I sewed the little yellow inset circles onto the top and the bottom of the Triple Cogs quilt.
The circles represent a birthday - 4/2 + 24.
Scenes from the Road of Life
I sewed the little yellow inset circles onto the top and the bottom of the Triple Cogs quilt.
The circles represent a birthday - 4/2 + 24.
I made the 12 little 4" inset yellow circles I need for the Mickey Mouse baby quilt today.
They still need to be trimmed, sewn together and added to the center cogs wheel.
It's Tuesday, time for Cheryl Arkison's Quilters Playcation 2024.
Today's live feed was earlier and I missed it. But, when I tuned into Instagram at 1pm, the reel was up and I watched it then.
Cheryl made a 4-patch of 4-patches using small scraps. I made something slightly different, using my scraps.
This is week 19.
Starting in the morning and working into the Brave Patch Monday Sewcial, I sewed together all of the arcs to complete the three ring Cogs wheel. I added some borders to make it a bit larger. It's 33" by 33" now.
I've been thinking about what to add. Stars were at the top of my list for a while. Then while showering I came up with the idea of representing his birthday with circles. It's going to be so cool. It will read correctly whether it's upside down or right side up.
It's coming up on my birthday when Mom would make me a Rhubarb pie. And, there was Rhubarb at our local grocery store. So, I bought some and made myself and my Mom a pie. Mine is GF, her's isn't.
Oh my, they smell so good!
The red fabrics I have don't exactly match the red I've already used. But, there was one Kona red that was close enough. I wish I had another red print. But, I made some arcs with the Kona Chinese Red.
I got the other two arcs of the 14" cogs made and started on the black 7" arcs for the little quilt I'm working on. I got all 4 of them made while visiting with the Brave Patch Friday group. These are not sewn together yet.
I enjoyed making the Cogs so much I decided to use the Mickey Mouse fabric I just purchased to make a little quilt made up of the Cogs. I'm challenging myself to make all three sizes. I started with the 14" arcs. And the red fabric I used needed to be fussy-cut to get the pattern all oriented the same way in each cog.
I got a good start:
I got out to the studio early, 7am, to attend a Jenny Haynes Cogs Workshop through the Sew Squad.
Jenny is so good about sharing all her tips and tricks. This workshop was about Freezer Paper Piecing.
I spent the last few days sewing the scraps from Peach Fuzz together to form a few slabs. The scraps were mostly curves which made it challenging, but fun. I was pleased that I used pretty much all of the scraps, with only a few small pieces left.
I used those slabs to make the backing for Peach Fuzz.
Darrell picked up Skyler and Scarlett for the weekend. We had lunch at a Mexican restaurant.
I've been working on piecing the blocks for the Peach Fizz quilt. The curves are coming together very nicely with a lot of pinning. I got all of the rows finished and sewn together this morning.
It's a top!
I always said I'd never make a T-shirt quilt, but that's what I'm doing right now. I cut up my Volunteer t-shirt from this year's Quiltcon. It was the color of this year's Color of the Year by Pantone, Peach Fizz. I added some more shades of peach, including a very dark rust-orange. I threw in a few blues. Then as I was putting the pieces up on the wall I decided it needed some white. I looked through my stash, hoping I'd have a white with peach or orange little dots or something - and of course, I didn't. So, I went with solid white. The pieces still need to be sewn into blocks and assembled.
Here's how it looks today:
I met up with the Seattle Urban Sketchers at the Seattle Chinese Garden next to South Seattle Community College.
We gathered at the entrance and introduced ourselves, then we all dispersed to sketch.
I choose a rock in the shade with a view of the entrance to the building, which turned out to be a mistake. It was cold and breezy. And the rock was cold and hard.
But, I really didn't notice any of that while I was busy sketching. But, as I drew near to finishing, I realized how cold I was. I quickly finished up and left before the throw-down, where we share our sketches, which was still more than an hour away.
Here is week 17's block of the Quilters Playcation 2024 with Cheryl Arkison. It was all about inserting strips. I started mine out with a piece I had sewn together of leftovers from a previous block.
She also talked about several methods to insert strips, I learned two new methods, both of which are very good.
I decided to do all of the straight line 1" spaced vertical lines on the Coordinates quilt. Once I get those done then I will roll it back and fill in the colored squares with their own color of thread and different designs.
