Unhappy Quilter: Unpicking quilt stitches
Happy Quilter: Thinking about the rainbow pack of fat quarters from Purl Soho that I bought yesterday.
Unhappy Quilter: Unpicking quilt stitches
Happy Quilter: Thinking about the rainbow pack of fat quarters from Purl Soho that I bought yesterday.
Not quilting with organic fabric. I was thinking more along the lines of a quilt that just sort of evolves from one stage to the next, getting stalled, then moving forward again. But Quilting Evolutionarily (is that a word?) just sounded like it was heading somewhere different. Often I feel the pressure to rush things–you know, to Get-It-Done so I can have something to show off to everyone in the blogosphere. Because why would anyone want to read about my humdrum, inch-by-inch progress in my projects? Only because that’s probably how things are going for many of us, especially at the holidays, when we are pulled too many directions.
So, after I put the blue borders on my wonky log cabin, it sat. Then after finishing the grading, the finals, I actually had a night when I was waiting for my husband to come home from a trip back East, and I wanted to stay up and I had a good novel going, so I was ready to sew.
Forgive the blurry picture–it was at night. I sewed white strips onto the blue borders. I also had a stack of “middles” without the blue borders (I’d run out of fabric). I added red strips to those, and then green.
And then I alternated them up on the pinwall. And there they’ve been for a few days now, while I try to figure out the next step. They are all different sizes, so I’m trying to decide which ones to cut down, and to which ones I should add a deep blue strip or two in order to get them to become roughly the same size.
The novel I’m listening to is Moon Over Manifest and it’s written for a bit younger crowd; I’m still really enjoying it as it combines two periods of history in the story of the twelve-year-old protagonist. I’m considering it for my English class next semester: since the main character is 12, I don’t have to worry about inappropriate romantic entanglements that I’d have to deal with in class discussions. I’m teaching a developmental class (one below Freshman Comp) so this level might be appropriate to most of their reading skills.
So, not that anyone’s reading with a week left until Christmas, and Hanukkah just beginning, and the general rush rush of buying gifts and decorating and baking, but I am making progress on this quilt. It’s interesting to sew without a plan. I’m sewing just for the pleasure of it, just to discover what will unfold — the kind of sewing I need right now.
Out at the outlet shops, gathering Christmas gifts, I spy this window display of antique sewing machines. Covet. Covet them all.
If your friend quilted on this machine, you could give truth to the phrase that you are merely sewing in order to keep up with the Joneses. [Lame humor, I know.] Makes our sleek, shiny machines look boring boring by comparison, doesn’t it? (Although I like the way our new machines sew.)
Earlier, this week this is what it looked like with the purse laid out, as I’m trying to figure out where everything goes. I wanted a purse that looked “Think-Freddy-ish” without screaming “HEY I’M A QUILTER!” You know what I mean. Clothes, purses — there’s art, and then there’s I’M-A-QUILTER-clothes. The best example of the latter was when I went to Houston and some woman had made a vest out of all the tote bags, complete with the handles hanging down all over. And yes, I’ve made a garment or two that fit into that category. Let’s not go there, because I still like that jacket.
Hoping I’m splitting that line, here. Side One.
Side Two, with a little pocket.
Same side without the Metro map.
Zipper pocket for phone. Gazillion pockets for everything else. I looove pockets in my purses.
Like I said, I like Nancy’s designs, but it does take a rocket scientist to figure out her directions. It helps if you’ve sewn a purse before. How do you like that fabric on that lining? Good way to use that Children at Play paper airplane design. I love the soft aqua. Good feelings here on finishing up something this Friday and I hope you’re having some too.
Tomorrow is the Temecula Quilt Show, where they hang their quilts all over outside, kind of like the Sisters Show, but think Cowboys Meet Quilters. And then the Red/White Quilt show over at Temecula Quilt Company. I’m looking forward to this all (plus getting a flu shot — must be fall!).