Quilts

Limping Along, Pineapple-Style

Pineapple Quilt Before

Take 1 (really it’s about Take 23).  While it’s fun to look at, I think it looks like I stuck the quilt in a light socket or something.  The petal/leaf things are like right on top of the pineapples and those tropical fruits need some breathing room.  But I’m loathe to mess with those borders, so I try something different.

Falling Pineapple Leaves

What if I organized the leaves by color: cool in the middle, warm on the outside?  Still not liking it.  This is a Truth-in-Advertising shot, showing how I load up the edges of my pin wall with related and unrelated junk.  Can’t help myself.

Pineapple quilt Borders Flipped

Leaves off.  Flip borders, so narrower light part (next to the green vine) is out and wider is next to the pineapples.

Pineapple Borders

More borders cut and sewn on.  I’m constructing the borders separately from the pineapple centers.  I made the fatal error of hand-appliquing on the vine.  I wanted to see what would happen if it were sewn down–it was really puckering before (it’s fine now).  But does that mean I have to hand appliqué all those sprightly leaves onto the thing?  (AAAAGH!)

Pineapple Quilt leaves

Poking the leaves/petals/whatever back on.  Trying to adjust for balance in size, number and color.  I feel obsessive.

PIneapple Quilt in Process Jan12

I think I’m pretty much there with the arrangement.  By flipping the borders, it gave the flowers more room, so they are not crowding the pineapple blocks anymore.  I’ll trim down the outer borders, but just that little bit gave the design some breathing room.

Classroom Corner A

I started back to school on Monday.  This is Corner A of my classroom, a windowless affair with a high distraction rating.  The computer is behind that roll top desk, next to the TV with the dinosaur.  Doesn’t every college classroom have a dinosaur?

Classroom Corner B

This is Classroom Corner B, with split personality model.  We are in the Respiratory Therapy classroom.  As Rachel noted on Instagram: “At least she’s wearing a shirt.”  Yep.

Chocolate from Around the WorldSo when I got home, even before we’d had dinner, I’d eaten most of Tanzania.  This lovely little box of chocolate is from Trader Joe’s and was a stocking stuffer gift from my husband.  They only carry this at Christmas, so I feel lucky to have it just for such emergencies as this.  Sao Tome may be gone after my next class.  I’m thinking I might have to take it with me and put it in the car, to have it as I drive home through the LA bumper-to-bumper traffic.  Yes, I might.

Quilts

Resolutions vs. Being the Best Self I Can Be

resolutions-web

from *here*

 I read this article, “Resolving to Create a New You”  in the New York Times last week.  I cut it out, kept it by my sewing machine and read it all week long.  I read it again today and finally, finally, I think I understand it (the author, Ruth Chang, is a professor of philosophy at Rutgers University).  It helped that I listened to Ms. Chang’s TED Talk about  “How to Make Hard Choices” (take the time–it’s enlightening).

SeptDec2014 Goals

Resolutions, even those quilting resolutions of Finish A-Longs and their sort, have a problem because basically we are trying to (as Ms. Chang put it) “to steel our wills to do what we already know we should be doing.”  Yes, I know I should finish Quilt XYZ and yes, I still make myself a list of quilts every quarter and hang them on my cupboard door.  Sometimes they are helpful, like when I don’t feel like doing much.  It can give a goal and a direction.  But I have two quilts I have had on that list every quarter for the past two years.  They are hard quilts.  I don’t quite remember what I want to do with the “Good Luck Quilt,” one that I dreamed up but now have no idea what I mean, nor do I know what I want to make with the fabric that I spontaneously bought in a stack from an online quilt shop one summer’s day (and which I call “The Mexcian Day of the Dead Quilt”).  Each quilt has its appealing qualities.  Each is a quagmire.  And every quarter I resolve to finish them.

Layer Cakes Jelly Rolls

Ms. Chang says instead of looking at resolutions as just another set of  Things To Do, we should view these as opportunities “to create ourselves anew.”  Each of those hard choices between two sets of alternatives, gives us a chance to “make ourselves the authors of our own lives. Instead of being led by the nose by what we imagine to be facts of the world, we should instead recognize that sometimes the world is silent about what we should do.”  Nobody cares if I ever start my Good Luck Quilt.  Or cut into that layer cake or jelly roll.  And even if you do make it and post it on some blog and someone has rounded up prizes for what you finish, you aren’t winning a prize because a quilt has taught you a new skill.  You aren’t winning a prize because you spent more time on the borders that you did on the quilt (like my current tortuous creative project).  You are only winning a prize because you finished something and your name was selected by Mr. Random Number Generator. And if you ask me,  an online app that can “lead us around by the nose” is probably NOT the best way to develop yourself as a quilter.

Instead, Ms. Chang suggests, by making hard choices, “we not only create value for ourselves but we also (re)create ourselves. . . . to reflect on what kind of person we can commit to being when making those choices.”  So whether it be challenging yourself in a new quilting endeavor, or resolving to become the kind of person who would rather go on a walk than eat a brownie, or the kind of person who can set aside the digital screens of her life in order to concentrate on the small people near her, if we can commit to that task, generating our OWN reasons for choosing that direction, we “make ourselves the authors of our own lives.”   We won’t just make another “Scrap Vomit” quilt because everyone else is.  While we might choose to use up our scraps, we’ll do it in a way that suits us, that refines us, that contributes a little bit of something to the inside of us.

She ends her article by saying: “So in this new year, let’s not do the same old, same old; let’s not resolve to work harder at being the selves that we already are. Instead, let’s resolve to make ourselves into the selves that we can commit to being.”

