Saturday, October 31, 2015

Quilty Inspiration #6 - A Recent Quilt

What was your inspiration for the last quilt you made or the quilt you're working on now?

I will soon be able to put a binding on a quilt I call "Dark Strings."


My inspiration for the quilt was a basket of strings sitting by my sewing machine and the quilt "Snowball Strip" in 101 Fabulous Rotary-Cut Quilts by Judy Hopkins and Nancy J. Martin.


Since I didn't want a light quilt and since didn't have the fabric to make one exactly like this one, I chose the colors, the size of the blocks, and the corner triangles based on the the fabric I had available.

If you're feeling uninspired you might like to read Diane's post, Quilter's Blocks:  the do's and don'ts, at Butterfly Threads.  Be sure to read the comments, too.

I hope you'll share a post about the inspiration for a recent quilt.



--Nancy.
.

Friday, October 30, 2015

What a Surprise!

Someone (some kind and generous person) nominated my quilt for Viewer's Choice at the Blogger's Quilt Festival at Amy's Creative Side!  A surprise, indeed!  Whoever you are, thank you very much.


There are 20 great quilts awaiting votes and each viewer can vote for three.  So go vote!  Decide which ones you like the best and click the heart.  You'll make some hearts happy.

--Nancy.
.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

That Moment


I layer a quilt -- top, batting, backing -- and baste the layers together.  I begin the slow, steady work of hand quilting, stitch after stitch, to hold the layers together.  Hours and hours, sometimes months and months, the quilt and I spend together.

And then there is that moment -- that sudden moment!  It happens when I'm near the edge, almost finished with the quilting but not quite.  I realize I'm holding a quilt.  The layers are no longer three held together by pins and long stitches but a unified one:  a quilt!  It always feels like magic and it always surprises me.

Does this magic happen to you?  Is there a moment when you realize the layers in your hands have become a quilt?

--Nancy.
.

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Quilty Inspiration #5 - From Many Sources

What inspires you when you quilt?  This week I'm highlighting quilty inspiration others have shared over the past few weeks (without copying their images so as not to violate copyright).

As for me?  Paintings inspire in the use of some colors together, or some colors now (instead of later or never).

Won't you join us and share your quilty inspiration?  The link-up is open until 10:00 p.m., Thursday, October 29.

A Few Rules for Quilty Inspiration
  • Link a blog post (not your homepage) in which you've shared either a source of inspiration to begin a quilt, during the process, and/or the results of some inspiration and a bit about your creative process.  (I'm sorry but Instagram photos just don't offer enough substance for this link-up.)
  • Link the url for the post, not the url for your blog.
  • Please mention and link back to this post in your own blog post.  You can use the button below (copy the code) or use a text link.
  • Visit at least several other participants and leave comments on their posts.

Grab button for Share Your Quilty Inspiration
<div class="Share-Your-Quilty-Inspiration" style="width: 150px; margin: 0 auto;"> <a href="http://www.joyforgrace.blogspot.com" rel="nofollow"> <img src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhKGWOu_1YW1OijA6Li_GCh1qq7EuVoGKBgCIJF2GFw1Pv-1m8DvOB3Rwnokb3Aip5MUgsLt4Qf1wHnh_7vCMWuUBHUymwp9-TvkpgcWHS8efQgMywXy_rPCvSlKxD5-1Zf3lCZVSDF7-k/s150-Ic42/QI-print1-%252520150%252520black%252520letters.jpg" alt="Share Your Quilty Inspiration" width="150" height="128" /> </a> </div>




--Nancy.
.

Friday, October 23, 2015

Plaid Churn Dash Quilt in Blogger's Quilt Festival

This plaid churn dash quilt is my entry into the Scrappy Quilts category of the Fall 2015 Blogger's Quilt Festival which is created and hosted by the very creative Amy Ellis of Amy's Creative Side.  Thank you, Amy.

scrappy churn dash quilt from upcycled plaid shirts
I was very new to quilting when I saw a plaid quilt in a book and decided to make one similar to it.  Of course, the only similarities between the two are the use of plaids and the setting arrangement.  I chose the size randomly by cutting squares, cutting them in half diagonally, then pairing the triangles and stitching them back together into squares.  Then I determined the sizes of the other parts of the block based on those squares.  The blocks became 7½" squares.

All the fabrics come from re-purposed plaid shirts.  I loved making the blocks.  I combined colors and fabrics I thought looked fun together and arranged lights, mediums, and darks for contrast or similarity, depending on the block.  A variety of churn dashes emerged which I think gives interest to the quilt.

