Quilt Catch Up

As those of you who have blogs know, blogging takes time.  I know that is why I haven’t gotten around to posting pictures of customer quilts I have worked on in the last month.  I will try to share a lot of pictures in this post and write just enough for you to get the info on these quilts.  I have to tell you that I have not snuck any surprises into any of these quilts.  I think my mind’s battle with itself scared me from adding any more surprises into other people’s quilts.  Here goes…

First off is Cindi’s quilt for her niece.  I love her color choices!  And, I was so happy to finally get to use some pink thread! She wanted the baby’s name quilted into the quilt, so we did that with a darker color.

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Next is Nancy’s quilt – her colors are soothing and go together so well.  Nancy gave me free range, so I decided to quilt feathers all over in the background white and make tulip  petals in the log cabin blocks with a matching thread.

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Marianne made a quilt using jelly rolls.  She wanted a simple swirl with the color names quilted into the middle of the colors.  I love how she made an otherwise simple jelly roll quilt look like it was a lot of work – I imagine it was!

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This next one is Leslie’s first quilt.  Can you believe it?  I thought she did an awesome job of piecing all those little squares together and getting them to match up.  I have to admit that while quilting this quilt, I fell in love the with colors and have decided that I MUST make a black and rust quilt for myself (add it to the list).

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And, here is Charlotte’s quilt for her grandson.  The critters are made with minky fabric, so they are soft and enticing for a baby.  We decided to just stitch in the ditch around the pinwheels and cornerstone blocks, echo around the animals, and quilt swirls to look like blowing wind near the pinwheels.

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Do you have a favorite from any of these?

Quilts from Days Gone By

What do you do when you know someone hasn’t finished a project that needs finishing, and this person hasn’t finished it because he or she is not able?  Do you help?  If it’s something you specialize in, do you offer to finish it?  As it turns out, I’m guilty on all charges.  Not only did I offer to help, but I offered to finish these quilts.

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It started out to be one quilt.  My husband’s Aunt Joyce has this quilt that she had started in the late 1980s, possibly in the early 1990s.  She was planning on giving it to her son when she finished, but she never finished it.  And… it was hand quilted… well, what she got done, which was most of it, was hand quilted.  All she had left to do was 2 borders and the cornerstones.

I’m not a hand quilter, and I haven’t been a hand quilter since I started my first full-sized quilt.  It’s just too hard on my hand and wrist and it takes waaaaay too long – I don’t have the patience for it.  But, Aunt Joyce is like a second mother to me, and I just can’t leave it unfinished for her son.  She’s in her mid 80s.  So, I offered to finish it for her.

When I was looking for the matching fabric for the borders that she had stashed away, I found a quilt top that looked very much like the hand-quilted one.  I figured I could finish that, even though it needs to be quilted entirely, by machine pretty quickly… probably sooner than the hand-quilted one.  I think I’m going to quilt feathers into the borders – there are plenty of wide open spaces.

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I didn’t know which side is the top, so I put the blocks that I thought might have the most stretch at the top, specifically the block with the hexagons.  That way I can try to tame it before it gets “stretched in” to the bottom.

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I hope I can do this quilt justice.  The blocks were hand pieced.  This is one of those dilemmas where you don’t want to sabotage a hand-pieced quilt with machine quilting, so what do you do?  I don’t have time to hand quilt it, so it’s going to have to be machine quilted.  I will, of course, continue to hand-quilt the one that was started that way.  I think it would bastardize it at this point to machine quilt it since most of it is hand quilted.

What are your thoughts on machine quilting a hand-pieced quilt top?  Tough Decision, huh?

 

 

 

Charity Quilt

Finally got the charity quilt done that I’ve been working on to be donated to Safehome.

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I quilted paws all over it to go with the cat theme.

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This quilt is so apropos since Safehome is building a pet shelter. If you are interested, you can help them build the shelter by donating here.   They still need over $10,000 to go before they can build the shelter

May’s Book Reviews… 5 of them… in June

I can’t seem to keep up with all the new quilting books that have been coming out.  Lots of great ones to peruse!  Since my business is longarm quilting, I will start with a book on machine quilting called…

Feathers That Fly by Lee Cleland

 

Martingale - Feathers That Fly (Print version + eBook bundle)

This is a GREAT book for a beginning machine quilter!  Lee gives you 14 projects from which to choose that will have you making a quilt top and then quilting feathers all over as you follow along with her detailed pictures and instructions.  She starts with a basic design and explains it in layman’s terms (think of hearts when you stitch feathers).

Martingale - Feathers That Fly (Print version + eBook bundle)  Martingale - Feathers That Fly (Print version + eBook bundle)

Her designs go from simple to complex.  You can’t imagine my surprise when I found the Intertwining Double Feather Repeat Design – as a professional quilter, I have not yet done this so I did not know how to quilt it.   It looks much like the picture below, with the curved “cables” intertwining with the feathers (don’t want to scare you off!).  It’s pretty cool!

