Evening in the Garden Quilts

Adventures in Fabric Art


1 Comment

Sunday Stash Report 9/20/15

2015-09-19 14.40.12Beautiful sewing weather here!  This week I finished The Very Large Christmas Quilt, but I don’t have good photos yet, so all you can see is the binding.  Looks good enough to eat, doesn’t it?  All 300+ inches of it!  No, the binding went fast.  Machine binding is one of my favorite parts.  The quilt was heavy and unwieldy to quilt, but it used ten and a half yards of fabric, including a lot of old pine cone and Christmas fabric, as well as some new pretty yardage.

This week:  + 0 yards,  – 10.5 yards
This year:  + 91.75 yards,  – 135.50 yards
Net fabric destashed  in 2015:  43.75 yards

Fifty yards looks like a piece of cake now, doesn’t it?  Could I do one hundred?  Hmm.

Hope you’re doing well with your stash!  I’m linking up to Judy’s report at Patchwork Times.


6 Comments

Sunday Stash Report: 8/23/15

image

Five and a half yards of fabric arrived this week, but none was used  (sad trombone).  I did some actual housecleaning, a lot of gardening, and we entertained, but mostly I spent the week dealing with this:

image

This was the commissioned baby quilt, and I had unfortunately dried it, and was lint- rolling it to photograph and mail off before I noticed the bleed on the back, where the light saber was.  I’ve been dissing the blue Northcott fabric (and it was narrow and frayed a lot), but now I’m starting to think the culprit may have been the silver decorative fabric I used, because that’s the only spot I had a problem.  Also, the OxiClean took all the color out of the silver (more sad music).  I always pre-wash, but, no, I probably didn’t pre-wash that.  Sigh.  Lots of thanks to the Twilters, who were super supportive as I pulled my hair out, suggesting various remedies for the quilt, and liquid remedies for me!

So today I’m starting one all over again.  Eh, its a beautiful day and I have no other commitments.  Sewing is sewing!

This week:  + 5.5 yards,  – 0 yards
This year:  + 91.5 yards,  – 115.75 yards
Net fabric destashed  in 2015:  24.25 yards

Hope all of you are making more progress in the right direction!
I’m linking up to Judy’s report at Patchwork Times.


1 Comment

July and August Goals

Wow, almost August already!  Those of you who are teachers (and parents!), there will come a time when August is no longer a frantic countdown to school, but opens up as a pleasant time for sewing, travel, and deck-sitting, I promise!  We are doing a little traveling, a little entertaining, and helping return DS to college, so my goals are modest, but I will enjoy the month.

2015-07-26 10.30.17

July Goals

1.  Finish the blue and gold quilt.  Yes, this one!  Really like how it turned out.

2.  Attempt a photo transfer technique for a Coastal wall hanging.  Yes.  First attempt is pictured.  We’ll see.

3.  Get another leaders and enders project organized so that it is available when I’m piecing.  Yes!  And, see, I wrote a note, because it will be months till this is done and I have no memory.

4.  Make a baby quilt from an animal panel I purchased.  Yep, right here!

Yes, I made these goals!  And this bonus quilt for donation/stash reduction.

2015-07-20 13.43.29

August Goals

1.  Complete coastal wall hanging.

2.  Work on UFO geometric wall hanging.

3.  Make a top from my new Christmas fabrics.  Looking at these tutorials:  Four-Patch Stars  and Big Star Quilt  from Missouri Star.

4.  Source little zippers for earbud pouches.

How did you do on your goals this month?  Eh, it’s summer!  Cooler, more productive days are around the corner.  Enjoy!


4 Comments

Thoughts on Sandwiching

image

I just spent ten minutes basting my newest quilt, and, as always, I gave thanks to the inventor of spray adhesive.  Without it, I wouldn’t be making many quilts.  My back just won’t take leaning over a table, never mind a floor, for the time it takes to pin baste a quilt.  I have jars of the right kind of pins, but haven’t used them in years.

I know some people can’t use spray baste because of allergies, and I’m really sorry.  If you just don’t care for the smell or residue, I have some suggestions.

image

I’ve tried three or four brands, but my favorite is June Tailor.  Its cheap (50% off at JoAnn at the moment!), it has less odor than some, and its not as sticky.  It doesn’t gum up my machine needles, which I hate.

The other important thing is that I don’t use much.  Lately, I’ve read bloggers talk about using a whole can for one quilt, or for three.  I think that’s craziness!  I can’t tell you how many quilts one can will baste if used lightly, because I use one for so long I lose track.  My guess is fifteen to twenty.  I shake well, then make a single light, zig zaggy pass over the backing or the batting.  That’s all it takes, and I don’t have problems with shifting.  Today when I picked up my can, it was very light and I wondered if I had enough.  Yep.  Can probably do the next quilt, too.

Also, I don’t handle it a lot.  I’ve read about basting, then turning the sandwich over to smooth the back.  I don’t understand why that’s necessary at all.  I tape the backing down to the table (floor), putting it under a little tension, so there are no wrinkles.  I spread out the batting, pull half of it back, spray the backing with spray baste, smooth the batting back down, do the other half.  Then I carefully arrange the top over the batting.  I pull half of it back, spray the batting, pat, not smooth, the top into place, then do the other half.  Then I remove the tape from the back, and consider where I will be starting the quilting.  I won’t have another place to spread it out like this again, so I use the opportunity to roll it up from each end.  Then I carry the “sausage” up to my studio and lay it on the sewing table.