I quilted free-hand Baptist Fans across the quilt, one of my first hand-quilting experiences.
scrappy churn dash quilt from upcycled plaid shirts

The quilt in different, slightly warmer lighting.
scrappy churn dash quilt from upcycled plaid shirts

While it's not a perfect quilt, it's an immensely comfortable quilt and speaks to me of home, family, love, and warmth.  It's one that I hope will be durable and well-used.  I hope loved ones will cuddle in it, sleep under it, and picnic on it until it's worn threadbare.

Please go to Blogger’s Quilt FestivalFall 2015 Edition! to see all the categories with links to each, and/or to Blogger’s Quilt Festival–Scrappy Quilts Category to see more scrappy quilts.  You can nominate a quilt for Viewer's Choice Award at the individual links until October 29.  Between October 29 and November 5, you can vote for favorites in each category (and there are many categories!).  Return often, especially if you visit today or in the next few days.

For anyone who wants the details about this quilt, continue reading.  Otherwise, thanks so much for stopping by and reading. 

--Nancy.


Details about the Plaid Churn Dash Quilt

Dates
The top was finished sometime between 2006 and 2010.  (I didn't keep records then.)
June 1, 2014:  hand quilting begun
October 30, 2014:  quilting finished
December 27, 2014:  binding stitched
June 2015:  machine washed and dried (and ready for wear and tear)

Batting
Mountain Mist Cream Rose 100% cotton
This batting is easy to hand quilt, wraps and cuddles easily, but is not super warm.

Measurements
66" x 92 1/8"  top before quilting
65 1/2" x 91 1/2"  top and back pinned
65" x 90 1/4"  quilted and bound
64" x 89 3/4"  after machine wash and dry
.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Pinned to Sew

These are all the parts I need to make 19 pieced setting triangles

like the one below.

Sometimes I don't bother to pin pieces together but in these blocks the placement of triangles and squares are a little more particular.  (I've had to unsew more than a couple of times.)  I don't mind pinning.  It's something I can do while watching the news or talking with my husband.

I'm not usually a counter but because these seem to be taking a long time to finish, I counted.  Each triangle has 21 pieces and 19 seams.  (A whole block has 37 pieces and 36 seams.)  I was thinking the other day how some blocks have lots of pieces and seams, others are fairly simple.  Maybe I'll chose a simple block for the next quilt.

I have a Dieter's Tip for you:  Avoid the flu.  It's a speedy way to lose a few pounds but it's also a miserable way to lose them.  I would recommend almost any other method than the flu.  (Perhaps the flu is why it seems to be taking me so long to get these triangles together.)

Healthy days and happy quilting to you.
--Nancy.
.

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Sunflower

Remember these shapes from a recent post?  I bought them already cut without instructions and I wondered how they went together and what quilt block they would make.

I found it!  In In Love With Quilts

The block is called Sunflower.

In fabric it looks like this.

There's a second pattern needed to create the block (but there were no pieces cut nor pattern shape with the other fabric).


Now I know.  I'm not sure I would use 1930s prints for this block.

I guess I'll turn those cut-outs into something else.  Stars?  A triangle border?  I'll have to play a little.

Happy quilting to you.

--Nancy.

P.S.  There's still time to link up to Quilty Inspiration #4.
.


Saturday, October 17, 2015

Quilty Inspiration #4

A few weeks ago my husband was sitting at the kitchen table reading The New York Times.  I walked into the kitchen from the other end and, though further away than this photo, this is what I saw.

The red strips that caught my eye.  My first thought was that one of the galleries in NYC had a quilt exhibit and was either advertising it or The Times was doing an article about a quilt exhibit.

I asked my husband, "Oh, is that a quilt?"
"Where?" he asked.
"On the page there in front of you, the photo with red stripes."
"No, it's an article...."  I immediately lost interest when I knew it wasn't a quilt.

Still, the image stuck with me.  In my memory, the red stripes and the darker stripes were equally wide.  In my mind I began to create a quilt with fabric scraps sewn into long strips alternating with red strips.  Maybe I will create a very scrappy strip quilt one of these days.

I don't know about you but I receive way more inspiration for quilts that I will ever have time to create.  Life's too short and I'm too slow.  Still, I make a note of the ideas that come along.

Do you have quilty inspiration to share?  An idea that came (maybe out of nowhere!), an image or quilt you saw, perhaps a quilt you're working on that "told" you to do something other than what you had originally planned?  If so, please link your post below.  Link any post with your ideas or experiences with inspiration for a quilt.  Through Thursday, October 22, 2015.

--Nancy.


Wednesday, October 14, 2015

A Scattered Week

I've been out and about, at home, then away again, etc., without a stretch of time to devote to much.  Still, I've been able to work on two quilts.

I've been cutting these triangles and squares...

