Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Modern Christmas

I was asked to quilt a few quilts for the "Quilts for Sale" booth at the Tri-County Quilt Guild's show coming up in March.
Judy thoughtfully gave me the tops, backs and batting in September so I would have plenty of time to get them done before February- she is impressively organized and I appreciate it. 
All the tops are donated so it is a wide array of styles and colors. Should be fun to try different things on them and hopefully they will raise some money for our guild.
 Here is the first one which I believe is a Maple Island pattern called Carnival because I think we sell this pattern in our shop too.
 Love the curvy lines, metallic gold in the fabrics and appliqued circles which extend out into the border in some places. The person who constructed this did a good job- the risk when sewing curves in quilts is that it won't lay flat once it is done. This one was perfect, nice and flat.
 Check out the texture the stipple created.
 The backside also had a metallic gold fabric on it which contributed to my decision to use metallic gold thread to quilt it with.
 I bought this thread at the quilt show a couple of weeks ago, it is actually an polyester embroidery thread but the guy said Sharon Schamber and many others used it a lot. So I figured it was good enough for me (ha-ha). I loved how it was high sheen and he promised me that because it was NOT constructed like other metallics (which wrap the metallic around a core of poly) and that it was stronger.
 He was right! This thread never broke once and I have quilted two quilts with it now. Didn't have to reduce my speed or anything! Woo-hoo. The only small change I made to my normal set up was to put a thread bag over it (seen in the pic above) because it had a tendency to wrap around its base as it was pulled off the cone. The bag solved the problem instantly.
I bought a couple other colors at the show to try (silver and coppery orange) now I wish I had bought more. 
More to come, in the Quilts for Sale category and several customer quilts that I am committed to finishing before the holidays so you can expect a lot of pictures coming up!

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Baby You're a Firework

Okay so this pattern is actually called Firecracker but I couldn't resist the Katy Perry quote because I hear my kids playing it on Just Dance so it is stuck in my head!
This pattern is by Julie Herman of Jaybird Quilts and I am a long time fan of her blog and I even saw her in person at Quilt Market this fall but couldn't think of anything cool to say to her so I didn't introduce myself. We are carrying a few of her patterns at the shop and they all use they Lazy Angle Ruler by Creative Grids(*love*).  
It was an easy to follow pattern and it uses fat eighths so you can really do it from your stash if you have a bunch of brights. I want to try it with a different color way next to see the different effects.
I quilted it with a simple meander but with some hidden things in the quilting like a sun,
 and some stars, hearts, a car, spirals, a triangle etc...
I played with some freehand "circle in a circles" in the stripy boarder (seen in above pic)-- some were more "ovals in ovals" but I am just gonna let that go. First time trying it and all that....
For the outer border I played with one of my arc templates that I bought at the quilt show. I noticed when working with the arc on the French Braid quilt that if I did arcs on opposing sides I would get these pointed ovals shapes alternating along the edge so I thought I would try that on here:
I learned with this quilt that I could buy 24 different fabrics that I really didn't like, put them together and get a quilt that I actually do like. Go figure! Even my husband and kids said they didn't were surprised at how cute it came out!
 It photographs well
and is kitty cat approved!



Monday, November 7, 2011

Nancy's French Braid

Nancy finished this quilt top months ago and it has been waiting in my queue patiently to be quilted. I was waiting patiently for it to speak to me about how it wanted to be quilted.


Somewhere in the flux and flurry of Quilt Market suddenly I heard it make up its mind and speak to me. (Perhaps it took a few months to learn English?? haha since it's a FRENCH Braid-- pathetic I know....)

Textures! It wanted lots of texture. So I treated each band of the french braid uniquely.  It is a lot of fun to try different things on quilts. A little free- motion, a little ruler work etc...
Here are a few more pics:



 The diamonds (above) have a spiraling feather in them and the set in triangles (below) at the top and bottom of each braid are done with curved cross hatching.
I hope Nancy loves it! It was a lot of fun to quilt!

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Busy week

I went to the "Schoolhouse" day that precedes Quilt Market for the first time this past Friday. Got to see lots of "Quilting Stars" and learned a bunch of cool things.  It is sort of a rapid fire mini demo day where you switch rooms every 15 -30 minutes learning a new subject each time.
Here are some shots I snagged there many are lectures given by bloggers I have read for years:
Sandi Henderson from the Portobello Pixie blog
Kelly McCants from the Oilcloth Addicts Blog
Major Star power here: Lila Tueller, Valori Wells, Tula Pink and Amy Butler! Wow!
My mom and I also took some business building seminars which were very informative and gave us a lot of ideas. Then ALL the Quilters Crossing gals got to go to preview night last night!  Here is Nancy stopping to give us a wave as she shops! 
We had a great time! I grabbed some bobbins for my longarm from Nolting and some new longarm rulers from The Gadget Girls which I can't wait to try!!
Hopefully I will be posting some quilting pictures soon! Back to work!

