Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Conunrum

I have just uploaded the last quilt photos from my camera to my computer, and then I started sorting. Sounds strange. But I did not document or even label most of my quilts, so now I am trying to remember when I made each quilt because I want to present them as best I can in chronological order.

But that presents another problem. Do I go by when I selected the fabrics, or when I started cutting/sewing, or when the quilt top is finished, or when the quilt is finished? From start to done-done finished (with binding and label), some of my quilts have taken more than 10 years to be done-done finished!

To make things a bit easier to identify age-wise, I sorted my photos into specific time periods (marked by major events or by where I lived). Then within each category, I have tried to remember the sequence of which quilt came before or after other quilts.

That's the best I can do, and I'm not going to worry about it any longer.

Now that *that's* done, on to another quilt...

I know one of my earliest quilts was a baby quilt I made for the first daughter of my youngest brother. That means I made it about 21-22 years ago. Here it is:



While this quilt looks like it has blocks in it, it doesn't. It was assembled in strips. The individual strips were pieced and then they were sewn together before the final, plain border was attached. Talk about fussy piecing. I really needed a design wall, but I didn't know such a thing existed. Maybe at that time it didn't. Who knows. I have thought about that quilt a few times in the past and considered making myself a larger one. But now that I remember how it has to be put together, well, I think I have more than enough other projects that require my attention that I probably won't do a large version.

Now, please pay attention to this announcement as you won't hear it very often: I did the machine quilting on this quilt! Very simple straight-line stitching, but I'm the one who did it. All the blame, all the credit comes right here.

Kathy

Monday, June 1, 2009

And the quilting habit takes off!

After finishing the quilt from the first quilting class that I had taken, my interest in making quilts increased. I went to Quilt in a Day and found a pattern that I liked. Well, what I *really* liked was the quilt on the cover of the book. And *that* was the quilt I wanted to make - white with red floral and blue floral fabrics. I really tried to duplicate that quilt. I'm sure I spent more than an hour looking for fabric that would result in a quilt that looked similar to the quilt on the cover. I finally realized it wasn't going to happen. So I spent nearly as much time trying to find 5 other fabrics to use in that pattern. I think this is the quilt that gave me the most problems in finding fabrics. Maybe it was because I was still a beginner. Maybe it was that the shop did not have the fabric selections that *I* needed (and still need - the more fabric in the shop, the happier I am). Eventually, I went with "close enough". Here's the quilt:



And here's what you cannot see from the photo: The lightest peach/coral fabric is a multi-color print that contains green. But it is an olive-y green. And the other "green" fabrics are really blue-ish green. If you put the multi-color light peach next to either of the greens, they just do NOT play well together - at least if you look at them closely. However, when I look at the entire quilt (not the individual parts), my eye doesn't see those clashing greens. It sees the peachy color. And the darker coral color plays up the blending colors from the lighter fabric. So the end result is still pleasing.

So the lesson from this quilt is that colors don't need to match perfectly. It's the totality of the effect, how the major colors play with each other, and the light/medium/dark contrasts that are important.

Oh, I still sometimes try to get too matchy-matchy with my fabrics. One of my more recent quilts (one of my favorites and I do love it) was made from at least 25-30 different print fabrics, yet somehow the quilt kinda looks like it was made from only 2 fabrics, a light and a dark. I'll get to that one later in my quilting chronicles.

But, before I end this post, I'm going to show you another quilt made from the same pattern...



My niece wanted a pink and purple quilt (she was about 8 or 9 at the time). I had lots of pink, but I didn't have purple. (Or it was more that I wasn't sure I could work on pink & purple in the same quilt.) As I had lots of blue, I substituted. Some years later, I kind of regretted not using pink/purple since that was what she asked for, but by then it was too late. Anyway, I really liked how her quilt was turning out and decided I wanted one like it. But as I measured how much fabric I had left, I didn't have quite enough to make an identical quilt. But, as it turned out, by changing color placement I could still make a similar quilt. The one you see in the photo above is mine. My niece's quilt has the exact same fabrics used in the same way, but where mine is blue hers is pink and where mine is pink hers is blue.