Martingale - Feathers That Fly (Print version + eBook bundle)

 

Book #2

 

Patchwork Loves Embroidery by Gail Pan

Martingale - Patchwork Loves Embroidery (Print version + eBook bundle)

I think embroidery is coming back into vogue, and this book provides the cutest whimsical patterns by Australian designer Gail Pan.  I have found the most amazing embroiderers to be from Australia, Japan, and Europe.  We need someone from the USA now to take the lead!  😉  There are 15 patchwork and hand-embroidery projects, all of them small enough to take with you for hand-work.  I found all of the projects could be made as nice gifts for others (or yourself!).  In this book, Gail shows you the basic stitches that are used in her patterns.  Check out these projects and see for yourself if you’d like to take up hand embroidery.

Martingale - Patchwork Loves Embroidery (Print version + eBook bundle)

See how you could easily take a checkerboard quilt and add embroidery to make it something extra special?Martingale - Patchwork Loves Embroidery (Print version + eBook bundle)

Look at the adorable bird in this redwork bag!

Martingale - Patchwork Loves Embroidery (Print version + eBook bundle)

This is a little folder for your embroidery supplies.Martingale - Patchwork Loves Embroidery (Print version + eBook bundle)

 

Book #3

Hexagons, Diamonds, Triangles, and More – Skill-Building Techniques for 60-Degree Patchwork by Kelly Ashton

Martingale - Hexagons, Diamonds, Triangles, and More (Print version + eBook bund

Funny, Kelly was just visiting our guild meeting this morning  with this book! She has got to be a math genius, because she has provided about 80 designs in this book  and has done all the calculations and measurements for us. Now we can just cut out our fabric and start stitching.  No more measuring and cutting wrong, re-measuring and cutting right we hope, and then stitching.  There are 9 pages of templates.  If you’d rather have thick, commercial templates, she gives suggestions for which ones to purchase.  This is a great reference tool that will help you for years to come.

 

One of four Patchwork Cutting Guide pages…

 

Martingale - Hexagons, Diamonds, Triangles, and More (Print version + eBook bund  Martingale - Hexagons, Diamonds, Triangles, and More (Print version + eBook bundMartingale - Hexagons, Diamonds, Triangles, and More (Print version + eBook bund

In this section (above and below) she breaks it into chunks of information with visuals so you can see for yourself how the shapes in the blocks break into smaller chunks.  For example, she shows you a tumbling block within a 6-sided star.  Part of this section shows how to values make up and show off the different shapes for a stunning quilt.  If you look at the table topper below, the Y-Seams might intimidate you, but Kelly shows you how to do them, step-by-step.

Martingale - Hexagons, Diamonds, Triangles, and More (Print version + eBook bund

 

 

Book #4

Beyond Neutral – Quilts Inspired by Nature’s Elements by John Adams

Martingale - Beyond Neutral (Print version + eBook bundle)

In this book, John (obviously from the title) uses colors from nature to create quilts, but he goes one step further and takes objects from nature to use as the shapes in his quilts.  The book is broken up into sections that incorporate wind, water, earth, leaf, sky, grass, lava, coral, and stone as they apply to nature.  As I looked through this book, I felt comforted by the serene backdrops and the soothing feel of being surrounded by nature and wrapped with love in one of these quilts.

Martingale - Beyond Neutral (Print version + eBook bundle)

When I look at the quilt below, I can see the sandy beach and the waves of water.  If you turn the quilt the other way, the sandy beach can become a sunset.  Do you see it?

Martingale - Beyond Neutral (Print version + eBook bundle)

This reminded me of birds on a cloudy day.

Martingale - Beyond Neutral (Print version + eBook bundle)

Martingale - Beyond Neutral (Print version + eBook bundle)

John used some interesting colors for his background fabrics, moving beyond neutral-colored background fabrics that we have come to expect in traditional quilts.

Book #5

English Paper Piecing II by Vicki Bellino

Martingale - English Paper Piecing II (Print version + eBook bundle)

This is a  follow-up to her best-selling book English Paper Piecing and includes 11 projects, from a tote bag, table runners, sewing machine cover,  and quilts.   One thing I noticed about this book is that it seemed to move beyond traditional paper piecing and incorporated the same techniques for applique; sort of like paper piecing with a twist. 

Martingale - English Paper Piecing II (Print version + eBook bundle)Martingale - English Paper Piecing II (Print version + eBook bundle)

Here’s the tote bag.  I’d love to have a Grandma’s Flower Garden quilt, but to be honest, the thought of paper piecing that many small  hexagons together scares the bejeezus out of me.  I think I can  manage to have a taste of Grandma’s Flower Garden with a tote bag, though.

Martingale - English Paper Piecing II (Print version + eBook bundle)Martingale - English Paper Piecing II (Print version + eBook bundle)

Many thanks to Martingale and their photographer Brent Kane for providing these books and the wonderful pictures!  You can find out more about any of the above books and can order them from the Martingale website here.  Happy shopping!  😉

That’s it for now. Stay tuned for June’s book reviews sometime in this life time.  Just kidding!