Showing posts with label quilt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quilt. Show all posts

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Books - Quarter 2

Is this already the end of the second quarter of 2013?  The year is half over already???  I feel like I better start doing some fun stuff to make the year last longer.  Anyway, I don't know what I have been doing, but reading has not been one of them!  I only got through one book in 3 months.

2. This book was one that was on my To-Read list for awhile.  It was a good book, but not what I had in mind.  It reads part fiction and part non-fiction.  Let me explain: It takes place in the era of when the World's Fair comes to Chicago back in 1893.  It is a work of non-fiction with dramatization, not unlike "based on true story" books and TV shows.  This is true crime that occurred during the World's Fair.  The boring parts for me, but interesting because it is how history was made, were the sections regarding how the Fair came about and who was in charge of what and the difficulties that the organizers and architects faced in order to meet the Fair's Opening Day in time.  Interesting because the Fair was when the Ferris Wheel was born and other inventions such as mass electricity, fireworks and Shredded Wheat debuted.  You learned that Frank Llyod Wright was an architect that was fired from a firm that did not win the bid for Fair and other interesting tidbits of historical information.  The interesting parts were the demonic ways of a silent serial killer on the loose during this time.  He used the lure and excitement of the Fair to gain property, loans, false identities and especially women.  He would lure women with his charm, and dupe them into signing over any property they had with dreams of marriage and extravagant trips.  Once he got what he wanted he would murder them in gas chambers that he built and in other horrific ways.  He went undetected as a serial killer and only was caught when he tried to cash in a life insurance policy on someone that he killed or so it would seem they died "accidentally"; he was caught for insurance fraud .  That was when they explored his personal belongings and uncovered another world in which he lived in.  The Fair and the serial killer story lines occurred in parallel, so reading this book tended to go slow during the historical parts.  It was a good book, well written based on hundreds of letters, other types of correspondence, photographs, trips to the Chicago archives and countless other sources of information.  One must be a great writer, to piece all of these events gathers from various sources to make a book that coherently tells this story of a great World's Fair.

I am getting burnt out on my knitting and crocheting projects, so I think I am taking a break from them for awhile.  I will do some sewing projects and some reading this summer.  I do love yarn and want to buy pattern books of beautiful pieces to create and soft yarn to touch, but I must resist!  I have a ton of yarn and a ton of books; I do not need to buy anymore.  I can finish my Scrappy Quilt that I have pushed the pause button on.  That should tide me over for a bit.

Is anyone else in a crafting slump?  Knitters block?  Eye twitching from too much reading?  Let me know...

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Scrappy Quilt - Part 2

Happy Easter!

Since my quilt blocks have been done for weeks now, it is time to pick a layout and sew them together.  I first blogged about my Scrappy Quilt here:
Next step you choose a layout.  Since I chose the lap size, I only have three (3) layouts to choose from.  I mean, you can do whatever you want, but to have some pattern, there are 3 ideal layouts for this size quilt.  I will lay them all out for you and then I will tell you which one I am doing.

A neat trick I learned in quilting class, is when you have your blocks laid out and you are trying to figure out which one you like best, you look at it through a peephole.  Yup, a door peephole.  A peephole for a door can be bought at any hardware store for about $5.00.  If you work with colors and palettes, I highly recommend a peephole.  It makes everything look like a kaleidoscope.  Wait and see....


Ok, I'm getting ahead of myself.  The next actual step is to press your blocks on the wrong side to get all of the seams laying flat and pointing outwards.


That is the back of one block.  See how one seam is all crazy on the right?  You will press that down so it is neat as a pin back there.

Next you "square-up".  Squaring up is a crappy job.  Nobody likes doing it.  It is easiest if you have a clear plexi quilting square in the size of your block so you can just zip around it with the rotary cutter.  Alas, I do not have said plexi square.  When I measured my blocks, the numbers were all over the place.  I had real job in store for me.

Not sure how or why the blocks were as much as an inch off one another.  No clue how that happens, unless I cut the strips wrong, and I would have noticed a half inch difference when I was making the blocks.  Whatever, no need harping on what I can't figure out...


So, because of the measurement differences, I now had to pick a size and cut them all to that size.  In the end, no one will notice that the outer strips are a 1/4" thinner than the next one.  I cut them all to 13-1/4".  They should have been about 14".

Now for the fun part...the layouts!  You will now see why I separated the Lights from the Darks.

Layout #1: Fields and Furrows


Kind of chaotic.  Now look at it through the peephole:


Can you see the Light and Dark diagonal stripes?  Cool, huh? 

Layout#2: Timberline



That one makes one Light diagonal line with the other Lights pointing to the center stripe.

Layout# 3: All Sevens



I am noticing on this one that one block is not facing the right direction.  All Dark corners should be pointing down and to the left.  The bottom middle is pointing up and to the right.  Darn!  You get the idea!

All my log cabin quilts have been done in the Fields and Furrows layout.  Can you guess which one I am choosing to do??

If you chose Fields and Furrows, then you would be WRONG!  I'm breaking my rut and choosing Timberline.  Below is all of the blocks sewn together in the correct order.


