Creating · Quilts

Lollypop Tree–Block One

One down!  Who Knows How Many to go!

How I did the machine applique:


You saw the earlier post on preparing the pieces: freezer paper lightly glued to the back of the fabric with a regular glue stick, the edges pressed over onto the waxy side, tamping them into place.  I got out a stiletto to assist me wherever the going got tough: where there was a tuck, or a sharp corner that normally, with the edge of hand needle-turn applique, would be smoothed out.  I lined up my piece with the center notch of my presser foot, and with a narrow zig-zag (1.0) and smallish stitch length (1.5 on a Husqvarna), went sort of slowly.

Remember that I’m a beginner.

Then I cut out the back of the pieces with the freezer paper (mostly the large and interestingly shaped pieces), leaving a 1/4-inch seam allowance. The glossy surface you see is the waxy side of the freezer paper.  Kind of pull–a bit–the edge of the applique to “break” the seal of the bond between the fabric and freezer paper, then place your scissors (closed) or your finger under the freezer paper and snap it out.

I took the paper out, finished cutting, then pressed it all, face-down on the ironing board.

I’m still stewing about whether or not I want to do hand-applique.  We’re in the middle of watching Foyle’s War, a BBC-TV production, and there’s something so relaxing about hand work and television.  But I also know that while I really like this pattern, I don’t want to spend the rest of my life making it, and I’m not that fast of an appliquer.

Fret. Fret. Fret.  I hope I’m not the only one in  Quilt Land who stews about these kinds of decisions–should I do it this way, or that? Use this technique or that?

Quilts · Sewing

Quilt Night–June version

So why did we have June’s Quilt Night in May?  Next Friday is the last day of school for most of the teachers in our group, so we thought by jumping it ahead we might be able to avoid Zombie Quilt Night.

Yes, this could have been us last night.  I had my grandsons for the weekend–which was fun, but tiring–and the others were teachers and tired professionals who came just by themselves, or with a hand project.  When someone asked Tauni what I was working on–I had brought down the sewing machine and had the Lollypop Tree block there, but at that moment was sitting over in the comfy red leather chairs visiting with Jean–Tauni glanced at me and said “Small talk.”  I laughed.  Yep–that’s about all I was good for.  But in my defense, Jean was headed to DC and since I had lived there for a year, I was giving her tips for her visit.

Others had been productive; here’s some of their achievements:

This is Connie’s quilt for a friend–all done with machine applique (a lovely line of zig-zag stitching around everything).  Connie said she chose a quick pattern this time for a quilt, and Lisa and I burst out laughing.  You ought to see Connie’s complicated quilts!

We recommended using some dye absorber if the recipient ever decided to wash it.

Laurel had been very productive with making these large (20″?) stars of multiple dotty fabrics.

Here they all are together (line-up was done digitally on my computer).

Tauni had finished this quilt top, and then when Jean arrived. . .

. . . got her second quilt back.  This was a friendship group challenge–to make a chubby log cabin block with modern and/or Kaffe Fassett fabrics.  My blocks are still in the bag!

Lisa’s first project of the night was to fix her daughter’s “promotion dress.”  Slight dressmaking adjustments. Then she put the borders on this wonderful quilt, made from a Bonnie McCaffrey block.

Lisa was the first to go, as she had “a date with the pavement in the morning” (she’s a marathoner).  The rest of us lovely zombie quilters slowly packed up and the night was over.  Who knows what July’s quilt night will bring?  It’s scheduled for the  4th of July weekend!

Happy Quilting!

Quilts

Gone Fishin’

Not really, but I just returned from a family reunion in Zion National Park in Southern Utah.  This was just after the rainstorm, and the Watchman Mountain was reflected in a puddle.  It is glorious waking up to, and going to sleep to this sight, as our campground is just below its colorful beauty.

Not only was the place beautiful and with wonderful people, which were made all the better when I discovered that an in-law (the wife of one of the young cousins) loves to quilt!  I dragged out the quilt I had on my sleeping bag to show her.  “Brights,” she said.  She likes the Reproduction fabrics, a more subdued palatte than the one below.  I keep this quilt in the car as it’s smaller.  It was really cold that first night (43 degrees) so I was glad I had brought it along.

This was a mystery quilt done by my guild, and I had a stash of fabrics from Me and My Sister Designs, which all worked together just fine. I have never named this one, but generally refer to it as “the bright mystery quilt.”

True confession: I generally HATE mystery quilts.  I’ve done several and I feel totally constrained by not knowing how the fabrics will work together, or where the darks/lights/colors will end up.  Some of the rows in the above quilt worked okay, and some didn’t.  Maybe that’s why I keep this in my car!

Creating · Quilts

Lollypop, Lollypop

I have struggled to find time to work on this quilt this week.  It wasn’t that there weren’t the hours, but that it was a struggle.  I just was a bit mentally worn out and this block requires some enthusiasm.  As Mary Poppins would say, “Well begun, half-done,” or something like that, so I thought it best to begin the task.

First, decide on which blocks.  Check.

Then lay out the first one and trace it onto freezer paper.  I completely did NOT think about if it were to be reversed, figuring whatever I started with I would end with and so it would be okay.  Plus I knew that these flowers/plants were symmetrical.

Cut out on the lines.  No, wait.  There are WAY too many pieces!

Number all the pieces on the pattern, then number all the pieces on the freezer paper, then cut out.

That funky stamen/petal-y thing in the middle is going to require a different sized piece of freezer paper so it can tuck under those outside petals. Can you tell I never studied botany?

The pattern calls for 4 different background colors in the blocks.  I’ve decided to make 12 squares (but am rapidly backpedaling to maybe only 9) and here’s my fabrics. They are all sort of gridded in a way–from mini-checks to a bubbly-looking print, upon the advice of Kathy from Material Obsession.  She’s done all this and so could give great advice.

I laid out the stems on the back of my brown fabric, placing the matte side of the freezer paper DOWN, and anchoring the freezer paper with a little bit of glue from a glue stick.  Then I trimmed the seam allowances to about 1/4-inch and using the tip of my iron, eased the seam allowances onto the shiny, waxy side of the freezer paper, letting the heat of the iron stick it down.

I found I could do the first method (above) on the big circles, but the little circles required a few more steps.  First, sew a running stitch around the outer edge, then draw it up over a plastic template.  I like to use gray thread–it just blends and blends.

Like so.  Give it a squirt of spray starch (I lay a scrap piece of fabric on my ironing board to catch the build-up) and set the iron down onto the circle for a few seconds, helping to dry the spray starch and flattening all those little pleats into place.  When dry and cool, ease the plastic template out of the circle and put it into place.

While doing some of the eight billion little circles this block called for, I decided this may take me the rest of my life to finish.
I also decided to only do one block a month, otherwise this summer will ONLY be Lollypop Tree blocks and I’ll get nothing else done.

I lay the pattern over my pieces and use it to nudge the pieces into place.


TA DA!!  First one laid out.  I haven’t decided whether or not to hand-applique this, or machine-applique with mono-filament thread.  While the hand method is very portable, if you have creaky hands (like I do) the thought of doing 12 of these makes me wilt.  But, with the machine, I will be tied to it–never able to take the block downstairs to watch Foyle’s War, our current BBC-TV favorite.  If I ‘m doing 12, I could get a lot of TV watched.

  Decisions, decisions.

I learned on Come A-Round ( my dotty circles quilt) not to obsess over every little piece, but instead go with the flow and realize that any quilt is greater than the sum of its parts.  In other words, don’t sweat the small stuff.  Get it done.  Remember Mary Poppins and that nursery clean-up.  Snap!