Sunday, August 24, 2014

2014 AQS Grand Rapids Quilt Show - Part ONE...


The 2014 AQS Grand Rapids Quilt Show has come and gone! "Baltimore Rhapsody - Symphony" was hanging amidst some mighty beautiful quilts!

I LOVED this first quilt and got to meet its maker!  My picture of her quilt label was too blurry to post, but her name is Leslie Stevenson of Lakeland, FL (quilted by Anne Haussmann).  It is called "The Fabric of Our Lives," and she made it symbolizing people and events in her family, utilizing the design sources of masters such as Elly Sienkiewicz and others.


There are two bed quilt categories at this show, "Quilter's Choice" and "Made By Machine."  Leslie won first place in the "Quilter's Choice" group.


















There were two quilts entered in the show made from this pattern and I loved them both...




It was fun to see my quilt under the bright lights in the big city...





There were cute whisperings around this 50th anniversary quilt for in-laws..."it was made by a MAN!"...




Deborah inherited the quilt from her aunt, finished a few of the blocks, but had no more fabric for the borders...hence her dilemma.



This was one of my favorites...I loved all the hand workmanship, classic design, and colors!





 

This won second place in the "Quilter's Choice Bed Quilt" group.


(Dang, but that's a LOT of HST's...)


The wool applique was a nice touch...








The twelve blocks of this quilt can be interchanged anywhere in the quilt and still match up with the motifs in the border...



This quilt won third place in the "Quilter's Choice Bed Quilt" group...







This won honorable mention in the "Quilter's Choice Bed Quilt" group.







At the show, Judy Endres and I looked and looked for that pheasant...I finally found him when I looked at these pictures at home on the computer...he was hiding in plain sight, LOL...(thanks for taking me to the show, Judy!!)





This quilt incorporated the concept of whole cloth quilting with a vintage linen bedspread to create this beautiful, unique quilt.












This won third place in the "Made From Machine Bed Quilt" group...




This won second place in the "Made From Machine Bed Quilt" group...














This won first place in the "Wall Quilts Hand Quilted" group...the subject is her grandfather and she used excerpts of letters he wrote to her mother (his daughter) in the sky background...






I hope you are inspired to go stitch something beautiful today!  I will share three more posts from this fabulous show, so stay tuned!

In stitches,
Teresa   :o)

Friday, August 8, 2014

Exciting news...my original block was accepted!

I just got the news that my original block was accepted for, not this issue #9 (pictured above), but the #10 issue of "Quiltmaker's 100 Blocks" that will go on sale in November.  I am so excited!

I had not heard anything for so long that I figured I didn't get in.  But then I got the congratulatory email this week. 

I wish I could show you the block, but I will give you this tiny teaser hint of the fabrics I used: (I know, I know...a pretty sucky hint...)


OK, maybe I can show a little more:


I can't wait until you see what I did with the hearts!  There will be a blog tour and I will have a detailed tutorial on the blog to go with the published magazine pattern.  Yee haw!  

Happy stitching.
Teresa   :o)

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

More Little Blocks...


I have managed to finish 8 more little hand applique blocks from Lori Smith's pattern, "Miss Emilie's Garden."  They will finish about 6 inches square.


Spending a week along the St. Lawrence River in Ontario, Canada was good for me.  Staying in a rustic cabin, watching the river, and listening to all the birds and wildlife in that beautiful area near the Canadian Thousand Islands are highlights of our year, as Steve's family owns the 11-acre peninsula covered with old growth forest and a handful of rustic, non-insulated structures.  This was my 24th year in a row of going there every summer.


We had some annual upkeep and chores to perform, but rainy, unusually cool weather allowed for cozy fires in the fireplace and a little time to hand stitch and work a couple of fabulous new puzzles purchased just for the trip (my daughter and I are militant puzzlers...).


We spent the week with Steve's brother/wife/dog, so there were just the five of us...very low key.  They drive from Maine and we drive from Michigan.  I love being in Canada, and the Kingston/Gananoqua area is so beautiful and the people so very nice.  Mostly just like a cleaner, nicer United States.  I love passing all the wind turbines that have been installed in the southern Ontario farmland areas and around Kingston.  It takes us 40 minutes to be in Canada from our house, then we enjoy the good roads, beautiful views, and wonderful hospitality of our Canadian neighbors (we bypass Toronto on the 407...).


