Saturday, September 29, 2012

BIG Progress

I cannot show pictures because it is a gift, but I just have to mention that I just finished piecing my first king-sized quilt! I have made baby quilts and throws that might have fit a twin bed, but never one this big. I don't think I'm going to try and quilt it myself, so have to find a long-arm quilter. I cannot wait to see it quilted.

There was 14 inches of thread left on the spool when I stitched the last stitch!

Friday, September 28, 2012

Progress



Fifty minutes of hand stitching last week and zero this week, so my total for the month so far—there are still a couple days left!—is about 12.25 hours. Guess I’m not the best participant in Bonnie Hunter's hand-stitching challenge for National Sewing month—but at least I DID participate. And I am late in posting my progress, but I AM posting.

Okay--I fell off the wagon for hand stitching, but I have been sewing. And cutting. And folding. My fabric has not been neglected.

I worked on my ongoing project of organizing my fabric stash. In my old condo I had a room dedicated to craft crap where fabric piles grew, teetered, got moved and re-piled, and I could just shut the door and leave things as they were. Although I also have a dedicated room here in our new home, I don’t want to close the door. The room  has a nice, big window, and the room is at the end of the hall; if I close the door, the hallway will be pretty dark.

So I have been washing, folding, and organizing fabric. I’ve accomplished a good bit in the last couple weeks. I love being able to see what I’ve really got, and that will make planning quilts a bit easier.

The best thing I did this week was to start assembling the blocks for my daughter and son-in-law’s king-sized bed quilt, based on a picture of a quilt DD saw online that she really liked. Of course, the focus fabric was discontinued a while ago, so I kept my eye out for something similar and began collecting fabrics to coordinate with it. I've finally got it all together and decided on a pattern. It won’t take long to get the top assembled, then I think I will send it out for quilting. They should have it by Christmastime.

I’ve also started using Bonnie Hunter's scrap users' system. I sound a little like a Bonnie groupie, but really, she gets so much done in the course of a day, and you can see how much fun she’s having all the while. She makes me feel like I really could finish something, too, if I just do a little each day. I know her leaders and enders method will be fun to do and help me get quilts built more often than I thought I could.

Due to very lucky timing, I got a very good deal on a new Accuquilt GO cutter on Craigslist last weekend. So fabric is getting cut for future scrap quilts.

Okay, got to get busy doing something—lots of things on my list!

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

I Am the Journey


Today Bonnie Hunter shared a phrase she kept seeing on the bottom of a travel poster in her hotel on a recent trip to Bali--You Are the Journey. As she said, the journey doesn't happen without you, so really, you are the journey.

It reminds me of a similar quote that I read back in high school--something like, "It's the journey that counts, not the destination." You know, take time to smell the roses, go with the flow.

When I took knitting lessons a couple years ago, when I had to "un-knit" mistakes, my teacher would always volunteer to remove the offending stitches for me. Mistakes were usually discovered many rows after they happened, and most students were dismayed at the thought of all the time lost undoing and redoing the stitches. They were always surprised when I happily did the "un-knitting" and re-knitting myself.To me, it was all part of the fun of handling the yarn and manipulating it and watching what it would do--all part of the journey I was enjoying.

The same applies to my quilting. Who likes to rip seams, remove stitches to separate parts painstakingly stitched together. It seems like you are not moving forward at the point, just losing time, but really it's a chance to let your mind wander a bit while you do something a bit less technical, a chance for your subconscious to review the plan for the quilt or mentally practice how to make it go right the next time you stitch, imagine the colors you chose all together. And really, it's all fun with yarn and needles, or fabric, thread, needle and machine.

It's too bad we usually seem to have deadlines so that we cannot just let it be about the journey/process. If I just had a succession of finished quilts, well I don't see that as fun--why not just buy them? I like thinking about the possibilities with this one fabric or color. I like thinking about the possibilities with this one block or layout. I like the actual measuring, cutting, aligning and stitching and watching it evolve. That I end up with a beautiful, useful quilt at the end is a bonus. All the time that brought me to that finished quilt--that's the part I like, the entire journey.

I AM THE JOURNEY.

Now if I could just apply more of that zen coolness into the rest of my life......

Monday, September 10, 2012

More Hand Stitching

Here we are in week 2 of Bonnie Hunter's challenge to us to do one hour a day of hand stitching on something, anything, as long as it involves a needle and thread in your hands, in honor of September being National Sewing month, and just in general her tendency to kind of kick us all into gear. Although I didn't do one hour each day this week, I did do enough when I stitched to get in 7.25 hours, so goal met!! Woo Hoo!! Here is the section of the little Christmas table runner I'm working on.

I started this table runner about seven years ago, I think, shortly after I started quilting. I had taken a three or four evening class during which I hand pieced an Ohio star, but I never quilted it--it languishes in my orphan block stash. But it did give me confidence to tackle more quilting. I found a pattern for a Friendship Star block and designed my little table runner.

In pulling together fabric for this project, I quickly discovered that a bit of yellow really sparks up a quilt no matter what other colors are in it. I used a golden shade in this block, you might even call it brown, but it is more yellow than red, so it works.

Thank you, Bonnie, for making me think about my quilting more often, so I will pick it up even if it's just for a few minutes instead leaving so much in the UFO piles. This little runner might even get to grace somebody's table this year!

Check out Bonnie's blog post for this week and scroll to the bottom to check out the links to other people who are meeting this hand quilting challenge. There are some wonderful projects being worked on, and it's fun.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Hand Stitching


I've loved quilts and quilting for as long as I can remember. To this day I've got quilt pictures and patterns that I ripped from women's magazines in high school and saved with the thought that "some day" I would make a quilt myself. I just knew it was a life long task, so I kept putting it off. Then I realized the pioneer women made lots of quilts for their family's comfort, and they didn't have the conveniences I did, so maybe I'd better get on with it. And now I have.

One of my favorite quilter/bloggers, Bonnie K Hunter, has been inspiring me to get more quilting done. First just by seeing that she manages to make huge beautiful quilts and travel to lecture and teach while having a family and social life AND posting on her blog, often several times a day, just to keep all the rest of us inspired and motivated. Made me realize how much I COULD be getting done if I would just do something every day instead of thinking it is such a big  project, why start?

Bonnie has issued a challenge to do some hand stitching, just needle and thread, for an hour a day this month. Now in reality, we know that is probably not going to happen, but at least it will help keep it in my mind, so I will definitely get more done than I would have without the challenge.

So you can see above that I logged 3 1/2 hours yesterday. Okay, it was a holiday, but it helped me get a jump start on the rest of the week. I watched some "Storage Wars" on the DVR while stitching in the recliner in the afternoon, then I got another hour-plus done while sitting in front of the computer watching Bonnie sew a binding on a quilt on live stream "Quilt Cam." The picture shows just a bit of the little table runner I designed and made a couple years ago that I am now hand quilting. Everything I need is on the little table next to my recliner, mostly kept together in a box meant for large glasses--it has a flocked lining so snips of threads stick to it, and it closes firmly to keep everything together and handy, even a full sized wooden spool of thread. I have Linda Franz, inventor of Inklingo, to thank for that idea.

Thanks for the inspiration, Bonnie.