Struggling to see the forest through the trees

If you enjoy hand quilting I should have mentioned it sooner, but today is Day 3 of a hand quilting blog hop over at Celebrate Hand Quilting. Personally, I think hand quilters are the nicest people. Always ready to share their thoughts and projects. I’ll be one of the stops on Sunday, Day 7. This is my first experience with being hopped to and I am looking forward to it! Go take a look see and see what inspiration awaits you!

Celebrate Hand Quilting
I’m about half way through with the quilting on this quilt and my first experience with big stitch quilting. I’m using Prevencia perle cotton No16 in dark gray thread for the hand stitching. I do love this thread, heavy enough but not too heavy. The stitches on my needle are actually a little bigger than my actual ones. And I am surprised to like the look of it in general.

Big stitch quiltingBut I’m still not convinced I love it overall. It is so not me. Too lightweight and puffy…. Not enough quilting.  I like it up close just fine, but when I stand back and look at it, it just doesn’t look as special as I was hoping for.

Oakshott batik tree quilt
Not sure which direction I will go from here, but I think I’ll play with different ideas today.

DSC_6766

I also started pulling fabrics for yet another project.

Fondling fabrics is the sure cure for frequent cases of start~itis.

Kona cotton

Linking up with:
WIP Wednesday
Fabric Tuesday

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There is a reason for everything

“Sometimes, you read a book and it fills you with this weird evangelical zeal, and you become convinced that the shattered world will never be put back together unless and until all living humans read the book.” <<< That’s a quote.

I got in a whole lot of reading in the month of March. I actually read one of the best books I have read in a really long time, The Fault in Our Stars by John Green.

The Fault of Our Stars

I’m not sure how this book got on my must read list, but I’m sure it was from Googling “best book you ever read” “best book of the year” “favorite book ever” type lists that I constantly look at trying to find “my” best book ever.

I’m still trudging through reading Civil War history books, leading up to our upcoming battlefields tour and feeling the need to supplement with variety. I download this on my Kindle, anxious to read something I enjoy, for a change, and we hit it off beautifully. So I am reading along, loving this book, already making plans to reread it, before I finish and debating if I should start rereading it before I finish, to make it last longer, or just finish it and start over??? When was the last time you read a book that had so much to absorb?

This book is full of so many great phrases to chew on. And when I get to this quote it gives me pause.

“The pleasure of remembering had been taken from me,
because there was no longer anyone to remember with.
It felt like losing your co-rememberer meant
losing the memory itself,
as if the things we’d done were less real and important
than they had been hours before.”

Powerful. I had to stop for the night and chew on that one.

The next night my husband and I walked to dinner. Afterwards we where strolling down the street, just past sunset, and paused on the sidewalk to look and see if we could spot the Starrs comet. This was the night when it was supposed to be prime viewing. Well, we stood there a minute watching and a man darn near ran over us. He was hurrying down the sidewalk to catch up his lady friend and didn’t notice we were just standing there. He was curious what we were looking at and we told him all about the comet and explained how we were hoping to spot it, but it appeared to be too early. Now if you know Peter and I, you know we are not social people, but when he invited us to share he and his partner’s table, we said sure. This was where we were headed anyway, the local spot for live music, we just didn’t realize how busy they would be this night and were glad to have a seat!

The really strange part? This woman and I hit it off immediately (remember I’m of the shy, introverted variety). It felt as if the universe put us on a path to meet. Why else would her story spill out, so quickly, to a total stranger? Her story of her losing her “co-rememberer” brought tears to my eyes within minutes of meeting her. I don’t believe in coincidences, the closely related cousin of luck, this was much bigger than that. One of those experiences that leave you wondering why you were exactly where we were, at the exact time, to have the distinct experience you had. It was as if the book I was reading had come alive. Have you every had one of those experiences?

According to Aristotle, there is always a reason for everything that happens. Your experiences are designed to shape you, define you and, hopefully, grow you into the mightiest you possible. That Aristotle was a smart man.

The Fault in Our Stars

A few other favorite quotes….

