2010: The year in quilts

/ Wednesday 29 December 2010 /
It's been great to see everyone's summary of their work in 2010. Collectively, we have been a busy lot! I'm hoping to be just as productive in 2011, but we will have to see how it goes. Some things I am planning for the coming year include:
  • A quiltalong with Jennifer - we are going to make a Triple Irish Chain, if we can ever get ourselves organized to pick colours
  • Further adventures in Kaleidoscope Land - I am looking forward to trying out the Marti Michell Kaleido Ruler and comparing it to the Smart Plate.
  • Shannon's BOM
  • Seriously cutting back on my fabric purchases
This last may be made easier by the rise of cotton prices. Deborah of Whipstitch wrote a very clear and thoughtful post about the cause of the rise in prices and the effects of this on the LQS owner and on us as consumers and quilters. She talks about prices going up $.60 a yard in her shop, and I have read others report increases as much as a dollar a yard. I'm sure that seems like a lot, but as a Canadian, it puts yardage still well under the average price that we pay here, in the neighbourhood of $15 per meter. (It is true that a meter is bigger than a yard - but not that much bigger!) And so, as long as the exchange rates hold, it will still be more economical for us to buy online from American stores. Of course, it's important to remember that economy is, or -- from my perspective -- should be, only one element that factors into our decision of where to buy fabric. I am curious to know whether or how this will affect your buying and quilting habits this year. What do you think?
P.S. Thanks so much for the love about the kaleido finish I posted about; it truly made me feel so much better. I have decided to definitely send it out to a LA-er, and I am feeling very hopeful that this will redeem the quilt and make it into the beauty I know is inside it!

Your advice, please!

/ Monday 27 December 2010 /

Before I get to the business at hand, just a quick pause to show off my lovely daughter and one of my two gorgeous dogs!  Eve is certainly going to miss her fur sisters when she goes off to university next fall!
And now back to our regularly scheduled programming.  As promised in my last post, this morning I set out my vinyl tablecloth on the living room floor and tried out four layouts of the HSTs made with Maison de Garance.  None of them use all of the 160 HSTs that I have - I just  wanted to get an idea of the look.  Here they are:
(1) Zigzag
Auditioning HST layouts 1
(2) Don't know what this layout is called officially, but I have been thinking of it as Lattice Diamonds (ignore those random blocks along the left side).
Auditioning HST layouts 2
(3) Single diamonds
Auditioning HST layouts 3
(4) Single triangles
Auditioning HST layouts 4
So what do you think is the nicest?  I'm sure there are other layouts that I didn't try; for example, the barn raising layout with concentric diamonds radiating out from the centre.  I'm not terribly fond of that one, so I didn't bother with it.  But if there are others that I should know about please do say!
P.S.  Thanks, all of you, for that bunch of wonderfully encouraging comments on yesterday's post when I was feeling so blue about that quilt top.  I've got a line on some long-armers, and I'm filled with renewed hope!

Kaleido finish!

/ Sunday 26 December 2010 /
Kaleido quilt top
I have never been so happy to finish a quilt top as I am with this one.  And it's a puzzler.  I can't decide how I feel about it.  I put it on my bed and it looks fine, nothing wrong with it.  But for the amount of blood and tears that went into this quilt, I expected more than fine.
Kaleido quilt top
It is mostly Rouenneries and Lumiere de Noel by French General, but there are some other random fabric lines making an appearance, as well.  The top finishes at 72" x 78".
DSC_0084
It's funny, but it seems to be a quilt that looks better in photos than it does in real life.  I may consider sending this one to the long-armer (if I can find one that I trust, having never used long arm services before), in the hope that expert quilting can turn this ugly duckling into a swan.
Kaleido quilt top detail
Finishing this kaleido flimsy was at the top of my list of holiday sewing goals, so I am pleased to have it completed.  Second on my list is quilting the Paprika quilt that has been sitting around for far too long.  I have the wool batting, King Tut thread and the fabric for the backing all at hand.  Third on the list is a late entry: a quilt for a friend in need.  A few days ago I caught up with a friend on the west coast who has had a very difficult year, a crushing, soul-crippling year.  Being far away, what can one do but make a quilt?  Wanting to make something quickly, I found some charm packs in my stash: two Maison de Garance packs and two Moda Bella packs in Snow, and I turned them into HSTs.
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I have yet to decide how to lay them out.  HSTs are so versatile, aren't they?  I'll lay out some options and show them in another post.
DSC_0078

