Blog Strolling · Creating · Quilts

Funnies

I spent most of yesterday–the Fourth of July quilting.  Pedal-to-the-metal type quilting.  Red-Pepper-Quilts-type quilting.  But first, I put in two tomato plants, some basil and some herbs.  That’s pretty funny to do it on the hottest day of the year, a full six weeks behind schedule.  But that’s because I vowed No Garden this year, given our usual crop of $60 tomatoes, an old joke on how much it costs to do home gardening.  The possum and raccoons are kind of ticked off at me for closing the kitchen this year, tipping over pots on the patio in search of the usual canteen.  So we tilled the soil a couple of days back and amended it today with Miracle Gro (I need some stuff called Miracle Quilt, as does the granny in the cartoon) and little green plants are wilting and wavering in the hot breeze.  I’m calling this a preparation-for-winter garden, with some summer enhancements.

More funnies are in how stiff a body can get while sitting quilting.  The foot hurts from up, down, poise and the shoulders ache, even though I’ve propped up my machine with two door stoppers at the back to guarantee a good angle.  So I have to take a break every once in a while–as the more elderly woman at our quilting bee once advised.  She had a timer strung around her neck, purchased after her doctor said to take a break every 30 minutes.  So we’d sit there at the table, quilting and chatting along when all of sudden we’d hear a bell, and she’d jump up and stride around our U-shape of tables, arms swinging high as her cropped hair all the while she encouraged us to “get off our duffs” and stretch.  More encouragement every thirty minutes until at last, by the end of the bee, we were in need of some stretching and allowed ourselves to be bullied into moving our duffs at least back and forth in place.

Five years later, I still think of her, and try to schedule a break from the machine to read Sunday’s leftover paper, get a drink of water, change the laundry, and yes–write a blog post.

Here’s a photo of the fireworks in black and white–a new twist on our traditional (4th of July) event.  They shoot off our fireworks on top of the local mountain–and every once in a while, like tonight, a rocket goes haywire and burns Mt. Rubidoux.  No worries, billions of fire trucks are there and are prepared with fire cannons, sirens and a little excitement.  We left our downtown viewing spot, winding our way home along all the clogged streets to our quiet house.  Much later we heard the cannons going off, and we watched the end of the show from our upstairs bedroom window, the lights flashing for the grand finale, with the thundering sounds arriving seconds later.  A  good 4th, this year, I think.

100 Quilts · Blog Strolling · Creating

This Quilt Is A Mess

Whooey!  Another tempest in a quilting teapot! (And this quilting disaster–explained at the very end!)

I love all this controversy.  I love that we are talking about quilt issues, digging our hands deep in the loam of the quilting garden and really talking about things that bother us and that delight us.  Rachel of Stitched in Color was quite frank one day about Saying Things She Didn’t Think She Should.  Bammo!  Millions of comments–some, mostly rants–about one aspect of the quilt world or another.  I should have expected as much from all of us women who run blogs.  Then her next post was about Things We Should Say, and the issues of it’s a subjective world (quilting) that some are trying to categorize objectively (skill levels, style labels).

Here’s my .02:

I’ve read all the posts and it seems like the conversation/comments has generated a healthy discussion, re: the labels of modern vs. traditional quilting.  More about that at the end.
But about the other–the “dumbing down” stream.  I’ve read all *those* original posts and realize that it had its genesis in trying to describe levels of skill.  I think this is sort of one place where there is no subjectivity, and that’s kind of what set off the whole alarm bells and craziness.  Either you have the skills to make successful HST (Half Square Triangles) or you don’t.  It’s meeting an objective standard.  For some, HST are intimidating.  For others, they do them in their sleep.  I do think it can be successfully argued that there are certain skills that come with practice and after having achieved them, a quilter can objectively say s/he’s got those down.  I consider myself a master quilter, having done just about every technique in the book (some while I was majoring in CloTex in college, some afterwards as I took quilt classes to become more proficient).  The point is I was still learning, still trying. And as I want to improve myself,  I’m now trying to master more applique techniques.  So even while I may have objectively met some unnamed standards of skill level, there is always more that can be learned, can be perfected upon.

