Showing posts with label scrapitude. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scrapitude. Show all posts

Monday, July 20, 2020

I'm Still here and Still Plodding Along

I'm still here, alive and well.  Had someone told me that we would still be battling Covid-19 while other countries are on the upswing, I probably would not have believed you.  But, it's still here, still raging and has not just disappeared as our national leader said it would.  Not that I believed him, but his incompetence has as astounded me.  I'm angry at the lack of respect for the scientific community and the ignorance of the population.  As such, I'm just a bit depressed and time seems mostly irrelevant.  This is a long way to say I haven't gotten nearly as much completed as I thought I would during our home-bound time this summer.

But, I did finally complete the quilting on Scrapitude Take 2 in May.  It's a fairly large quilt (92" square I think) and took me quite some time to complete.  But, here it is.  I used the opportunity to try out some new free motion techniques and practice my feathers.  I'm pleased with the results.  
























 
The next project that got my attention was Bright Baby.  I was looking for some mindless sewing.  I had all the pieces cut out and all the 4-patch diamonds assembled and just had to put the top together. I'm looking forward to quilting this one.




As a consolation to myself for not being able to attend quilt meetings or  the cancelled quilt retreat, I decided to give a try to some on-line classes.  I took Beth Helfter's Accordion Sewn Half Square Triangles class.  I had never taken any on-line classes before and was a Zoom newbie.  The class was live with about 8 students from all over the US.  Beth is in my area and I had seen her speak before, so I knew a little about what I was getting.  The class was wonderful.  Beth was an attentive teacher with clear demonstrations and preparation.  The method for sewing the HSTs is fun and quick.  Now what to do with this block?  I'm going to make 3 more with different solid grey backgrounds and bright colors and assemble it into a lap/baby quilt.  Because, you know, I don't have enough projects to keep me busy.

Beth's web site is https://evapaigequilts.com/ where you can find more information about her classes, books and the tools she sells.

A few friends wanted to take a class together one of them suggested Timna Tarr's Stitched Mosaic class.  This one was a series of recorded videos that walks you through the steps of creating a stitched mosaic picture based on a photo.  The project I did was based on her class example.  I blew up the photo to about 20" square because I wanted the finished project to be a largish wall hanging for my sewing room.  I like the technique because you only work on one 2" square at a time.  I'm getting used to the fractured image and am holding our final judgement until I get it quilted.  I was regretting not printing the original photo in color because I think it would have given me better indication of color placement.  I think that would be more important of I were using a photo of an animal or multi-colored object.  I'm looking forward to quilting this one and will probably start it this week.  You can find Timna and information on her classes here:  http://www.timnatarr.com/




On an entirely different topic, I finally got an african violet to survive under my care.  My daughter bought this for me last spring with the special pot that is designed for violets to give them the right amount of water.  It survived the winter but was looking a little grey in some of the leaves.  I moved it to another window where it gets bright light but no direct sunlight, and added african violet fertilizer to the water and it's thriving!  I've never had one rebloom after buying it and never had one that looked this healthy after a few months.  I guess I've learned just how much care and neglect it can take.





You make have noticed a similarity in the last 4 photos.  Even though I do not have the creative energy that I thought I might have while mostly staying home, the creativity I do have is being translated into purples and bright colors.  It was a surprize to me.  I don't often work in bright colors, but I suppose those boost my mood and I'm not fighting it.

Last note - I do not like this new blogger interface.  I'm having a lot of trouble getting this formatted the way I want. Right now I'm tired of playing with it and want to get this posted.  So, here it is.  Done is better than perfect.





Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Winter UFO goals

On the last UFO challenge I completed one quilt, made progress on two, created a new UFO and ignored the rest.  This is the list of UFOs I want to make progress on this quarter:

1. Ladies of the Sea

I
 I got all of the blocks completed and trimmed last quarter.  I am now working on the nearly 400 HST blocks that will be part of the borders.  I would like to have this top completed this quarter.

2. Left Over Stars

I put a border on this top in October.  It needs a back, basting, quilting and binding.  I'd like to make progress on this before the next quarter.


3. Scrapitude Take 2

This should be the next quilt I prepare for quilting and start machine quilting.  I would like to have it completed before our guild's quilt show in May.  I guess I'd better get working on this.
4. Bright Baby Revisited

Yep, still on my list.

5. Handy Dandy Scrappy
Still here, too.










6. Put A Chicken On It

This is new to the list.  The top is a bonus quilt with left over pieces that I cut for the border of the star quilt (above).  The chicken is the product of a guild tutorial from this summer.  She had no place to go, and I thought she looked good on this background.  I may give her a few eggs to tend.  I bought a quilting template this fall that looks vaguely like chicken wire.  I plan to use that and practice my machine quilting. 

 7. Maxine

These little blocks showed up in my stash and I don't exactly remember how they got there.  I probably got them at a guild UFO auction.  I've got a bunch of bright fabrics to use as borders around the blocks.  I think there are 25 printed blocks in total.  This should be quick and easy to put together.













8. Blue Floral

I haven't even given this on a thought.










That's the list of the quilting projects I would like to concentrate on this quarter.  This doesn't address the knitting I would like to do, or the tessellating lizard hand piecing project I've been playing with (it's not technically a UFO yet.)  I certainly have enough to keep me busy for quite some time.