Half a quilt top and a winner (or two)

/ Monday 20 December 2010 /
kaleidos
Oh lordy, this kaleido quilt will be the death of me.  I spent the weekend finishing off the blocks for this quilt and starting to assemble the quilt top.  My design wall is a vinyl tablecloth that I pin to the living room curtains, and it was only big enough for half the blocks.  Since the pattern is so fiddly, and I have drafted it carefully on a piece of paper with all the colours marked, it didn't really matter that I could only see half the blocks at a time before I started to sew them all together.  Last night I was feeling pretty blue about how it was coming along.  I felt like the primary pattern of these star points weren't emerging the way I hoped they would.  I was starting to feel like it was just going to look like some random scrap quilt.  But in the photos, I see the rings a lot more clearly.  Why is that?  I'm kind of liking it again.
kaleidos
See how the primary pattern of the rings of star points are composed of four different blocks?  This means that things have to be sewn together very carefully.  I like to chain piece the heck out of things when I am assembling a quilt top, but I just couldn't do it on this one. When I tried to, I made so many mistakes, sewing the wrong sides of blocks together, etc., that I finally just limited it to joining up three pairs of blocks at a time.  Who said quilting was a sedentary activity?  I must have walked my 10,000 steps just going from the design wall (living room) to the sewing machine (dining room).
half a kaleido quilt top plus dog
Here it is, being held up by my old man in the kitchen this morning.  Darla seems to be interested in it, doesn't she, but in truth she is interested in the garbage can.  This is not a very classy prop, but I hope for forbearance from you all - my husband's arms were getting tired after me putzing around with the white balance on the camera and reminding him not to let the quilt drag on the floor, so I didn't have time to move the bin out of the way.  (Relatedly, I am excited to report that when I was last at the Workroom transferring my hard-earned money into Karyn's cash box, I found the large size Smart Plate, the ruler that I used for these kaleidos.  The small size makes blocks up to six inches, the size of these blocks in the current project; the large ruler makes blocks up to 12".  I posted about using the Smart Plate here, in case you want to know more.)
probably about 1/3 done
I've also been beetling away on my EPP diamonds, and I'm happy to report that I've gotten that sucker squared up, at last.  Well, perhaps rectangled-up is more accurate.
EPP diamonds coming along
It's great to have a hand-piecing project - this one is about 1/3 done, probably.  As it gets bigger, it's harder to handle, and I worry  a bit about the weight of it pulling on the stitches.
DSC_0066
DSC_0060
DSC_0059
Also, in other news, I am thrilled to have my clock back from the repair shop.
DSC_0071
This clock is a fixture of my childhood.  My grandfather worked for the Bureau of Mines in the US government and moved around a fair bit.  I remember where this clock was in all of their homes.  It came from his family home.  He was born in 1906, in Marion, Kentucky.  Every room in the house had a clock, and this clock was in on the mantel in the room where the boys would dress in front of the fire in the winter.  Well, it was with my mother after her parents passed, and now it is with me.  The clockmaker has had it for awhile, cleaning it and getting it up and running again.  When we wound it up and it started ticking, I became all weepy for days gone by - it has a lovely deep chime on the hour and a sweet feminine ding on the half hour.