...to make more of these side setting triangles for this quilt.
I also cut all the green strips and white squares to make the stars in the center.  Some are sewn but not many.  Some quilt blocks have many pieces and seams in their creation.

I'm finally nearly finished hand quilting the first corner (only!) of this quilt.  Two sides and three corners to go.  I'm a slow quilter.  At first I thought the brown quilting thread might be too dark.  Now I think it could have been darker.

This past Saturday there was a Zero Landfill event nearby.  Design and interior decorating companies donate their unwanted samples and deliver them to a specific location where educators, artists, or anyone else who knows about the event can look through them and take what they want. 

I found a sample book of 50/50 linen/cotton fabric in a fun range of colors.  These are a few.  I couldn't leave them behind. 
Each sample has enough usable fabric to make two 3" squares.  The fabric is about the same thickness as several thrift store cotton/linen shirts I have.  I can't spend much time on them at the moment other than imagine the possibilities. 

That's been my week.

Hey, there's still time to link up to Quilty Inspiration #3 -- until Thursday evening.  It's a new, small, little-known link-up for sharing an inspiration for a quilt:  colors, fabric, photograph, painting, another quilt, etc.  If that's interesting to you, please link a post.

I hope you having a great week!

Linking to WOW at Esther's Blog, WIP Wednesday at Freshly Pieced, and Let's Bee Social #94 at Sew Fresh Quilts.  Thanks for hosting, ladies.

--Nancy.
.

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Quilty Inspiration #3 - Butter & Geraniums

Just a Note:  Quilty Inspiration runs from Saturday evening around 10:00 p.m. until Thursday at 10:00 p.m.  If you don't have a post ready to link, please know that you have a few days to create one.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Sometimes when I'm reading a book the words bring an image to mind.  It was so when I was reading Annie Dunne by Sebastian Berry.  Annie lives on a farm in Wicklow, Ireland, in the 1950s.  One morning as she is about her farm work she comments,

"From red geraniums to yellow butter I go."

Ah, red and yellow could be beautiful together.  And then I remembered seeing Mary Cowan's book Colorful Stash Busters not long ago with its red, white, and yellow quilt on the cover.

I have plenty of yellow and red scraps so I'm playing with little 2" squares.  Four-patches, nine-patches, or...?  I'll wait for more inspiration to decide what comes next.


The wonderful thing about creative inspiration is that we can act immediately noticing more inspiration as we work, or we can let it rest in the back of our minds for a while and see what other thoughts and ideas gather around it and then begin.

Now it's your turn!  I hope you'll join in and also let others know about this link-up.  Thanks.

--Nancy.

Just a Few Rules for Quilty Inspiration
  • Link a blog post (not your homepage) in which you've shared either a source of inspiration to begin a quilt, during the process, and/or the results of some inspiration and a bit about your creative process.  (I'm sorry but Instagram photos just don't offer enough substance for this link-up.)
  • Link the url for the post, not the url for your blog.
  • Please mention and link back to this post in your own blog post.  You can use the button below (copy the code) or use a text link.
  • Visit at least several other participants and leave comments on their posts.

Grab button for Share Your Quilty Inspiration
<div class="Share-Your-Quilty-Inspiration" style="width: 150px; margin: 0 auto;"> <a href="http://www.joyforgrace.blogspot.com" rel="nofollow"> <img src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhKGWOu_1YW1OijA6Li_GCh1qq7EuVoGKBgCIJF2GFw1Pv-1m8DvOB3Rwnokb3Aip5MUgsLt4Qf1wHnh_7vCMWuUBHUymwp9-TvkpgcWHS8efQgMywXy_rPCvSlKxD5-1Zf3lCZVSDF7-k/s150-Ic42/QI-print1-%252520150%252520black%252520letters.jpg" alt="Share Your Quilty Inspiration" width="150" height="128" /> </a> </div>

Thursday, October 8, 2015

My (Lack of) Resolve

At the beginning of the year I resolved not to buy more fabric, a resolve which I announced to my daughter and husband.  I was strong for many months, except on the rare occasion when I found fabric in the form of a shirt at the thrift store.  Here and there, now and then, I bought a shirt that I knew would look better in a quilt than on a person.

And then along came the sale at the local quilt shop several weeks ago.  The allure of new fabric is very strong.  My husband drove with me to the shop and ran an errand or two while I looked around.  He knew I went to the shop to buy fabric.  He said not a word about my resolve not to buy fabric.  He's a kind husband.

There was a bag filled with this fabric, plus some smaller pieces. (The photo doesn't do it justice).
They were scraps, probably leftovers from cutting kits at the shop.  They feel luxurious and the colors are luscious.  I have no idea what I'll do with these but I know I'll use them in some wonderful quilt(s).  Maybe a small quilt....