I mentioned that this was the same pattern as the earlier photo. It is. It's just that pieces of the block are colored differently from the earlier quilt (and not just the change from green/coral to pink/blue). In the coral/green quilt, there are roundish areas of white. These are really white squares with 2 coral corners and 2 green corners. But in the pink/blue quilt, the white squares have 4 light blue corners. The 9-patches in the pink/blue quilt have white centers, while the 9-patches in the coral/green quilt have 9 colored squares. What an amazing difference color placement can make.

Kathy

Sunday, May 31, 2009

My interest in quilting begins...

I enjoyed that first quilt for several years without making any other quilts. About the time that my mother expressed an interest in starting to make quilts, I received a crafting catalog that had quilt kits in it. There were two that I liked so I ordered them. When they finally arrived, I was a bit disappointed. The fabric had already been cut into strips (width of fabric). And, I'm not sure, but I think the fabric was not 100% cotton. At least, it had a kind-of stiff feeling to it that I didn't care for. I did make one of the kits and realized that the quilt was not as big as I would like for my bed. So I went to the fabric store and hunted up some kind of fabric that would do as a border (which was not included in the kit, what was up with that?). I did get the quilt top finished. And it was large enough (barely) to use on my bed. Not quilted, just tied. I don't have a photo of this quilt because I don't have it anymore (I hadn't started photographing my quilts yet).

The other kit stayed a kit for maybe 10-15 years before I finally made it. It didn't have any border fabric, either. So I made do with what I could find at a quilt shop. It is definitely *not* the second (or even third) quilt that I ever made. But it was one of my first quilt-related purchases.



After I finished it, I thought that I would probably give it away. But I think it has grown on me. I will probably make a final decision after it gets machine-quilted by a professional longarmer. If I were making this quilt from a pattern and I were using the same colors, I would probably make sure that there were different sizes/visual textures to the different colored-fabrics. But, still, when it is finished, it will keep someone warm, whether me or someone else.

As for the first quilt that *I* planned (pattern, fabric, etc), that was from a pattern that was eventually called "A Winning Hand" (a variation of "Card Trick"). The pattern had not yet been published by Quilt in a Day. The class I took may have been used as testers for the final pattern. Mackie, the author of the published book, was teacher for the class I took at QIAD. This is the first quilting class I ever took, and where I started learning the "hows" of making a quilt, like a 1/4 inch seam, rotary cutting, etc.



It's awfully pink, isn't it. The background is a solid, but the sashing is tone-on-tone. One of the "cards" in the blocks is a solid. And with this quilt, I learned that tone-on-tone reads as solid from even a short distance. So if I stand back just a little, I see what looks like a lot of "solid". Even so, I still like this quilt. The floral fabric remains one of my favorite fabrics. This quilt was finished using the "birthing" technique that I learned at QIAD, and then was tied all over.

The back of this quilt has its own story: I thought I had bought enough fabric for a backing. What I did not take into account is that once I was ready to add borders I wanted the quilt to be larger than the pattern specified (I like extra length hanging down the sides of my bed). When I started to cut/piece the plain light pink fabric for a back, I, uhhhh, mmmm, well..... To put it bluntly, there was just not *quite* enough fabric for the entire back of the quilt. Oh, shoot! Now what to do? I pondered, and thought, and pondered some more. Eventually, if I recall correctly, my eyes fell on the extra squares of the fabric that I had used on the front. Hmmm.... Is there some way I can make use of those? I wonder.... What if... "Racing stripes?" Would that work? So I did a little figuring, and, YES! it will work. The result:



Some few years ago, I decided that I would like it to be quilted and decided to hand quilt it. I just started hand quilting 1/4" away from the seams of the "cards" on the inside of the cards. Ooops! When I look at the quilting from the back, it looked like a swastika. Yikes! Out came all the hand quilting. Thank goodness it was only one block.

I have not (yet) revisited the idea of hand-quilting this quilt; it remains tied.

By the time this quilt top was finished, I was hooked. I knew I would be making more quilts.

Kathy

History of my quilting

I just finished taking photos of my quilts and uploading them to Webshots. I had already uploaded some, and today I uploaded photos of 18 quilts that I made (or planned) and another 5 quilts that were made by others. While taking the photos, I decided that I wanted to describe the history/background/decision-making/lesson learned behind each quilt.

However, if I try to do this all at once, the blog post will be *huge*. So, instead, I will take them one by one, in as much in order that they were made as I can remember.

Ready for some history?

MY VERY FIRST QUILT!

