But all that data does makes the block seem crowded...maybe I need to make the blocks 12 inches instead of 10 inches?  What do you think?


All the leaves and petals are great ways to use up the tiniest scraps...and eliminates fabric decisions...they all work!


I hope you get lots of stitching done over the long, holiday weekend.  I am glad I got the stork done before Labor Day, since "they" say we are not supposed to wear white AFTER Labor Day, LOL.

In stitches,
Teresa  :o)

Thursday, August 29, 2013

"Baltimore Rhapsody" Block #20 - the banjo


The next block in the "Baltimore Rhapsody" quilt project is the banjo, and is also the first folk instrument in my original applique music block series.


This instrument originates from the African banjar, and was brought over to the United States by early slaves. 

Crude instruments were built here in this country by tightly stretching a coon skin over a hollowed out gourd.  A handle was attached, along with 4 strings.  Soon it became known as the banjo and was a source of plantation songs and dances.


Soon they were made from wooden or metal hoops and had 5 strings.  This hound dog is patiently waiting for his master to come back and play for him!


Melodies can be played on the banjo, but more commonly chords are played rhythmically as accompaniment.  Very fine players can play the rhythmic arpeggios while featuring the melody note prominently "on top" at the same time (a technique also used by guitarists).


Around 1830 the banjo could be found around the campfires of the westward movement in this country.  Everyone knows Stephen Foster's song "Oh, Susanna!" about "coming from Alabama with a banjo on my knee."


The rhythmic syncopated melodies played on the banjo led to the early jazz style called ragtime, and until 1930 banjos were a basic member of the rhythm section of dance bands.  It was then replaced by the smoother sounding guitar.


The banjo is popular once again thanks to musicians like Bella Fleck, Pete Seeger, and the comedian/actor/musician Steve Martin.
  
It also lends its characteristic sound to bluegrass and American Folk Music.


Some musical snobs define "perfect pitch" as throwing a banjo into a dumpster without hitting the sides.  It is their loss.

In stitches,
Teresa  :o)

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Spa treatment for finished blocks...


The first two blocks of my new "Contentment" project are all hand appliqued and ready for my "glue removal spa treatment..."


I use two different glues while doing my hand applique...both temporary, although they are both archival glues and could be left safely in the fabric.  I start out with cool water, and add more and more warm water as I am assured of my fabric's color fastness (I'm a fabric washer, so I am pretty sure of nothing running at this point...).  Warm water seems to dissolve the glues faster for some reason.


I use Elmer's Disappearing Purple Glue Sticks (the smaller size) to glue my raw edges to the back, or wrong side of the fabric.  I've seen pre-schoolers sucking on those madly, like a purple Popsicle...those suckers are SAFE (no pun intended).

And because hand sewing around straight pins make me super cranky, I use Roxanne's Glue Baste in teeny-tiny dots to hold things together while I concentrate on invisible stitches.

(You can faintly see my "dot-dot-not-a-lot" dots on the wrong side of the pant legs below.  Even when I use the tiniest dot possible, they spread out when the 2 fabric layers are mashed together.)  

I soak, gently squeeze, replace water, and repeat until I can no longer see the little dots.  The glue stick comes out in minutes.  The Roxanne's takes a little longer...a lot longer depending on how much glue baste you use.  

I left these two blocks about 4 hours...I walk by and squeeze-release a few times while they are swimming around to help the process along.


WITHOUT WRINGING, I GENTLY ball up the blocks together and squeeze out the excess water.  I was super gentle this time, as I had already cut away a little bit of the backing behind larger motifs to remove excess dark fabric that was peeking through.  (I usually sew some layered motifs together before placing on the background, but this time I glue basted everything together so I could stitch on them away from home.


I gently pat each block out, right side down, on a clean towel over my pressing surface.


I fold the towel over the block, then gently roll up the towel.


Then I gently squeeze along my roll, NEVER wringing.




I pat out the block again on my towel, face down, and pat to smooth it out, NEVER pulling or tugging.


 (pat-pat-pat...)


I press (lifting to move the iron) with my hot, dry iron to mostly dry the block and remover wrinkles.



These blocks will finish 10 inches when I trim them down, which I will wait to do, just in case I change my mind about the setting, etc  

This one commemorates the day we met...


Hey, check out LuAnn at Loose Threads...she is using the glue sticks to make her hexies...so cool and so clever!!

In stitches,
Teresa  :o)

Monday, August 19, 2013

AQS Grand Rapids and it's time to come clean, everyone...

Me and "Folk Art in the Vineyard"

I had WAY too much fun in Grand Rapids at the AQS show last Friday.  My black "Folk Art in the Vineyard" wall hanging just seemed to melt into the black draped display, making it look a little mysterious.  My quilt was hung not too far from Lori Smith's booth (From My Heart To Your Hands)...she just had to lean over a little to see it.  The center blocks from my quilt were made from her pattern, "Folk Art Applique."

Jo, Judy and me

It was fun to go with Judy and meet up with other quilting friends for lunch, dinner, and show-and-tell of our purchases.


I had the opportunity to meet Sharon (currently no blog), a cyber quilting friend, in person and take pictures in front of our quilts! We have so much in common (born in the south, re-planted in the Midwest, love hand applique...).  She brought me this beautiful little bag of goodies that she had made (I was so overwhelmed!).


I am still discovering little details like the homemade attached rose and the little eyeglasses zipper pull...too cute!


And look at all the fun stuff inside!  (including a matching little tissue holder...)


Jill, of Berry Wood Lane, and I were hoping to meet at the show, but we ended up going on different days...this is her beautiful "Sunshine Sherbet," made with cheerful, sunny 30's fabrics, (picture posted with her permission).


I did my part for the economy, but found that I didn't need to report my credit card as "stolen," LOL.  I was a GOOD girl!  I did get a couple of patterns from Lori's booth...I love EVERYTHING she does.


I also stopped by the Primitive Gatherings booth...danger, danger!! I bought a wool applique kit to make as a Christmas gift.  Can you believe that I have never worked with wool?!?  I don't own any, so I had to buy a kit.  Their sample was just irresistible...I guess that is why they make them...


Look at all the beautiful colors of wool!  It will be fun not to worry about turning the edges under for a change...


Of course, my kwazy kat had to "staple" all the pattern and kit bags that I brought home (he was a stapler in a previous life).


I also got a cone of Aurefil thread for piecing and these cute little "minders" for balls of pearl cotton embroidery thread.  Don't they look just like the little goodie containers holding prizes that came out of those machines you put 25 cents into (next to the bubble gum machine, in the arcade)?  I bought them because they are practical and because I was feeling a little nostalgic.


And look what I found for a certain someone recovering from a knee procedure...I think I really shocked my show companion when I stopped at THIS booth (this is all they were selling in that particular booth, and they were making a KILLING!).


Yes, I am afraid it IS what you think it is..."bow-chicka-bow-bow..."


OK...now time to pose a question...
What is the funniest/weirdest way you have sneaked quilt show or quilt shop purchases into your house/stash?  I've heard stories of disguises and secret compartments, spare tire storage areas of car trunks filled with bags of fabric (but no tire...).  Time to fess up (WE won't tell...).
In stitches,
Teresa   :o)