The afternoon of the same day we went to the quilt show in another nearby town.  My husband went along this time, too, since we had errands to run afterward.  He patiently waited while I took my time looking at and photographing the quilts -- after looking at the fabric for sale there.  It seems the quilters buy fabric and decide they don't want it, donate it, and I buy it.  They arrange 10 or 12 pieces into bags by color and price it to sell:  $1.00, $2.00, $2.50.  Who could pass up such great buys, especially a scrap quilter?  The donated pieces are usually shorter but some are as long as a yard and a half.  There were finished and partially finished blocks for sale, too.

These off-white fabrics came home with me.  They were all half yard or less and one was a group of strips of various lengths and widths left over from someone's project.  Not a problem since I'll cut them into smaller sizes or sew them into larger blocks anyway.

The oranges (are those cheddars?) are half yard pieces.  The browns were at least a yard and one was about two yards long.  The center brown was a longer which could become a cute size 2 dress for my granddaughter (think blue piping and buttons).

These reds/roses/corals were all half to quarter yard pieces and two were just 4" wide strips.

And then there were these pieces, many cut and pinned in groups of eight to create . . . what?  A flower?  A circle?

Some fabric had uncut shapes drawn on part of it with pencil, which left some unmarked fabric.

Do you know what these pieces were to become?  One set of cut-outs was pinned but not stitched or ironed.  I almost think it should become a circle but it doesn't look like it's long enough for the ends to meet and lay flat.  If not used for their intended block, could these become stars?  Or could they alternate direction and become a triangular border strip?  Or . . . ?

I was pleased with my purchases.  Some of the reds and lights will go into the quilt I'm currently working on.  The rest will be used elsewhere.

To preface this next bit I want to say that my husband is very supportive of my quilting efforts but not so much of my fabric collection and collecting.  Plus he knows I resolved not to buy more fabric.  When I walked out of the quilt store with a bag he didn't say anything.  But when I walked out of the quilt show with a bag he asked, "What's that?"  "Fabric," I said.  His eyebrows arched just slightly, his eyes went up (but not quite into an eye roll), then he put his hand to his head.  And he said not a word.  I thought all of this fabric for under $20.00 was a great buy (but I didn't tell him how much I paid).

Now, I have to back to picking up my resolve not to buy fabric this year and go back to work on a quilt in progress.

I'm linking this post to Sunday Stash #147 at Molli Sparkles.

Thanks for reading,
Nancy.
 
.

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Quilty Inspiration #2 - Circles on Earth

Welcome to Quilty Inspiration #2.  I hope you'll decide to link up.  Share some bit of inspiration you've received for either a quilt that may be, a quilt that's in progress, or a quilt you've already made.

Here's my bit of inspiration for the week.  These are aerial photographs of earth from Earthview.  The arrangement of shapes make me think of quilts.  (You can click on any of the images to see them larger, then click again to see them even larger:  I'm not using Lightbox.)






I may never make a quilt based on any of these photographs but who knows what my brain will do with the images or how it will combine them with other ideas.  Circles have been on my mind for a while.  These images just add to my ideas.

Now it's your turn to share your inspiration.  Perhaps you were in the middle of a quilt and changed directions from how you thought it would be.  Share what happened.  Maybe you read some words that created an image of a quilt in your mind.  Or maybe you were sorting fabric and the colors inspired you.  Please share.

Just a Few Rules for Quilty Inspiration
  • Link a blog post (not your homepage) in which you've shared either a source of inspiration and/or the results of some inspiration and a bit about your creative process.  (I'm sorry but Instagram photos just don't offer enough substance for this link-up.)
  • Link the url for the post, not the url for your blog.
  • Please link back to this post in your own blog post.  You can use the button below (copy the code) or use a text link.
  • Visit other participants and leave a comment on their posts.

Grab button for Share Your Quilty Inspiration
<div class="Share-Your-Quilty-Inspiration" style="width: 150px; margin: 0 auto;"> <a href="http://www.joyforgrace.blogspot.com" rel="nofollow"> <img src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhKGWOu_1YW1OijA6Li_GCh1qq7EuVoGKBgCIJF2GFw1Pv-1m8DvOB3Rwnokb3Aip5MUgsLt4Qf1wHnh_7vCMWuUBHUymwp9-TvkpgcWHS8efQgMywXy_rPCvSlKxD5-1Zf3lCZVSDF7-k/s150-Ic42/QI-print1-%252520150%252520black%252520letters.jpg" alt="Share Your Quilty Inspiration" width="150" height="128" /> </a> </div>

Link a post in which you've told something about some quilty inspiration you've received.  (And please spread the word.  The more who participate, the more interesting the link-up will be.)

--Nancy.


Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...