I was at my Grandmother's house and she was cleaning out and getting rid of "stuff". She unearthed a quilt that her mother had made. It was truly falling apart. Many of the seams had come apart ( and it was easy to see that she used a blanket for the batting!). It really was in bad shape. My grandmother was going to throw it out. ACK!!! "Noooooo", I objected. I couldn't imaging throwing out a quilt made by my great-grandmother. I figured, "I know how to sew. So I can save parts of this quilt by making (re-making) it." Keep in mind that I had never made a quilt before. Here's a photo of this quilt after I finished it:



Looking back, here's what I remember (some some of the techniques that I would probably not use today [otherwise known as "mistakes"]):

I decided to save the "flowers" from the quilt, so I carefully removed all of them. However, some of those flowers were also falling apart, so I let those go to trash. When I finally had my stash flowers, I needed new background fabric for them. I when to my local fabric shop (I didn't know that there existed anything known as "quilt shop"). I looked all over that fabric shop for a plain white fabric. Arrrrggghhh! Could not find any. All right, next best thing was white fabric that had woven texture. (today I would shudder at this) I bought a bunch, took it home, and cut it into squares. Then I started re-appliqueing the flowers, using the same blanket stitch to attach the flowers, duplicating what my great-grandmother had done.

Eventually, all the blocks were finished and I got them all sewed together. Hmmmm. What in the world am I going to do about fabric for the back of the quilt? Fabric doesn't come that wide. (I don't know about *then*, but I know it now comes as wide as 120", more than wide enough. But, I digress.) Ah-hah! I know! I'll use a sheet! So off I went to find a queen size flat sheet in a lovely peachy-orange color. I used my grandmother's living room floor to layer everything. Then came the hand-quilting. Yes, folks, I hand-quilted this baby. I threaded up my needle just like I always did when sewing clothes: a nice length of thread, doubled-up with both ends used to make a nice knot! (Ummmm, that was *not* a quilter's knot. It was both ends of the thread wrapped around the end of one finger and then *rolled* off the finger into a large, ugly knot. Now I know that real quilters use a single length of thread, with a tiny knot that can be pulled into the middle of the quilt "sandwich". Oh, well.) I had one hand under the quilt and one hand on top and I quilted that quilt using the same hand motions that I used for needlepoint. (Of course, that resulted in the stitches on the back of the quilt being all different sizes and going in all different directions!) Oh, and I used a ruler and lead pencil to draw lines on the blocks so I would know where to quilt. And then came my final problem: How will I finish the edges of my quilt? (think, ponder, more thinking) Ohhhh! I know! All I need to do is fold the excess sheet over the top of my quilt, tuck the edges under, and stitch it down (thus making a border-binding). I even mitered my corners. I was so proud of that quilt when it was finished.

I refuse to be ashamed of the mistakes. After all, I didn't know any better. Besides, even with mistakes, that quilt still provides warmth at night; and a "perfect" quilt would not be any warmer than this one. I just refer to it as my "quilt with character". And, best of all, I have preserved something from my great-grandmother's quilt.

Kathy

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Stash Report Week 1, 2009

I came across the idea of keeping track of stash in the middle of 2008. But the year was half over and I had no idea how much I had used up to that point. (Then I kinda forgot about keeping track - oops!) But we now have a new year and I ran across this again, so, here I go:

I am currently working on Pinwheel Parade, which I started (sort of) about 18 months ago when I made BOM kits for guild using this block pattern. My 30 blocks have been sitting and waiting for me ever since the blocks were turned in. That quilt is on my 2009 list of things to work on. It is in progress right now. However, of the 30 blocks, 6 are not quite what I want to use. For now, they will sit on the sidelines and I will continue to make my own blocks to finish off my queen-size quilt. If I need them later, I will add them in. But for keeping track of fabric used, I won't count the BOM blocks, only the blocks I am working on now. I think I will use Judy Laquidara's method of keeping track (pull fabric and cut). I'll admit that not all of my pieces have been cut yet, but they will be soon, and my count for this week includes all the fabric that will be used in all the blocks (no sashing or borders yet).

Fabric Added This Week: 0.0 yards
Fabric Added Year to Date: 0.0 yards

Fabric Used This Week: 10.4 yards
Fabric Used Year to Date: 10.4 yards

Kathy