We have two more brief road trips before Riley starts her senior year on August 18.  Then, maybe I can exhale...it has been one crazy summer.


There are 25 total blocks in this wall hanging, which I think will measure 42" x 42" when finished.  I have 9 more blocks to do...maybe I will finish all the hand work on these next road trips.


I love these reproduction fabrics, but they are definitely a little duller than what I have been working with on "Baltimore Rhapsody" and our anniversary project.


I have picked some brighter repro fabrics for the sashing and borders/swag, so I think things will be more "zingy" overall once everything is assembled.  Someone emailed me about the duller tones, worried that my mood was affecting my color choices, but I actually picked these fabrics and prepped these blocks before my parents' fatal accident.  I am doing OK, by the way...


On a recent college swing through the state, I stopped by "The Door Mouse" in Kansas, OH and picked up some yardage of the above, older repro fabrics.  I may use two reds, but if I only use one I am leaning toward the one on the right with the smaller scale print.  I love this green for the swag!  


I was in and out of "The Door Mouse" in less than 20 minutes, which totally stunned my daughter...that's the shortest stay in a quilt shop for me EVER, so I guess I'm still not quite back to normal, LOL. She had just gotten comfortable in the classroom area of the shop with a novel when I prodded her toward the car...


This is the main swimming/bathing area at Grass Creek, with Riley and Steve "demonstrating."  The water seemed warmer than the air some days that we were there.  Those were days with very quick dips, only for cleanliness sake!


Those are long skinny islands across the water, with the wider branch of the St. Lawrence on the other side.  We only get local tour boats, sailboats, and pleasure boats on our branch...so nice to watch all the pretty and fancy boats!  All the commercial boats and barges are on the branch we can't see.  With the "protection" of a row boat (so boats can see us...), we swim across and back some days for exercise.  It's about a half mile one way...

That is the way to Kingston...



...and that is the way to Gananoqua, the gateway to the Thousand Islands.  The boat house just sits on the rocks by the shore...


Steve is relaxing on the Main House eating porch, drinking a cup of coffee and watching the river...


The dish washing area on the porch is kind of behind him (we boil river water to hand wash the dishes).  The indoor kitchen of the main house is right behind Steve's head.  We have a propane stove and refrigerator and all the pots, utensils, china, etc., so we can cook just about anything.


Freshly washed breakfast fruit, awaiting Red River Cereal...


Walking from The Robin's Egg cabin (where we stayed) over to the Main House in the morning.  There are three sleeping cabins (each with an outhouse), the Main House, the Boat House, and a free standing outhouse (yes, ladies...outhouses...not so bad...).  You can see the river peeking through the trees...


Lots of ferns, moss, weird mushrooms, wild flowers, wild life 
and rotting trees that have fallen over the years...



I've been walking by this rotting part of a tree for years, watching it's transition from huge limb to shapeless mulch on the forest floor...



This is Diaper Point...named that in 1928 when the family bought the property (Steve's Uncle and Dad were babies at that time...).




From the Main House porch, looking at the back side of the Boat House...


The Main House and porch...we now have a solar panel and enough power for limited lights at night and recharging our phones and devices...).


The living room, where a cozy little fire is getting started in the fireplace...



We haul in drinking/cooking water, but bring river water up in old aluminum buckets for everything else...


There are clothespins with the names of everyone who comes to Grass Creek, family and visitors alike.  The clothespins mark people's places at the table(s) and keep folded paper napkins from blowing away...


I had to retire my parents' clothespins this year...they visited 3 or 4 years ago, coming up from Alabama while we were there.  I brought them home...I think I will put them with the Christmas ornaments to clip to the tree.

At the end of our peninsula there is an inlet called Grass Creek that comes in and makes our land almost an island (except where we drive on).  There has recently been a HUGE mansion built across the inlet.  It is called "Mandalay."  It is quite impressive, as compared to our humble structures and outhouses.  The owners made their money from inventing those pine tree air fresheners that you hang in your car.  We have rowed over for a closer look...it would be fun to invite them for dinner some year...    :o)



My husband's cousin is a quilter, but we are never really there at the same time (Hi Peg!).  It would be fun to have a little hand sewing retreat there, although I am tempted to take my Featherweight next year...if there is room in the car!

I love being there, but I do admit that the first warm shower upon returning is AMAZING...

Happy stitching!

Teresa   :o)