Because I was so obsessed with the kaleido quilt, I was dilatory in announcing the winner of my Sew Mama Sew giveaway.  I was flabbergasted to receive 416 comments on the giveaway post, where I asked people to name their dream job.  I had a grand old time reading the comments, and there are some humdingers!  I thought you'd like to see what your fellow bloggers consider to be their dream jobs:

Full-time quilter/crafter
Philanthropist
Quilt student/appraiser
Quilt/craft store owner
Zookeeper
Chocolate taster
Writer
SAHM
Lactation consultant
Baby cuddler
Food taster/food critic
Domestic oceanic observatory consultant (beach bum)
Paint swatch/lipstick/fabric/hair dye colour namer
Reader
Researcher
Museum curator
Toy maker
Traveler
Translator
Personal shopper
Lighthouse watcher
Nurse
Bunny rescue
Corgi petter
Librarian
Flight attendant
Singer
Baker
Teacher
World traveler
Brewer
Latin-speaking cephalopod worker (hmmm)
Dog snuggler/puppy cuddler
Caramel eater
Fashion designer
Dilettante
Long arm quilter
Blog surfer
Doodler
Librarian
Vacationer
Commercial Pattern Archive worker
Gift-giver
Doctor
Cookie taster
Adoption facilitator
Restaurateur
Greeting card designer
Dancer
Nanny
Graphic designer
Photographer
Grandmother
Diet Coke drinker
Textile anthropologist
Furniture maker
Entrepreneur
Recreational therapist
Sims3/ Bejeweled Blitz player
Bird watcher
Sewing machine repair person
Quilt/sewing teacher
Retiree
Environmental planner
Muse
Whirlpool/spa tester
Ultrasound tech
Student
Artist
On-line chatter
Advocacy worker
Hand model
Studio musician
Quality inspector at Four Seasons hotels
Worker against human trafficking
Giveaway follower
Horse trainer
Wine maker (in Italy, natch)
Farmer
Dog resort owner
Cardmaker
Newborn baby rocker
Shark/dolphin biologist
TV watcher
Kitten belly quality control manager
Muppeteer        
Taste-tester at Jolly Rancher factory
Beekeeper
Tour guide at the Pyramids
Procrastinator
Luxury beach resort tester
Engineer
Ice sculptor
Caterer/party planner
Kayaker
Physicist
Willy Wonka factory worker (not Oompa Loompa)
Proofreader
Cat petter
Boxer rescue (dog, not athlete)
Tea drinker
Alpaca raiser
Bum
Archivist
Dog kisser 
Decorator
Day dreamer
Millionaire
 The random number generator was pressed into service, and it returned K@ren's name, whose dream job is to have a fabric store.  This was a very common dream job, and I wish it would come true for all of you!  I was also captured by Sherri's dream job, which is to be a professional dog kisser.  The hours for that job match nicely with those required to be a professional napper, so I think I will take that up, as well.  So I'll drop a bonus couple of FQs into the mail for Sherri.  Thanks for playing, everyone, and a warm welcome to you new followers.  I didn't win anything from the giveaways I entered, but never mind - I am slowly making my way through the comments left on my giveaway post; finding new blogs to read and meeting new people is the biggest prize of all!

Sew Mama Sew Giveaway Day!!!

/ Monday 13 December 2010 /
Today is Sew Mama Sew's Giveaway Day!  Here is the swag I'm offering up.  These four fat quarters of assorted quilting fabric!  Here are a couple of closer views of the fabric:
Sew Mama Sew giveaway loot
Sew Mama Sew giveaway loot
I would also like to remind you that I have just started a Flickr group for swapping quilty goodness like patterns, rulers, tools, fabric, etc.  If you have things that are duplicates or that you aren't using anymore that you'd like to swap, come over to the Quilters' Exchange group and add your goods to the pool! 
Now, for this giveaway, please leave a comment below, telling me what your dream job would be.  Mine is professional napper - I am an excellent napper, and if I could get paid for taking naps, I would be a millionaire: that's how good a napper I am.  So let's hear from you.  Comments are open until December 17, and it will be the standard random draw.  

Swapping charms

/ Wednesday 8 December 2010 /
I am a very peripheral member of a Flickr group called Old Red Barn Co. It's a very lively, chatty group that does quiltalongs at a rapid pace and periodically has swaps of different kinds. Earlier this year, I participated in one where I swapped packs of 25 different 5" squares with seven other women. I'm still hoarding them, and I have added to them over the year. I jumped in when they announced another swap last week.
25 5" squares for swapping with the Old REd Barn Co. folks
I am thinking ahead to next year, when my daughter takes Wine Gums away to university; I'd like to have a similar one to take its place. So I'm collecting these 5" charms in preparation. When my swap partners send me theirs, I will have 175 new ones to add to my hoard!
charm swap goods
I had to share these photos of the charms in the dollar store satin bags I picked up.  They make the charms look like treasure! I hope my swap partners will be happy!
Love these little satin bags

Extra stuff - let's swap!

