Thursday 30 December 2021

Scrappy Brightness

There were still a lot of Kaffe Fasset scraps in my bins everywhere so last summer I got them sorted into a couple of baskets and came across a photo of this quilt on the internet.  I had lots of 1 1/2" strips leftover from another project so I pieced them together and cut into 1 1/2" segments and sewed them as leaders/enders into rows.  At the end of the rows (left side), 2 1/2" squares are added and every second row more are added until 10 rows are complete and you start adding 4 1/2" squares.  It was a great way to use up lots of scraps, but I still have lots left!  I can easily start another quilt ☺! This turned out to be a riot of colour and really makes me happy!  It was beautifully quilted by my friend, Chris Bogart.

(Click on the photos for a larger view.)

The finished quilt

The 1" finished block corner

Label

Wednesday 15 December 2021

Two more Dear Jane blocks

I finished two more blocks in the last month or so.  Happy to make a bit of progress again.  I am now finished 82 blocks. Both of these blocks were paper pieced.

C 2 Streak of Lightning

C 4 Tic Tac Toe

 

Monday 25 October 2021

Dear Jane progress

 The London Friendship Quilt Guild started up a Dear Jane support club last week and I got a chance to work on some Dear Jane blocks again.  The first one was done awhile ago, but I finished the other 5 blocks since last Wednesday!  Prepping blocks ahead of time is the key.  I need to take some time to prepare some more blocks again.  We'll see if the momentum remains :-).

 

B 6 Wild Goose Chase

B 9 Tinker Toy

B 10 Jud's Trophy

B 11 Melissa's Cross

B 12 Starflower

C 11 Soldiers and Sailors Monument

 I'm working on filling in the missing blocks in order or rows now.  I almost have rows A & B complete.  I now have 73 blocks completed of the 169.

 

 

Placemats

Our local small guild committed to making two placemats a month for our local VON for meals on wheels recipients for Christmas.  I used up some cut offs from a quilt which I made for my niece in 2013.  There were a lot of cut offs so I made flying geese units and pinwheel blocks with them as leaders/enders for quite awhile.  I then assembled them into placemats using up leftover strips from the quilt as well as some solid green.  The backings were done with some fall fabrics.  I was happy to get those leftovers used for something useful.

 






 

Tuesday 19 October 2021

An International Joint Project

 Ten years ago, I met my friend Els, from the Netherlands, in person after being internet friends via the Dear Jane quilt project for several years.  Our friendship has blossomed and we have been to visit one another quite a few times.  Els does beautiful applique and posted a picture of the quilt below on face book a couple years ago.  My daughter commented and tagged me on the post that she would like a quilt for her bed like that.  Not in a million years would that get finished!!  But, Els didn't have anyone in mind for this top and gifted it to Amanda!  Wow, what a great gift that was.  The next problem, however, was to make it big enough for their king sized bed.

The original quilt top was the size of a lap quilt or wallhanging.


Amanda and I went shopping and she found this lovely print at Hyggeligt in St. Mary's to use as border fabric and a focus for the colours to finish the quilt.

I removed the pink border and we started playing with ideas on how to enlarge the quilt.
Many ideas and diamonds later, this is the basic layout that emerged.  You will notice that there is no applique happening in those triangles between the pieced ones ☺!




Some closeups of the lovely quilting by Julie Cassidy

The backing shows the quilting quite nicely too
The finished quilt finally.
On the bed!  I used a wool batting for the quilt so it's nice and fluffy and warm in winter and cool in summer.

Thursday 14 October 2021

Wool Applique project

 On January 18, 2014, I joined a workshop given by the London Friendship Quilt Guild taught by Jill Buckley on wool applique and embroidery embellishment.  This was a really fun workshop.  I finished the top and all the embroidery and beading a long time ago, but every time I dug it out of my ufo bin of items to be quilted, I froze and couldn't decide how to quilt it.  A couple of weeks ago I had it in my hands again and made myself put the needle down and step on the pedal of my sewing machine and get it done!  It only took a few hours!   It really is true that you just need to start sewing and something will happen ☺!  So happy that it is finished finally.  I hope to hang it in my sewing room. 

(click on the photo to enlarge for a better view)

I quilted it on my Bernina 830 vintage machine

I found a few filler ideas in various machine quilting books.

The batik insert looked a little puffy when the dense quilting was finished in the black area so I hand quilted along some of the lines and added beads to the darker areas.


The finished wall hanging

The whole class with our projects (photo courtesy of Gail McHardy-Leitch).

 

Testing a handcrank machine

 I spent some time this summer testing out a lot of machines in the garage.  Here is a beauty of a Singer 28 machine which stitched like a dream.  I sewed up a comfort quilt block on it. 


the decals were in perfect shape

folded corner block

 

Sunday 3 October 2021

Curved Flying Geese Workshop

Another UFO finished!

