Treadle Quilts

This blog is intended as a bulletin board to show the quilts I've been making on my vintage and treadle sewing machines. My husband and I collect antique and vintage sewing machines and I use them to make all my quilts. Here are some of the results.

Wednesday, 23 March 2011

Progress on a few projects....

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I made some progress in the sewing room in the last two days. I had the blocks on the design wall for the selvage cubes and the One Block W...
7 comments:
Monday, 21 March 2011

Indian Orange Peel class - part 2

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On Saturday, we got together for our second class on the Indian Orange Peel taught by Heather Stewart . You can read other posts on this cl...
3 comments:
Tuesday, 15 March 2011

Shattered Angles class that wasn't :-(

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I was supposed to go to our guild's workshop on Friday, called Shattered Angles, taught by Susan Purney Mark. She spoke at our guild me...
6 comments:
Monday, 7 March 2011

More hexagons

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Just realized that I haven't posted anything on my blog for awhile! I've been playing around with some more hexagons this evening a...
3 comments:
Friday, 18 February 2011

Hexagon madness

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We've lived in our new house almost two years and I still hadn't found a picture to hang above our bed . My daughter in law, Jannyn...
3 comments:
Tuesday, 8 February 2011

I'm up to 97!

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I hosted a mini retreat at my place on Friday and Saturday and we accomplished a lot! Here are 12 of the arcs I started on Saturday and com...
5 comments:
Thursday, 27 January 2011

Block of the Month

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Our local small quilt guild is doing a block of the month for charity quilts. We choose a colour each month and everyone makes a block and ...
1 comment:
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Jacqui's Quilts
I have been quilting since 1989 and do most of my quilting on a 1951 Singer 15-88 treadle sewing machine. My husband and I collect antique and vintage sewing machines and enjoy finding, cleaning, restoring and sewing on them together. Well, my husband doesn't do much sewing :-). But, when we demonstrate machines at museums or other shows, we have a stack of patches ready. Someday, there will be enough four patches to make into a quilt!
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