/ Monday 6 December 2010 /
Today I want to talk about extra stuff.  I'm not normally someone who goes for the less is more approach to most things, and this includes quilting.  But from time to time, one does tend to end up with extra stuff. In my case, I inherited quite a few specialty rulers and loads of fabric from my mom when she passed (not to mention cross-stitch patterns and enough embroidery thread to go to the moon and back a couple of times).
Quilt Soup Tiddlywinks pattern
After I made the Christmas wreath that my mom had started as a mystery project from a Quiltmaker's magazine, I was contacted by a reader who was wondering if I could be persuaded to part with the issues so she could make a similar wreath.  No problem!  I was very happy to think that someone else could benefit from my mom's magazines.
Rising Star Quilt Club pattern
When I was in Texas, I went to The Old Craft Store in Carrollton.  It was a cute little store with a post office inside!  I wasn't turned on by the fabric, but I found some great rulers, including the Rapid Fire Hunter's Star ruler by Deb Tucker.  I really like Jackie's quilt using this ruler, so I was thrilled to find it.  I also got the Easy Angle and the Companion Angle rulers for making HSTs.
The Angler 2
But when I got home, I went to get the magazines out to send to Karen and I started looking at through the box of my mom's quilting things, and didn't I find the Easy Angle and the Companion Angle!  I could have kicked myself!   I also found a duplicate HST square-up ruler.  Argh - how frustrating!  Who needs duplicate rulers?
Quilt in a Day triangle tools bundle - photo 1
It occurred to me that it would be great if I could swap these rulers for others that I would use.  Or maybe for patterns, or other notions.  Why should I hang on to patterns like the Christmas wreath pattern or other patterns I have already made up when others might be interested in them?

So here's what I suggest:  an online swap meet.  Go to this Flickr group, Quilters' Exchange, to see what I have to swap and if you have some things you're ready to give away, take some photos and add them (you have to join the group first).  I've got some more things to add, like the Fons and Porter magazine issue with the Paprika pattern in it (I promise I will quilt this baby over the holiday - I already have the wool batting).  All the photos in this post, plus some other great swag, is listed on the Quilters' Exchange page at Flickr.  Go look and see what you think!

Recent Bee-haviour

/ /
DSC_0004.JPG
This is a shameful photograph.  It displays my bee blocks in arrears.  But this weekend was a sewing weekend for me, and I managed to catch up almost entirely on those blocks.
For the Incredible Shrinking Bee, I finished Claudia's Ohio Star,
For Claudia
and Madeline's Dove in the Window.
Dove in the Window for Madeline
For the Maple Leaf Bee, Austen gave us quilter's choice and some Hope Valley fabric.  Her fabric was strips about 4 3/4" x 20" wide, so it made it surprisingly difficult to find a 12" block that could be accommodated; you couldn't use a 6" patch or even make a 4.5" HST.  But I found this Jacob's Ladder block that fit the bill, even though I had to supplement with extra white fabric.
Jacob's Ladder for Austen
I also made Ariane's Dresden Plate.
Dresden Plate for Ariane
It was the first time I'd made one of these.  I used the zigzag stitch on my machine to sew down the centre circle, but I wasn't 100% happy with the way it looked.  So I took a chance and used the blanket stitch setting on my machine to sew down the petals, with much better success.
Blanket stitch
And for the Modern Tradition Bee, I made these two churn dash blocks, from a dark grey and Hope Valley.  I like this colour combination a lot - and from the blocks the others have made, I think this is going to be a knockout quilt.
Churn dash - September MTQB
Churn dash for September MTQB
I'm very nearly up to date, although not entirely.  But I did feel like I had earned the right to sew for myself a bit the next day.   On Sunday, I finished all the pinwheel blocks that are the foundations for the kaleidoscope blocks on my current project.  I'll show a photo taken previously, since it's been so long since I've posted about this project - you may have forgotten all about it!
More kaleidos
Coming together

Happy Chanukah!