Now: my .02 on the “modern” quilting business.  A while back ( a year ago?) I read a blog post putting forth the idea that *modern* was one leg of a three-legged stool, the other two legs being *traditional* and the *art quilt*.  I was happy with that idea–that we were all finding ways to be creative.  I love the injection of fresh! new! that the modern gals have brought to the industry.  I started quilting in the 1970’s when I was 21, and personally, I thought we were all getting a bit old and musty.  Something had to change.  I wasn’t ready to go the art quilt route because I still love a good cuddle under a hand-made quilt.  So I was happy to see some fresh ideas, another way to contribute to our big wide world of quilting.  It’s not an either/or.  It’s all of us together, doing what we love.

On that note, I present to you. . . This Quilt Is A Mess.

I don’t think that this was its original name, but it is certainly the name it has now.  I’d recently been on a trip to Venice and like so many other quilters, fell in love with the floor of the main cathedral.  I bought the POSTER of the floor (they wouldn’t let us take photos) and started to sketch it out.  This quilt was supposed to be one of those very clever quilts of using one block yet coloring it so many different ways that the quilt would be chameleon-like.  Yeah, right.

It started out that way–I think that section is kind of in the upper right.  Then I got tired.  Then I started piecing things every which way.  Then it sat, like an ugly gnome in a room of beauty queens.  Here’s where the class thing comes in.  I had to have a quilt to take to a workshop with Hollis Chatelain, who was just hitting the circuit after her very successful painted images (then quilted) were winning big prizes.  I knew I would be experimenting with quilting, so grabbed this.  She talked to us about spray basting (so I did that) and brought the “glued-together” sandwich to the second day of the class.  I realized that I had to be plain-jane with the quilting, not swirly.

So the quilting consists of eight billion rows, one-quarter-inch apart, some in black thread and some in red and occasionally switching directions.  I was never so happy to be done with a quilt.  I put the binding on, a sleeve for hanging, but basically it is STILL an ugly gnome in a room of beauty queens.  It rarely sees the light of day.

So, even though I execute flawlessly in objective skill level (well, okay, maybe not ALL the time), subjectively I can say: This Quilt Is A Mess.  To this day, I’m still not a complete fan of tight row stitching, but I have learned from Red Pepper Quilts that there is a fresh, modern way to adapt that technique so it’s not so painful.  So to all you bloggers & quilters out there–keep sharing, keep showing, keep writing.  It’s good for us all.  Even the tempests in the teapots.

Blog Strolling

Blog Strolling

I had a few minutes this morning to do some blog strolling–looking around, clicking on links, letting my browsing take me where it will. (Oh, yeah, and I changed the look of the blog again.)

This selvage heart is made by Riel Nason, a quilter in Canada.  I think it’s an inventive way to use all those fab selvages we all acquire–well, at least the ones we’re not sending on to Cindy for her pincushions (and if you don’t have a pincushion yet, you should really get one!).

Carla, of Lollyquiltz, took two simple motifs–that of the sunburst and a birdhouse–and created something cheerful, springy and a way to use up a related novelty fabric.  Maybe I have sunburst-style blocks on the mind after making my Come A-Round quilt, but there is something so appealing about the combination of these two ideas.

Not all the blog-strolling results in quilt ideas, however.  Jen of StitchHack has a nifty tutorial on prairie points, made from one piece of fabric.  Makes me want to leave all my plain bindings behind and try a few novelty edgings!

This is a close-up of a quilt made by Wanda of Exuberant Color.  While I love the swirly black and white setting squares and sashing, it gave me courage to use up some of those batiks I used to stockpile.  I had stopped using batiks after the lack of colorfastness ruined a quilt I gave as a gift (the owner washed it and the fabrics ran–I still feel really badly about giving away a quilt that would self-destruct in the wash cycle!).  But this quilt entices me to use the batiks in a new way–always pre-washing, of course.

This is one of my all-time favorite modern quilts, made by Ashley of Film in the Fridge.  She unfurled it on a fall day, then it disappeared while it was being photographed for a magazine.  I love the patterns of the nine-patch blocks interspersed with the large blocks of fabric.  It’s a way to have our cake and eat it too: cut up those fabulous fabrics we buy into small squares, while retaining large squares to show off the fabrics.  The pattern will be in 101 Patchwork Projects, due out on the newsstands about now!

I’ve been idle long enough today, as I am still recovering from doing a luncheon for 300 women at our church’s women’s conference.  I had a lot of help, but after six weeks of planning, baking and fussing, I’m glad to be moving on to something else.  Here’s the cake we served: Almond-Orange Cake with Chocolate Ganache Icing.

My next project?  Yep.  It’s Lollypop Trees Time!