Saturday, November 15, 2014

More quilts for little ones

More quilts for little ones! These two went to a 3-year-old great niece and her new baby brother.


This was made from 6 fat quarters using the Turning Twenty Pattern.



Here is the back of it:




Here is the one for the new little boy. I just cut squares and rectangles to make this one.


A close up view:




A view showing the backing:


Sunday, November 9, 2014

Free Motion Quilting

What is this mess below?



Oh, that's me trying to free motion quilt. I recently found out about Leah Day https://www.leahday.com/ and her fabulous free motion quilting. She is a talented young lady. You can take one of her classes on Craftsy.com. Use the link on Leah's website to get 50% off the classes.

I signed up for "Free Motion Quilting a Sampler". It is 9 hours of video instruction about free motion quilting. I've watched a few hours so far and it is great. It's the first class I've taken on Craftsy. You go at your own pace, can pause any time you want and even add notes at any points in the video. 

One reason my practice piece is such a mess is because of tension issues. I had dark thread in the top and light thread in the bottom to make sure the tension was right. It wasn't! I kept messing around with it. Tried different thread on the top and still had problems. Finally I tried a different bobbin. Ah ha! That was the problem. The bobbin I was using seemed to not be wound tight enough. 

I still need a lot more practice of this type of free motion quilting. I'm not good at judging distances. That is part of my problem doing this type of echo quilting.

This practice was done on my Husqvarna Viking Quilt Designer II. Leah Day talks about a way to modify a generic free motion quilting foot so that it does not "hop" while you are quilting. I realized with my Quilt Designer II, that is not necessary. If you get the speed up just a little, the foot stops hopping. I made a short video to show you.

 


I spent a lot of time organizing quilting supplies and fabric this weekend. I found two items I need to frame or make into wall hangings.






Saturday, November 1, 2014

Two little girl quilts

Today is about more baby quilts. These two quilts went to sisters.

This one took me a lot longer than it should have. I just was not in the quilting mood for a long time. But I did get it to her before she started to school :)




Isn't she a cutie?




When the little sister was announced, I got motivated to finish the one above and make one for the youngest.



This was the "Turning 20" pattern but with 6 blocks instead of 20 blocks. 





Friday, October 31, 2014

Back to blogging!

So it's been years since I updated my blog, oh well. I'm not even going to try to recap the last few years but just focus on I've gotten my sewing mojo back. 

My nieces and nephews have produced a few children in the last few years, so I will start with some pictures of baby quilts. 

The oldest great-nephew in this picture already has a quilt so I made him a fleece blanket.





For the littlest one, I did this sea theme quilt:



This picture is showing the front and the back.





 For the girl in the family, I did this with flowers and butterflies on one side and ladybugs on the other side:






This is the braided edge on the fleece blanket. I got the instructions from http://www.piecesbypolly.com/2010/12/braided-fleece-blankets-tutorial.html 

I didn't use the bent paper clip like she did. I just used my fingers to connect the pieces.
 


This is my blanket/quilt tester. His name is Chuck Norris. 


More pictures to come in a few days!

Monday, November 9, 2009

Remaking an old quilt

A few months ago I bought a set of vintage quilt blocks from eBay. These had once been part of a quilt and were still attached in rows with sashing. There were 6 rows, each containing 8 blocks. The sashing was detoriating beyond thread bare, it practically fell apart in my hands.

The blocks had been machine sewn. I saw no remnants of actually quilting but some of the blocks are worn spots or torn fabric. I ripped what was left of the sashing. I think the blocks were originally supposed to be 9 inches finished. I say "supposed to be" because the seams were not straight and most of the blocks were less than 9 1/2" unfinished. I trimmed the blocks so they would all be 9 inches square before I put sashing back on them. Some were barely 9 inches! Talk about a challenge, this was!

I cut the sashing from white muslin at a size of 3 1/2 inches wide. I also added 3 1/2 inch wide sashing to the outside as a border. I'm pleased with the results. Hopefull later today I can get a shot of the whole top. Here are a couple of close ups.





Sunday, October 18, 2009

It's finished!!!!!!!!!!!!

At last! The quilt that took 16 years. It is finished! I just finished hemming down the binding. It was the first large quilt I started when I was first quilting in 1993. The pattern is called Crown of Thorns or Wedding Ring.

It was machine pieced and hand quilted. Each white square has a design in it, the pieced squares have the quilting in the white parts. The finished quilt is about 80 x 80 inches. The blue print is brighter than it shows in these pictures. The backing is white muslin.



Here is a close up of the quilting design (sorry about the shadow)
Here is the whole quilt!



AAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHH!!!

It's DONE!! ::::Doing a happy dance:::::

Saturday, October 3, 2009

A couple of more quilts

This is a quilt I made a couple of years ago. First is a close up of some of the fabric.


Here is the complete quilt with a matching pillow. The back of the pilllow has the same large floral as the border of the quilt. The quilt is about 48x36 - a nice size for a throw.





This one I posted about a few days ago -- I purchased the top in pieces and have sewn it together. The finished size is 39 x 48 inches. I did free motion quilting using my Viking Mega Quilter machine.

I pieced the backing with this large floral I had in my stash and some unbleached muslin. The binding is done in a solid dark blue.