/ Thursday 2 December 2010 /
It's early this year, isn't it?  Wow!  Chag sameach to all the quilting MOTs out there - all five of us - lol!  

Texas report

/ Tuesday 30 November 2010 /
We had a wonderful time in the Dallas area, visiting family for American Thanksgiving.  Our hotel was near a little town called Grapevine.
Mural
We were also just down the road from the Gaylord Texan resort, so we went in there to see it all dressed up for Christmas.  Oh my word!
plus-sized ornaments
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mariachi band at the Gaylord Texan
Watch out for the wicked witch!
Gingerbread cowboy boot!
I loved these shotgun shell Christmas lights!
only in Texas
It was great to be with family.  My Aunt June loved the Christmas wreath that I made for her.  I almost didn't do it, because I was so busy with work in the days leading up to our trip, plus I felt so guilty for working on something besides all the bee blocks I have in arrears.  But I'm so glad I did it - it made her so happy to have something made by her late sister.  Within the last four years, my aunt has lost her husband and the younger of her two sons - both of pancreatic cancer - and her sister (my mother).  She up and left everything in Tennessee - too many memories - and moved to be near her son in Texas.  I was thrilled to hear that she has been keeping company with a gentleman, a rancher who wears cowboy boots, of course!  My cousin's eldest son had just been married, so we got to welcome his lovely bride into the family.  We did puzzles, played Scrabble, watched Dallas lose to New Orleans, and ate loads of delicious food.
deep-fried turkey
We got lost just about everywhere we went.  My husband says it's because the roads weren't signposted particularly well, but I wonder if we are just getting older and more decrepit.  Next time we are definitely getting a GPS unit with our rental car.  However, one place we did not get lost was the Grapevine Mills Mall, which was right across the parking lot from our hotel.  Eve and I decided we would participate in the great American tradition known as Black Friday by hitting the stores at midnight on Friday morning. It was deadly, trying to stay awake when we were stuffed full of turkey, but once we got there, we perked right up.  We shopped until about 3am.  It was pretty busy!  But the mood was fun and festive - I couldn't see any of the desperation that you hear about with pushing and shoving to get bargains.  I wasn't really shopping for anything - paying duty and overweight luggage surcharges act as a counterbalance to all but the most astounding Black Friday deals.  However, my daughter certainly did quite well.  Nevertheless, we both agreed that we were glad we had done it, but that it doesn't bear repeating!
Ft. Worth Stockyards
We also went to the Stockyards in Ft. Worth and dined at Cattlemen's Steakhouse before taking in the rodeo!  We peeked into the bar at the Stockyards Hotel, but we were in too big a hurry to take advantage of the bucket of Buffalo Butt Beer.
Bar of the Stockyards Hotel, Ft. Worth
This handsome fellow is Elvis, and he was the mount of the current Miss Fort Worth Championship Rodeo.  He had an important job to do at the beginning of the rodeo as the crowd sang the national anthem.
Elvis
National Anthem
The events at the rodeo included bull riding, calf roping, barrel riding, and a crazed event where hundreds of children chased a sheep around the ring, trying to remove a tag from its tail in order to claim a prize.
At the rodeo
These guys are so much bigger in real life than they seem on television!
Star attraction
I never figured myself for a girl who goes for cowboys, but some of these guys......!
Bull riders getting ready
And they start young!  My pal Jennifer clued me in that the letters on his sleeve probably stand for Professional Bull Riding instead of Pabst Blue Ribbon, which is what I thought!
Junior cowman
These fellows had to stay on the bull for 8 seconds in order to get on the scoreboard.  It doesn't seem like much time, but most of them didn't qualify.  Those bulls were pretty angry!

Bull riding
Bull riding
Barrel riding was the women's event.  These women had to race their horses around each of three barrels and back to end of the ring.  The best times of the evening were less than 15 seconds.


It was an exciting evening!  A glimpse into another world - far from the university where I spend most of my time, for sure!
Isaac's new boots
I did make it to a small quilt shop in Carrollton, TX, but I will tell you about that in another post.  For now, I will leave you with this video of bull riding!

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