Dive into the quilt quagmire and make that hard quilt.  It may take you three months or three years, but you will have become a different and better self for having tried it and finished.  Use that pattern in the drawer, but make it up in fabrics you envision.  Go ahead and make a quilt that mimics the one online, but make it better.  Make it different.

Make it yours.

Colorwheel Blossom_inner quilting

Quilts

Pineapple Quilt Borders: Progress?

Pineapple Blocks laid out

I laid out all the pineapple blocks on a grey, cloudy, rainy day, but their brightness and color made them fun to work with (Yucky photographs, though.)  I thought about all my bee mates and was sending out Good Karma over the universe, thanking them for their work.

Pineapple Quilt Borders

But how to get a border on this thing?

Come A-Round, full SM

I remembered my other quilt with a bold colorful center, Come A-Round, and decided to mimic that idea.  This quilt, designed by the Piece O-Cake ladies, is one of my favorites.  I remembered that they have terrific border ideas, so after a Google search, found Daisies and Dots, a free pattern, which also had a great idea for a border.

Cutting Wave Border

I sewed the border pieces together in two sections, then overlaid them and cut a wavy line with my rotary cutter, freehand.  I tried to make sure the seams were kind of matched up.

Wave Border

I put RST and matched up those seams and sewed a 1/4″ seam.

Bias Vine on Wavy Quilt Border

I made gallons of 3/8″ bright green bias tubing and pinned it over the seams.

Leaf shapes on Freezer Paper

Now to cut the leaves.  I thought the free pattern looked a little small for what I wanted.  Besides I already had a baggie full of reject leaves from the center of my Colorwheel Blossom quilt, so I started with that leaf, and morphed it down to make five shapes. (I don’t throw away appliqué shapes.  Well, hardly ever!)  I traced that shape onto plastic, cut out and traced the shapes onto freezer paper, doing it in batches.

Laying out leaves2

Applique leaf freezer paper

 

 

 

 

 

 

Then I cut out many colors, using the templates for tracing, and am now ironing the leaves to the freezer paper (shiny side up).

 

Laying out Leaves in Quilt BorderAnd here’s where I am this morning.  I had to actually do school work all day yesterday, so didn’t get time to work on this.  I am just throwing them up there now for “cluster placement,” and plan to do some fine tuning of color, shape and arrangement later.

Simone Wins

So as you all well know, the Random Number Generator hates me and I hate it.  So I went to a different website and entered in all your names, and hit “Pick a Random Name.”  Which it did.  Simone, I’ll be in touch–you are the winner!  And thank you all for entering and all your lovely comments.  I’m working my way through my email notes and will get them off to you this weekend, after school orientation, syllabus writing and plotting my Course Calendar.  I feel like this quilting community is my real joy and delight in life, in terms of an occupation.  The other one is to get quilt fabric money.

Just kidding.  I love to teach, and this gearing up at the beginning of the semester is a pretty normal thing for us all to be doing.  Hats off to my other teacher-readers out there!

 

Quilts

False Dawn (and a Giveaway!)

False Dawn_front

False Dawn
Pieced and Quilted by Elizabeth Eastmond
#138 of 200 Quilts
41 1/2″ high by 36″ wide

Made for the Modern Quilt Guild Cotton Couture Classics Challenge

Cotton Couture Solids QC
MMillers fabrics

Michael Miller, a manufacturer of fabrics, sent members of the Modern Quilt Guild a packet of fat eighths in pastels, for their challenge this year, and to try their line of solid fabrics.  I know that pastels only makes a dull quilt, with no contrasts, so I reciprocated MMiller’s kind gesture by buying some darker colors in their fabric line.  I had one design all laid out, but then re-read the contest rules and it said it had to be predominantly made from the packet they’d sent.  I decided to obey, but in scanning the IG feed of those quilters who had submitted in this category, I noticed most ignored this rule.  Maybe I should have too?

Beginning False Dawn

This is how it started.  This line of solids is lightweight and would be perfect for making French-sewn dresses, or smocked clothing for children. The weight is more like a batiste than a broadcloth, but it is strong and has a lovely finish and hand.  Since I’m used to working with Kona Cottons, a more mid-weight line of solids, I had some challenges working with the Cotton Couture line.  I found that even though I pressed it and starched it, it was still more prone to wrinkling.  The quilt, however, weighs next to nothing when finished, so it would be a perfect line for a lighter quilt, or those in hot climates.

False Dawn_quilting detail

Because of its lighter weight, it quilts up easily so I had fun layering on thread in narrow zig-zags and loopy-loos.

False Dawn_back

We also had to use Michael Miller fabrics for the back, and I had enough yardage of this Parisian print, choosing a jewel-like print for the binding.  I named it False Dawn, hoping to bring to mind that luminous light before the sun rises.

False Dawn_labelWhile I did enter it into QuiltCon’s Challenge, it was not accepted.  Even though I have no way of knowing what the criteria were, other than “predominant use of the Cotton Couture Pastels” and all Michael Miller fabrics, I’m not that put out.  I followed the only rules available to me, I finished a quilt made with gifted fabric (and purchased some more) so I figure I fulfilled my part of the bargain.

Giveaway Banner

MMiller Solids GiveawaySince it’s my birthday this week, and I think that’s a terrific time for gifts and presents, would you like some of these fabrics?  I know that many quilters love this line, and like I said before, it has a lovely smooth hand.  If you would like my leftovers (about 2 yards in a variety of colors), please leave me a comment below, making sure I have your email address.  Since we are all recovering from Christmas, I must limit it to domestic (USA) readers this time around.  Maybe your New Year can be welcomed in with a new project?  This will close Wednesday night, the 7th of January.  I’ll announce the winner in the next post.