“Some people don’t understand the promises they’re making when they make them,” I said.

“Right, of course. But you keep the promise anyway. That’s what love is. Love is keeping the promise anyway.”

“The marks humans leave are too often scars.”

“That’s the good thing about pain. It demands to be felt.”

Three words: Best. Book. Ever. Seriously, go read it. It’s amazing! What was the last great book you read??

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Double zippered, open wide pouch

An original bag, loosely adapted from Noodle-head’s medium-sized, open wide, zippered pouch.

Double zippered Sewfrench bag
This one is for my husband. He doesn’t get zippered pouches made for him nearly often enough. I am really lacking in the guy fabric department but I think this birch fabric worked out great. I’m thinking he’ll use it for electronics when we travel, but who knows?

Double zippered Sewfrench bag

So you can get a feel for how big this one is, I used a 14″ zipper across the top and a 9″ one for a shallow zippered pocket, I inserted along the front seam. I am envisioning using that pocket for the Fit bit charger, camera cards, adapters or maybe thumb drives, small things that are easily lost. I like that I boxed the corners really wide, on this one. 4 inches! It gives it a lot of depth for computer chargers, phone chargers, razor chargers…. Maybe you get the picture, maybe not. With him having his own nice sized, zippered pouch, maybe he will carry my chargers, too!

A Sewfrench original

Finished at 13″ x 7.5 ” by 4″.

I trimmed out the back panel with a piece of the same marbled green I used as zipper tabs. In my brain they match the zipper exactly, the natural daylight causes it to absorb more light, I suppose, to where it doesn’t come off matching as well, on the monitor as it does in real life. Why is that? You’ve seen it happen, too, right??

Linking up with:


Can I Get a Whoop Whoop?

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Listening to an old quilt talk

Paul's quilt

They really do talk if you take the time to listen. And while this quilt is not that it is “that” old, it still speaks volumes. 1989 was not that long ago. 24 years? That’s nothing in the life of a quilt. I love going to quilt shows and especially when they show off old quilts. I mean the really old quilts, the ones that look as if they must have been wrapped in acid free paper and rolled instead of folded. They are still pristine after 100 years? How can that be??  But just because it is no older than it is it does not diminish what it has to say.

Paul's quilt

When you gift a quilt and tell the person to use and enjoy it you never know just how much they will take it to heart.

DSC_6637

This quilt belongs to my son. He received it, from his grandmother, for his 11th birthday. As long as he was living at home it was on the end of his bed. He wrapped up in it in the evenings, after his shower and watched television. I can still picture him as that little boy, with the wet head and his quilt tucked up under his chin watching TV. So over Christmas when he asked me if I could do anything to fix his quilt I was a little surprised at his continued use of it, after all these years. This is still his every single day quilt. This is his recliner quilt. This is his TV watching quilt. I’m sure Grandma Sue had no idea how much use this quilt would get!

DSC_6634

One reason for its softness is that there is nothing left between some of the blocks. The batting has just disintegrated. Sometimes the quilting is only thing holding a quilt together.

Stitches doing their job

This is the reason 10 stitches per inch is so important. Big stitch quilting might be easier and artistic looking, but it won’t hold a quilt together like tiny ones will. And boy could she make not only tiny, but consistently tiny stitches!

10 stitches to the inch

On piecing battings – no matter how well they are pieced, they can still come apart. Who knew?

Pieced batting

On binding – when old school quilters talk about hand stitched binding, generally we think about it being sewn on by machine, flipped to the back and stitched down by hand. But the hard-core actually hand stitch it with a running stitch to the front fabric.

Hand stitched binding

And then wrap it around, turn it under 1/4 inch and attach it to the back with a slipstitch.

Hand stitched binding

A sad thing about this method is that it is often done with a single layer of fabric. And though this same fabric is featured throughout the quilt front, and is in decent condition, it couldn’t stand up as a single layer binding, it split right down the center.

DSC_6633

As I’ve studied this quilt, trying to figure out what to do with it, I had to ask myself why does this quilt look like it does, when so many other quilts can make it to 100 years old and still look respectable?

