Ort: Noun, meaning a scrap; a bit. Usually plural. Words about quilting, fabric, family and life in a Southern California beach town.
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Monday, November 18, 2013
Design Wall Monday
On my design wall today is a sample for the quilt I'm making for my grandson-to-be, who'll be here in just a few short months. My daughter Elaine and I shopped for the fabrics some weeks ago but until now I hadn't had a chance to work-up the size of the Flying Geese the design calls for. After looking up various ways to size and make flying geese, I decided to use the fast method that makes four geese at a time. Here's one source for that method http://www.patchpieces.com/files/flyinggeese.pdf
After spending some time Saturday night doing quilt MATH, I was ready Sunday morning to cut, sew and press my geese. These will finish at 3x6".
Cutting one large square for four geese saves time right there. The four smaller squares form the "sky" triangles without having to cut triangles and without having to trim excess triangles off the finished geese.
The directions also suggested drawing stitching lines but I thought marking the center line only was fine, since my 1/4" foot is accurate.
The final two squares are applied the same way as the first two, by stitching on either side of the drawn line on the sky pieces. I made sure I pressed well and had 1/4" at the top of the geese for a nice point when joining.
Four geese lickety split without leaving a pile of cut off triangles or having to trim down the unit to size. I wouldn't call this perfect but for a sample mainly to test the desired finished size of the geese blocks, worked just fine.
I did find that hitting this valley on either side of the drawn line was important, since it is the top intersection of the two sky pieces once the unit is sliced along the drawn line.
Looking pretty good on this block.
A second sewn set of geese helped me plan my ironing and practice matching points. The design we're using has three sets of four geese, and we have 9 different fabrics. This is going to be a million point project--with that many opportunities to cut them off :). The final layout will be Elaine's choice. The sample will be set aside until Elaine decides on a background fabric, on which she is leaning to a white on white dot. I see a lot of cutting in my future!
See more design walls on Judy's Patchwork Times. http://www.patchworktimes.com/2013/11/18/design-wall-november-18-2013/
Thursday, November 14, 2013
V's Antique Blocks
Some years ago my sister's roommate V, knowing I quilt, showed me a bunch of unfinished quilt tops that her Grandmother had made. After she passed away the family found them in a cardboard tube hamper labeled "Dirty Close". V's sister had rejected the tops as "too ugly". I was smitten by the complete wonkiness and make-do and selected 5 tops. Sadly, they are all still tops except for one. I loved the Goose in the Pond blocks but hated the sashing/setting fabric, so I took them apart.
They are all hand pieced and definitely not precise. This is the best one. It is *almost* square :)
Some have the bars turned the wrong way.
The stitching is fairly neat but it looks like kitchen twine was used, it is so thick.
There is no way this block will ever lie flat, but I like it anyway!
Definitely the craziest of the bunch. Look at all the "make do" in that one. There are eight Goose in the Pond blocks--and they are big, variably about 16-18" square (I use the word square lightly!)
In the original top--which unfortunately I don't have a photo of--this ninth block made a 3x3 layout. It was obvious at first glance that it didn't belong with the others.
Flipping it over proved the suspicion correct--this was machine pieced and of much better construction, though the fabrics are still pretty old. It might make a great looking pillow, though.
This was the original sashing fabric, along with some really stained and dirty blue chambray that I ended up throwing away. I'm wondering if the Goose in the Pond blocks belonged to the the generation before V's grandma and she made this one to expand the layout. My idea is to applique the blocks to a plain background. I saw an antique quilt at a show once that had blocks in the double pinks, blue and black that had an alternate plain block that was olive green. It was very eye-catching. I would probably have to tie the quilt rather than quilt it, as nothing will be flat. First these blocks will need to have a bath!
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Arty and Crafty
No sewing has been done since I completed the binding for the tardy baby--whose mother was induced on her 11th day post due date and son Jackson finally greeted his happy parents on November 8th! I hope to get a chance to meet him soon and deliver the quilt. Love that new baby scent :)
Meanwhile, for my future grandson, whose parents are working on his nursery, I've started a little embroidery.
The lighting is turning the brown linen and rusty orange from true colors, but you can see the lovely sheen the linen has. My stitching lines are hard to see but will become this:
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Halloween Report
Weird year for our street--started late, ended early, long gaps between groups. We were left with two unopened bags of candy. Very dangerous thing.
My sister said there were a couple of haunted houses a few streets over so that must have held the trick-or-treaters up. Erica was handing out handfuls of treats at the end. It was all over before 8:30. Next year will be different, I'm sure!
Monday, November 4, 2013
Late Stage
I'm up to the finishing stage of the baby quilt, though the baby isn't here yet--he's over a week late. He'll be my grandchild's cousin and we're all anxious to meet him.
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Design Wall Monday--Catching Up
Design Wall Monday --See more design walls on Judy's Small Quilts and Doll Quilts blog. I disappeared for awhile, due to computer issu...

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