And, I love my ping pong table!  I know a lot of you work in very small and/or crowded conditions, and my hat is off to you that you get anything made.  My knees and back are long past getting down on the floor for any length of time.  If I didn’t have my table, I guess I would cultivate a relationship with a community center, Y, church, etc., and push some of their tables together.  But you can often get a used ping pong table at a garage sale, and they fold and stand upright, so you can keep it in the garage and open it in the driveway when you need it.  Mine is in my unfinished basement, which has good ventilation.  Did I mention I don’t use much spray adhesive?  I’m still breathing.  Really.

Thanks for listening to my two cents on this.  Now I have some quilting to do!


3 Comments

Sunday Stash Report: 7/ 19/15

image

This week I used 3.5 yards to make the Cute Animal baby quilt.  I cut up a yard of poor-quality fabric to make plant ties for the garden.  Last week I used the last of the Michael Miller bird fabric to make a pillow case to go with the Scrappy Blue and Gold Trellis quiltimage

That’s good, because while traveling, I bought four yards of batiks at Patchwork Plus, Dayton, VA.

This week:  + 4 yards,  – 5.5 yards
This year:  + 81.5 yards,  – 103.75 yards
Net fabric destashed  in 2015:  22.25 yards

Creeping along toward my goal of destashing 50 yards this year.  Good luck on yours!

I’m linking up to Judy’s report at Patchwork Times.


3 Comments

Piggy Bank Savings Challenge

image

image

I’m joining Val from Val’s Quilting Studio again this year in her Piggy Bank Savings Money for Quilting Challenge.  The picher is ready!

image

Last year I saved for Craftsy classes (haven’t bought any yet).  This year I think I’ll save for quilt shows or #Twilter (quilters on Twitter) meetups.  I had lots of fun in Kansas City, and might want to do one again.  I’ll have to be a better saver, though!  Working on a plan.  Maybe Yuri can pick up some odd jobs…

Good luck on your savings project!


4 Comments

Time to Count Up

image

Yes, its been a year since I joined the Second Annual Piggie Bank Savings =Money for Quilting Challenge at Val’s Quilting Studio.

wpid-65.jpg

I forgot to take a photo of my finished collection of bills and change, but here is the pitcher half full.

I threw (gently placed!) change in here that I found in the dryer or around the house, and cleared my wallet of ones and change whenever it got too fat.

And the grand total is….

$76.05!

I’ll be using this “found” money to finance some Craftsy quilting classes, so let me know next time you hear of a sale, please!

For next year,  I may spend the next couple of years saving up to go on another quilt-related trip, since I enjoyed treking to the Kansas City Quilt Festival.  What will you be doing with your windfall?


Leave a comment

June and July Goals

2015-06-28 10.04.57

2015-06-29 13.33.08Not a perfect job on the goals this month, but that’s okay.  We’ve been traveling, and trying to get our house and yard into shape in between the rains.

 

June Goals

1.   Audit Jinny Beyer BOM Craftsy Class.   No.  Think maybe I’ve given up on this.

2.   Quilt and bind  Charlotte’s Scrap in a Box Mystery Quilt.  Yes!  Here.

3.   Attempt a photo transfer technique for a Coastal wall hanging.  No, but I bought the soluble stabilizer and the gel media.  Our printer is on the fritz.

4.  Assemble quilt blue and gold leaders and enders units into a top.  Yes!  And I’m quilting it!

 

The only “bonus” item was the Slabs of Color for donation, and those were just fun.

 

And July promises to be more of the same, so here are my unambitious goals for the coming month:

July Goals

1.  Finish the blue and gold quilt.

2.  Attempt a photo transfer technique for a Coastal wall hanging.

3.  Get another leaders and enders project organized so that it is available when I’m piecing.

4.  Make a baby quilt from an animal panel I purchased.

 

2015-06-27 15.11.33That certainly seems doable.  These goals do help focus my muddy brain so that I get something done, so that’s good.

Hope you are making progress and enjoying your summer (or winter)!

 


6 Comments

Design Wall Monday

image

After months of making these little units as leaders and enders, I finally made them into blocks and stuck them on the wall.  I’ll probably rearrange a few, but this is basically how they go.  This morninging I printed some butterfly designs for the white blocks.  It would make a lot more sense to trace them before I assemble the top.

I’m linking up to Design Wall Monday at Patchwork Times.  Check over there and vote for your favorites!


6 Comments

Slabs of Color

image

Nothing like a quick batch of donation blocks to give a sense of acomplishment.  These are the first “slab” style, “made fabric” blocks I’ve ever done.  They are for the Flood Texas with Love project at Sara’s blog.  Thanks, Katie (Katie’s Quilting Corner), for spreading the word about this on Facebook.

My blocks are a little different from the models, because my scraps are already cut into squares instead of random sizes, which I think are both easier and harder to use.  I would have preferred to use all strings, but I don’t have enough in the clear, rainbow colors.  It did use a lot of scraps, even though you can’t tell from my bins. These are 15.5″ square.

Hope some of you can whip up a few of these to send along for a good cause.  These should be beautiful quilts.