My best guess? This is a polyester batting and I suspect that over time it has acted like a scouring pad and abraded the fabric. And even though these fabrics all came from a quilt shop, some are obviously a higher quality than others. In the 1989 era, we weren’t using heavier fabrics, like the feedsacks of the 30s, or even our current Kona fabrics. The fabrics of that time are just not what we had early on or currently. I think there was a slip of quality for a few decades, if you ask me. I know, because I still have a lot of that fabric and have to be careful with what I use it in.

I also suspect polyester or a polyester blend thread was used in the piecing by way of how the fabric has disintegrated at some of the seam lines.

Another way to age a quilt quickly is to throw it in the washer and dryer frequently. But when you are using a quilt everyday, it is going to get washed pretty often, too. Now the scouring pads really go to work, from the inside out.

Then it all clicked with me, and how many quilts I have gifted, that I used polyester batting in, possibly polyester piecing thread and I never thought to warn the recipients. Although I always hope my quilts will be used, loved and enjoyed, they really are no different that clothing. The more you wash them the shorter their lifespan is.

And while I handle, study and try to figure out what my next step will be in “fixing” this quilt, I can totally appreciate how much this quilt has been used and loved. It is the thinnest, softest, most loved quilt I think I have ever handled.

And that is why we quilt.  There is nothing quite like snuggling under a hand stitched quilt.

I’m really tempted to propose a trade and keep this one for myself….

WIP

fabrictuesdayfinalcopy

Posted in fabric, Family, Gifts, hand quilting, Quilt stories, Quilting, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Rubber baby buggy bumpers

Say that quickly three times, LOL!

Okay, that’s not exactly what these are, but when tagging the pictures, baby bumpers, that childhood ear worm is now stuck in my head. Yours, too??? I should have called them crib bumpers and that would never have happened… Sorry.

Crib bumpers

The bumpers are finished, and aren’t they sweet!

Baby girl crib bupersI know you are wondering what is up with the line down the center of this picture? I was struggling to find a place to get a good picture, with natural lighting, and decided that our workout room would be the best place, it faces south and the daylight brightness reflects off the full wall of mirrors. That line is a seam in the mirror. So now you know!

Next up is the dust ruffle and I’m stumped. There hasn’t been a baby in my house in 25 years so I just don’t remember. But aren’t cribs adjustable from the mattress being up higher when the baby is smaller and you can lower it as they start to pull up? How do you decide the length of the dust ruffle? I see ready-made ones come in about 14″ and 20″ long. I’m assuming those are standard crib heights, but I don’t know. Did you make a long one then later cut it off? Make two different ones? I’m thinking a very clean, tailored style so I suspect I am going to have to wait until the crib is set up to get an exacting length. I don’t think puddling of a tailored skirt will work…..

Linking up with:
Finish it Up Friday
A Stitch in Time
Can I Get a Whoop Whoop

Now aren’t you glad those are finished?!!

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Making Progress

Last week I was kicking myself because in the middle of a project I ran out of natural colored quilting thread. Who runs out of such a basic item, one I use constantly. Seriously. I tore the house apart looking for just one more spool, but it was not to be. So, I ventured out and braved the heavy construction and headed to JoAnn’s for a spool of thread. One measly spool of thread. I wandered around trying to find something else to spend my other 50% off coupon on and had just about given up when this magazine jumped out at me. Keep in mind, I *never* buy quilting magazines. I’d rather spend my money on fabric! As I was waiting in line I thumbed through it and it looked like it had several interesting projects in it and of course ads for all kinds of things I didn’t even know were out there…  I decided to splurge and get it using my coupon.

Modern Patchwork Spring 2013

Later at home, I was eating and thumbing through it when I just about choked on my lunch.