The book explains how you ensure that your blocks are in the correct orientation when you go to sew them.  I won't explain it here.  All I have to say is pay attention when you do this.  I did make one mistake and had to take the seam ripper to it.  Also, be careful when you rip out these seams, you can poke a hole in the fabric.  Ha, trust me.

Next will be making the borders.  I will save that for some time later in April.  Thanks for stopping by!

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Scrappy Quilt - Part 1

Here is the start of the scrappy quilt.  I bragged about my previous quilts in a recent post: Quilts - Brag Pics.  I got a couple of comments and a bunch of people viewed it.  It was great!  Now this quilt I'm making now takes a little bit from each one of the quilts, sort of like a memory quilt.

I am making another log cabin (they are easy and I don't need to learn anything new) and I follow the fabric needs and instructions in the Quilt in a Day book series.


This really is a great book, as you can tell in my previous Quilt post, I made several and had this book by my side each time.  This time I am choosing to make a Lap quilt size, which should be about 54" x 68".  I will need a total of 12 blocks.


Above is my collection of fabric.  Some are already cut into strips and some are still fabric that are whole pieces.  I tried to separate into light and dark.  The reason why I do this is so that you will see a distinction in the pattern when I put it all together.

I cut a bunch of strips, about 2 or three strips per fabric.


Those above are my "Darks."


Those above are my "Lights."

I chose the same fabric to be my center square.  I thought choosing the same fabric would give the quilt a focal point or points of reference that would give order in a chaotic array of fabric.  Now, I like the thought of scrappy, but I have rules to my scrappy.  They are:

  1. Have to have separation from the Lights and the Darks; I could not let it be completely random
  2. No two strips of the same fabric could be in the same block
  3. No two strips of the same fabric can be next to each other once all together
I guess you could say this is an OCD Scrappy Quilt.

Here is the "Center."  It was one of the main colors in Alex's quilt. 


Once the center is cut into a square, you need another set of squares to be your first addition strip.  I chose two different fabircs, so they don't look that different yet.


Above is adding on the second strip.  You pretty much go around the square adding on either a Light or a Dark strip until your block measures about 14" x 14".


The beauty of strip quilting is that normally you make the blocks all the same so you sew them all at the same rate.  The challenge with this scrappy way is that I wanted each block to be unique, so I was dealing with having to constantly grab new strips rather than the same one.  Might not sound like a big deal, but it was a bit of a hassle.  A labor of love, that's all I can say.


Almost there...


Here is one finished block.  I have finished all 12 blocks.  You will have to stay tuned to see how it progresses.  I will leave you with that one block to fantasize how scrappy the other 11 blocks are.

Toodles!

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Quilts - Brag Pics

Since I sew, I also make quilts.  I am in the process of making another quilt, this one for myself, and I thought that I would intro it with the quilts that I have made in the past.  I made my first quilt in a quilting class in Mass with my friend, Kjestine.  It was about the year 2004-ish, I think.

My first quilt I made a wallhanging size.  Now I have never hung it on the wall, but use it as a throw.  I still use it to this day.  The style is a logcabin.

My First Quilt - 2004

My First Quilt - 2004

My second quilt I made as a gift and it was a baby quilt size, which was quite large actually.  The baby's bedroom had a jungle theme.

Joni - 2005

Joni - 2005

Next, later in 2005, I made another baby quilt for my cousin Stephanie's baby, Aiden.  This was made with fleece and did a blanket stitch around the edges.

Aiden - 2005

I was a quilting fool in 2005, I made a third quilt for my friend Erin's baby, Janelle.

Janelle - 2005

Janelle - 2005

I took a small break and made a quilt in 2007 for myself.  I made it bedspread size.  This one was a spin off the courthouse steps style.  I used flannel as my backing (back fabric).  So snuggley.

Mine - 2007

Mine - 2007

Next, in 2009, I made a baby quilt for my friend Nicole's baby, Allison.

Allison - 2009

Allison - 2009

In 2009, I made two quilts, one for each of Vince's daughters for Christmas.  These were full size quilts and I backed them with flannel, like I did for mine in 2007.

Youngest daughter Gen, I made a daisy chain style.

Gen - 2009

Gen - 2009

Gen - 2009

For his oldest daughter Alex, I made a spin of courthouse steps style.

Alex - 2009

Alex - 2009

Alex - 2009

In 2010, two more friends had babies.  Crissta was first, with Ines.  Her sex was unknown, so I had to make it neutral.

Ines - 2010

Ines - 2010

Next was Sheri, who had Keira.

Keira - 2010

Keira - 2010

I have made another one for my friend Crystal's son, Zander, but I could not find any pics of it.   Hey Crystal, if you can, take a pic of the quilt for me!

Update!

I now have pics of Zander's quilt.  His had a bug theme (and little mice thrown in :-) ):

Zander - 2008

Zander - 2008

I have saved all the scraps from these quilts and that is what I will use to make my next quilt.  I will share this with you over the next couple of weeks. 

Let me know which one(s) are your favorites!  I truly love each of these and I got great enjoyment giving them as gifts.  For the ones that I kept, I cherish and use them all the time.  Take time to learn how to quilt, it is a timeless tradition that makes family heirlooms.