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Miss Melanie's Feathered Star

 Melanie always has beautiful quilts for me to quilt.  They always challenge me and I really enjoy them.
 As many of you know I have been intimidated about doing feathers on a quilt and have thus far not done them on a customer's quilt. Well this one definitely breaks the ice! 
It is nearly all feathers!
The back 
 The aren't as elegant as I hope to one day achieve in feathering technique but, I am pretty pleased and I hope she is too!
 Thank you Melanie for another pleasurable and beautiful challenge!
 Spiraling feathers that I learned from my friend Diane!

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Terrain Quilt Finish


 Okay I haven't liked a quilt this much in a long time....
This is made from one Terrain Layer cake (moda fabric) and a yard or so of Bella white pfd (also moda). I used the pattern from the moda bake shop website but I altered the border and used the leftover 2.5" pieces of the layer cake and made a piano key border on the top and bottom instead of just putting on a one piece fabric border as the pattern suggested.
I even used wool batting to treat myself!
The quilting on this quilt is a design from this book by Suzanne Earley. You make a few huge meandering line across the quilt in several places and then you go back and fill in the sides with curlies in sort of feather fashion.
 You can kind of see the spine in this lower picture and the curls coming off of it going up and down.
The technique was not as hard as I had feared.  At first I kind of hyper obsessed about each curl - was that one too curly? Was this one too oval? too long too short? Anyway...
After a row or two I realized it was really the overall effect that you notice with this design not the characteristics of each curl! Then I started to really enjoy the quilting and I will definitely do it again. Maybe I will get even braver and try it with feathers? It could happen.

 For now, the quilt will reside at Quilters Crossing for a while where we have some kits made up and it will serve as an example, then it will be all mine! <3

Friday, October 14, 2011

Gone with the Wind ( no pics this time)

I first read Gone with the Wind while I was on vacation in college. I was really into reading classics ( I was an English major) and as there are so many references to the iconic book in other things I had picked it up almost feeling dutiful. Happily I discovered it was a very enjoyable book with humor, history, and romance all in one!
Then I moved to the south a couple of years later. It is funny how much of the southern lifestyle the character Ashley Wilkes reminisces about is still seen here in there in the South of today-- sprawling ranches and  farms, long hot afternoons, porch swings and barbecues.
It felt like I was in a foreign country to me at first there was even a language barrier I called soda "pop" when I moved down here. Here everyone calls sodas "Cokes". All athletic shoes were called "Tennis shoes" versus "Sneakers" which is what I grew up calling them.  I also didn't understand some words spoken to me by my Southern born and raised mother-in-law-- the first time she spoke to me about a hurricane it took several minutes for me to understand because she pronounced the word and made it sound much more like "pelican" than I was accustomed to.
I was somewhat of an enigma to my very Southern mother in law I think. I wore almost no make up (when I wore it at all) and she once asked me if Cary, my husband,  minded that I didn't fix myself up?  I was much more casual in my attire than she found appropriate too - I wore jeans and tee shirts most of the time and my hair was worn long and often pulled back in a pony tail where hers was curled, hair sprayed and teased up as high as she could get it. She would have never thought of leaving the house without foundation, eye shadow, mascara, blush and lip stick on! She never NEVER left the house without her lipstick-- I on the contrary owned no lipstick.
And then there were little things that were different too--they gave me saltine crackers when I ordered a salad which confused me and when I ordered tea they asked if I wanted it sweet or unsweet?  You received gravy with your french fries at some eateries and they asked me if I wanted cream gravy or brown gravy-- I had never had anything but brown gravy so this was another mystery.
I distinctly remember walking into a gas station to pay for gas early one morning and feeling like a fish out of water....the 10 old pick up trucks lined up in front of the gas station should have given me a head's up. I walked in and was immediately surrounded by old farmers standing around drinking coffee together with their cowboy hats and overalls on. That first year in Texas was very educational needless to say.
Anyway back to Gone with the Wind....
My daughter and I just read The Help by Kathryn Strocket. I thought reading Gone with the Wind might give her the "before" picture so she might better understand the attitudes characterized in The Help regarding racism.  I am realizing in my rereading, that Ms. Mitchell's portrayal of the South is very positive, even fairytale-ish and I will have to offer her some more historically accurate reading choices though I am still glad she is reading it.
I am also enjoying the story once again. It has given me the opportunity to rehash some of my favorite memories of my grandmother, Barbara, in all of this as well. My grandmother told me when I was reading the book that she remembered when it came out and how everyone was simultaneously scandalized and intrigued by the book. When her family got the book first her father read it, then her mother and then her older sister Polly and then FINALLY she was allowed her turn with the book which, being a rather large book, seemed to take forever to her.
Later when I got married we had a family get together to celebrate, and we played a game.  Everyone had to anonymously write down two things they would take with them if they knew they were going to be trapped on a deserted island and then these choices would be read out loud and everyone would have to try to guess who had written those answers down. When someone read out "Rhett Butler and a bottle of wine" my grandfather got a knowing smile on his face and after several people guessed he said he knew without a doubt it was his lovely wife.  I remember my grandmother smiling innocently at this and the rest of the family laughing hugely.  For who could be sexier than Rhett Butler she said!