So, I finally got all of the straight line quilting done on the background. Now begins the tying off and burying of all of those threads!
I joined Quiltfolk's BOM for 2024 - Break the Rules! This month they discussed a 4-Patch quilt that is featured on the cover and inside Roderick Kiracofe's book, Unconventional and Unexpectedd: American Quilts Below the Radar, 1950-2000.
I wanted to make a replica of that quilt. I looked through my stash and came up with these Essex Linens, a canvas print and a few others.
Here is the original:
I recently bought some fabric online. I was a bit disappointed when it arrived - it was darker than I had wanted. It was suggested by a friend that I try using Rit Color Remover to tone it down. That sounded like a great idea. Here's what happened.
The directions and reviews were adamant about doing this process outside because of the fumes. So I took my hot plate and big dyeing pot outside and got some hot water started. The water needed to be above 200*. It was suggested to bring it to boiling. I waited and waited and waited. I finally got out my food thermometer - it was 160*. It never got any hotter than that. After waiting for over an hour, I gave up and boiled the water in the house and then took it outside to the hot plate and stirred in the solution. That was going to be as good as it was going to get.
Experiment Fail:
It's Tuesday at 1pm! Time for Cheryl Arkison and her Quilter's Playcation 2024.
Here is this week's improv block.
I finally got that first section of the quilting on my Coordinates quilt done and was able to roll it forward to the next section.
Of course there was a bit of fussing to do to get the top lined up to continue the parallel quilting lines.
Finally, I got back to work on the quilting of my Coordinates quilt. It's been on the longarm for quite a while, languishing. I had a lot of other things on my mind, was preoccupied and a bit stressed out. So, it didn't get the attention it needed.
But, I'm back at it and making progress.
I'm making more blue Slabs and adding them to the wall. When should I start thinking about joining them together?
Not yet.
I got out the blue Slabs I made last Friday with Cheryl Arkison on Sew Squad. And, got busy making more.
I put them up on the wall as I made them.
Love it!
And then, since it's Tuesday at 1pm, it's time for Cheryl again! It's the Quilters Playcation 2024.
This week's block is about pointy things. This is week 15.
First thing up in the studio, I started cleaning up. I've finished working on the scrappy Checkerboards but the two scrap buckets were a mess. They were all mixed together.
During the Brave Patch Monday Sewcial I started sorting them back into their buckets. I didn't think I'd made a dent on them, but I was surprised that they fit much better now - not overflowing anymore. So, I guess it worked!
I also put all of the fabrics, mostly greys, away that I had used on the Sunrise quilt. So the studio is looking a lot better and the cutting table is cleared off.
After lots of missteps, backups and restarts, I finally got the Checkerboards 15-17 top done!
Yea! It's about 70" by 87".
While at the birthday party yesterday, I gave my cousin some baby quilts to donate to an organization she is familiar with.
I also gave one to another cousin to give to her brother's brand new grand-baby.
She sent me this picture today of the happy recipients with their quilt.
My cousin Clayton was born on my Mom's 21st birthday. He says they've never celebrated their birthdays together. This year was Clayton's 70th, so we figured it was time to remedy that.
A lot of the family got together at cousin Ron's in Lacey for a big birthday celebration. It was so nice seeing everyone. Ron and Marva have a beautiful home and everyone had a great time.
The April birthday kids. |
I signed up for Sew Squad so I could go to a SLAB Workshop with Cheryl Arkison. And it was so much fun.
I took out my Blue Scrap Bucket and got to work. First Cheryl had us sort our scraps. She started with color first, but I already had mine sorted by color. Then we sorted by size. I had a lot of narrow strips, so I sorted those into their own pile.
Then we started with sewing the little pieces into a bit bigger pieces. And we were off!
I'm making quicker progress now that the squares and blocks are a little bigger. I got the top half of the Checkerboard quilt top done - all except one seam to join the two big chunks together. And, with the bottom half half-way completed I'm more than half way done. But, then I'm probably going to take off some of the border I've done and re-do it. Two steps forward, one step back.
I've been working on this scrappy Checkerboard project for a while now. I've got the left side pretty much together. Almost every seam is a partial seam. There's a lot of head scratching and figuring and constructing more pieces to make every thing fit together.
It can be exhausting, but it's also very exciting.