This is how far I got at the workshop.  There were two more flying geese rows to attach.

 In November of 2014, I took a workshop at the London Friendship Quilt Guild taught by Susan Clark.  We were instructed to take some leftover quilt blocks along, some background fabric and scraps. The quilt blocks were leftover from this row quilt from 2011.   I took along some hand dyed fabrics that I bought at a quilt shop on Salt Spring Island while visiting my sister and some KF scraps.  This was a really fun workshop with a unique method of inserting these strips.  Of course, I didn't get to finishing it right away and then it became a daunting task.  During the pandemic, I joined the London Friendship Quilt Guild UFO group and got it finished.  Then I got to blogging it and never finished the blog post!  Summer hit and we were outside!  I just found this half started post in my drafts.  Better late than never ☺!

The finished wallhanging

I found a lovely Kaffe print in my stash for the backing

a great memory of my visit to Salt Spring Island and a lovely quilt workshop


 

Saturday 2 October 2021

Summer in the Garage

 I've been very negligent on my blog!  We have been working in the garage fixing up many sewing machines this summer.  The pandemic has given people time to rediscover sewing and many people have hauled sewing machines out of closets that have been sitting there for years so they could make their own face masks, etc.  We are now in the process of cleaning things up so that we can get both cars in the garage after Thanksgiving!

I did work on some UFO's and have finally had a little time to start sorting out my sewing room.  I'm hoping to blog about some finished items in the next few weeks.

This Kenmore sewing machine weighs a ton, but it purred once it was serviced.  A wonderful vintage machine that sewed through multiple layers of fabric and battings!  I enjoyed testing this one, but it is definitely not a portable ☺!

Here is the table where I test machines during the summer.  We had a great summer, but now it's time to clean it all up again.  Sewing machine repair and testing will now be moved to my sewing room again.

 

Tuesday 6 July 2021

Comfort quilts

 The Hearts and Hands Quilt guild that I belong to had a get together in the park this week and we brought along all the quilts we've been working on for the past months to give to our local hospital's chemo unit.  Each person coming for treatment gets to choose a quilt to keep them warm and bring them love during this difficult time in their lives.  Fifty quilts were brought in this time.  We had a wonderful show and share seeing all the quilts.  

I had two quilts that were finished over the last while.  We had received a donation of a bundle of Fat quarters and I used them to make these two quilts.  Click on the photo for a larger view.

Half square triangles are arranged to form diamonds. 

Chris Bogart quilted it for me with this lovely butterfly pantograph which really suited the fabrics


This quilt was made from strips from the same fabric bundle.  The pattern is called One Way from the Purple Pineapple Studio.  The pattern is on a postcard and the price was very reasonable.

I decided to quilt this one myself and tried out a funky swirly flower which worked well using a light blue thread.

quilting closeup

 

Thursday 27 May 2021

40th Anniversary challenge for the LFQG

 This year was the 40th anniversary of the London Friendship Quilt Guild and of course, due to covid, none of the usual celebrations could take place.  However, this does not stop a bunch of quilters from having fun! 😁

The guild put out a round robin challenge, but we would be making our own quilts.  The first task was to make a center block and put 40 on there somewhere.  I dug through my stash and found a couple of charm packs of Mama Sews fabrics as well as the leftovers of a scrap bag I bought and some miscellaneous yardage from the same line.  It had a sewing theme which was appropriate for a guild challenge.  I also found solid red and black and grey in the stash that could be used.

Each month, we met on zoom, showed our progress and drew the next border instruction.   The borders were:  houses, flowers, diamonds, four patches, paper piecing and rail fence.  There were some real challenges along the way, but I combined the diamond with the flower border (making the corner stones diamonds) and used the paper piecing for corner stones on the four patch blocks.  My original idea was to use the rail fence block to make a picket fence, but it just would not work colour wise.  You just have to listen to what these quilts tell you!

I did some extensive quilting on it and had fun with it.  And, we really got to know some of the members of the LFQG.  At the regular meetings, the group is so large and we tend to sit in the same spots and there are a lot of faces, but zoom has really helped us to connect with other members during this challenging time.  Quilters know how to take lemons and make lemonade.  My thanks to the program committee and board of the LFQG for all the wonderful ways we were able to stay connected this year.  Here's to the next 40 years for the guild. (Click on the photos to enlarge the picture.)

The finished quilt

The center block is from an embroidery pattern by Shelly Burge for Country Cabin Craft Patterns.  I added beads spelling forty on the sewing machine.

The diamonds quilted in the corners continued the diamond theme in the next row

These fun watering can blocks are from a wonderful book "The Paper-Pieced Home" by Penny Layman.  I resized the block to fit my borders.

Swirly quilting in the border

The back was pieced with bits and pieces of leftover charm squares, yardage and leftovers from my grandson's quilt backing.

The quilting from the back