200 Quilts · FAL · Finish-A-Long · Quilts

Star Mother’s Youngest Child quilt

StarMotherQuilt

Here’s my second finish for March: Star Mother’s Youngest Child.  The book, from which the title of this quilt is taken, was about Star Mother’s youngest boy who came to earth to experience Christmas before he was destined to take his place in the heavens, shining brightly forever.  He landed at the home of a cranky old woman, who, childless and alone, just wanted to have one Christmas to celebrate before she died.  And so the two came together.  The illustrations are charming, and the child’s spikey hair and ugly countenance reminded me of the weirdo star in the bottom left corner, the points going the wrong way even though I tried really hard to get them like the picture of this quilt from the Moda Bake shop pattern.  But in the aggregate, I think it all works okay.

StarMotherQuilt_Back

Whenever I’m looking for a back, I usually go for whatever cheap fabric I’ve picked up on sale, or snagged from IKEA or the Marimekko from the Crate & Barrel outlet.  I went to the guest bedroom closet, where these lengths all hang, washed, pressed and waiting and lo-and-behold! I’d purchased some of this Sweetwater Christmas line when I was buying the rest of the fabrics for this quilt.  It had been two years and so I’d forgotten. I pieced it carefully to make the seam as invisible as I could.  I’ve tried doing pieced backs.  I usually fail at that sort of thing because at that point, I’m just so ready to be DONE.

StarMotherQuilt_folded

I had also purchased this black/red stripe for the binding and even if it was on the original, I just didn’t know if it would work for my sensibilities.  When I went to quilt night last week, Laurel told me it was just perfect.  Sometimes you just need that atta’boy to help get these quilts done.  I hand-stitched the binding while 1) watching a movie, 2) attending a baby shower another night, and then 3) coming home and talking to my husband after a long day.

StarMotherQuilt3

My quilter used Superior’s King Tut in a tight red/green variegated color in a medium meander.

StarMotherQuilt_label

Quilt Label Closeup

For the label, I scanned a picture from the book when the little child first knocks on the Old Woman’s door, and included a quote from the last pages of the book.

StarMotherQuilt4

This is #108 on my list of 200 quilts.  Frankly, I can’t keep up this pace of finishes unless I stop sleeping or eating (neither of which is very likely).  The last two quilts have been in the pipeline for a couple of years, and I just had some extra time this semester and was able to get them finished (along with the help of my quilter).  But for today, it’s nice to see this all done, lounging on my sofa.

ChristmasQuilts stack

That makes five Christmas quilts I’ve done in my lifetime: two have been given away, and the other three reside here.  It will be fun to get those out this coming December.

FinishALong Button

This is another one of my Finish-A-Long quilts; original posting showing all my goals is *here.*

200 Quilts · Finish-A-Long

Once There Was A Snowman

OnceThereWasASnowman Quilt

I’ve had my first finish for March with Once There Was a Snowman.  As I’ve mentioned in earlier posts, I’m thinking that I’m several months early with this Christmas quilt, rather than 3 months late.  It’s all about context, in my life.  This was my attempt at being wonky.  Not a favorite thing to do, I must admit.  I’ve made quilt blocks that are wonky sewing as well, and really, I just can’t find the attraction in all of this sewing random strips together, trimming at weird angles, sewing some more.  I wasn’t attracted to it in the first place, but you really can’t judge a process until you’ve done it.  So I did it, and can now safely say: not my favorite, as Johnny Depp said in the movie Chocolate, as he instead preferred other kinds of chocolate.  Just like I prefer other kinds of assembling a quilt.

OnceThereWasASnowman backing

But it will be fun to set it out for Christmas and have the house all festive.  I used a Kate Spain snowflake-on-red fabric for the backing, piecing it carefully to match the design and so no seam would be apparent.

OnceThereWasASnowman Label

My quilter zipped out this very cute ornament design for me.  I used Superior’s variegated blue King Tut thread for the quilting.  In hindsight, maybe white would have been better on top, but that’s the game in quilting, I think.  Always learning, always learning.


Snowman Quilting

 I have to admit that being a part of the great Finish-A-Long, hosted by Leanne of She Can Quilt really helped motivate me.  Now on to the next one!

FinishALong Button

Update: Original Finish-A-Long post is *here.*

FAL · WIP

WIP and FAL are real motivation!

WIP new button

I’ve been doing Lee’s Work In Progress Wednesdays for a long time now, and I love participating and reading her blog.  Head back there to see more of what others are working on.

FinishALong Button

And Leanne’s Finish-A-Long has certainly focused what I’m working on.  I’ll get back to posting up Road to California pictures next post, but here’s what I’m working on today.

EPP outer pieces

I’ve finally figured out the outer pieces of my EPP quilt.  And the border after this, too.  Now just to sit and watch something interesting on television, so I can finish it up.  What to watch now that Downton Abbey’s all finished, and the Oscar broadcast is over?  I do have some interesting Netflix coming.  By the way, if you like quirky movies, I can recommend Moonrise Kingdom.

Lollypop Tree Border Blocks2

And I finished appliqueing all the pieces on my Lollypop Tree Border Blocks.  Now I have to cut away the backs of those that have freezer paper in them, pull out the paper, then press them.  When that happens, it means that all the components of the Lollypop Tree quilt will be ready to be put together.  I first saw Kim McLean’s pattern on the blog for Material Obsession–a blog you should defininitely have in your Reader.

Lollypop Tree Border Blocks3

A few of my favorites.  Happy Quilting!

Finish-A-Long · Quilts

Lollypop Trees Rise Again: Blocks 4, 5, 6

One advantage to being in a group like Leanne’s Finish-A-Long (FAL), is that you have a reason to pull those unfinished projects to the front of the line, rather than letting good solid work be upstaged consistently by the New! and the Fabulous! and the Have You Seen This Fabric Line! sort of business.  So the Lollies came out of hibernation.

LollypopTreeFour

Lollypop Tree Four.

LollypopTreeFive

Lollypop Tree block five.

LollypopTreeSix

Lollypop Tree block Six.

Gang of Six Lollypop Trees

So I’ve appliqued six to their background fabric, using the freezer-paper, then invisible thread in top spool method.

Appliqueing Lollypop Tree

I’ve discussed this in buckets of digitial bytes in other posts, but here’s a photo of me going at it.  Yes, those are teensy applique pins and when you have about 60 of them on a block (these are huge blocks), it helps that they are small so you are not stabbed to death by pins.  I also hang my sweater on the back of the chair, as they have affinity with knitted things–they get caught in the sleeves.  I use a 1.0 width zig-zag with a 2.0 length of stitch, with Mono-Poly invisible thread in the top spool (put a netting on it and you will be happier) and Bottom Line thread in the bobbin.  I also dial back the upper tension by half, down to 2.2 and use a very slender needle.  Both threads are made by Superior Threads.

My student papers don’t come in until Thursday evening, so maybe I can squeak out three more blocks?  It takes about an hour to stitch each block, and another 20 minutes to open up the back and take all the freezer paper pieces out. I know I won’t finish the quilt this first quarter of the FAL, but the very fact that I’m sewing on these trees is a benefit of signing up. I’ll be thrilled just to get the blocks done.

WIP

Now head back to Lee’s Freshly Pieced blog to see more Works in Progress!