Blogger's Quilt Festival

Besides all the really interesting projects, there is a nice article on the Blogger’s Quilt Festival. I had been interviewed and asked to submit photos of my Bubble quilt, from last fall’s BQF but never heard anything more about it. Well, it finally made it to print. Unfortunately, my quilt was not included…. but…

quilting daily.com

I was quoted twice and my blog address was included! How about that?! That was a pretty cool random surprise! I think it’s amazing when sometimes you are drawn to something and don’t understand why and then after the fact you realize why. That’s what this felt like. Of all the magazines there were to pick from, this was the only one I even picked up. 🙂

In other news…

Continuing on with last week’s project, I’ve made lots and lots of 1/4″ bias covered cording.

Creating piping

I trimmed it down to size allowing a 1/2″ seam allowance. I like to make it wider than necessary because I think it’s easier to seam up, then trim it down, as opposed to it barely being wide enough and it twisting off the cord as you’re trying to sew it with your zipper foot, then not having enough of a seam to insert in to a seam…. I am getting smarter as I get older! And besides I had lots of extra bias cut from covering the 1/2″ cording for the duvet cover, which was naturally wider. I have also learned that if I hold a finger alongside the cording, as I make it, the bias fabric lays much smoother. See how smart I’m getting? LOL!

Trimming to width

I also made 24 ties for the bumpers. I cut them at 16″ x 3″, folded them in half, lengthwise, stitched them the length with a slight angle on one end and then turned them right side out and pressed them.
Sewing 24 ties

Along with the other projects I’ve been working on, I got two of six of the bumpers finished.

Baby bumpers

I really, really like how they are turning out. I wish a had a crib to try them out on, and the baby girl to go in it!

Crib bumpers

Pretty sure what the rest of my week looks like…

Linking up with Freshly Pieced and Fabric Tuesday.

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Show Me My Options

The real finish of the week was making decisions. I’m exciting to be doing the nursery for our next little granddaughter, due August 24! Her mother found a picture of the fabric she wanted, I then did the research and found the line. It is a Premier Fabric line in Wisteria and Storm. I found them at fabric.com and onlinefabricstore.net. Kona orchid and Riley Blake dots in gray were the perfect go withs. The big decision was which fabric to put where.

Premiere Prints wisteria and gray storm

Confirmation that I am just a simple girl from Missouri, you’ve got to show me my options, before I can decide. I did a mockup of crib bumpers, inside and out, orchid standing in as the sheet, showing the thickness of the mattress on the front view, and the dust ruffle.

option 1 Option 2  The winner option 3 Option 4 Option 1

We independently decided on option 3. Yippee!

While I was putting off figuring all this out, I created the duvet cover for the twin bed, that will also be in the nursery. This, because I knew what the plan was, was easy to knock off the list.

Riley Blake white with gray dots fabric

Finished! This is actually the backside of it and I really like it! I used a Riley Blake gray dots on white fabric and added white , to add the panels, to give me the width I needed for a twin. And since I don’t have a twin bed, it was hard to photograph, but you get the idea. I bound 5/8″ cording, around the outer edges, in Kona orchid. Storm gray duvet cover Linking up with:
Finish it Up Friday
A Stitch in Time
Can I Get a Whoop Whoop

Posted in Decorating, Design, fabric, Finishes, Sewing, Show it off Fridays | Tagged , , , , | 17 Comments

Baa, baa, black sheep, have you any wool?

Listening to The Revised Fundamentals of Caregiving written by Jonathan Evison, read by award-winning narrator Jeff Woodman. A thirty something guy is at his rope’s end, running out of money, no career path or employment history, to speak of, decides to give caregiving a try. His first job is with a 19-year-old, wheelchair bound, girl crazy, angry teenager with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Personal forgiveness and finding purpose in life seems to be the theme. I’m enjoying it. Perfect to listen to while working on a quilt, nothing too heavy, nothing I will be quizzed on later, but with feelings that will stick with me, I am sure.

Love the narrator, he sounds like a guy next door. I had to double-check to see if the author was reading it because it feels so genuine. I like that about a reader. He also read, with an accent, Life of Pi.

Revised Fundamentals of Caregiving

So, while listening, I’m still working on getting this quilt to the point of sitting in front of the TV and quilting it. For a hand-quilter, that’s always the goal, isn’t it?

This is my first experience with wool batting. I was advised Hobbs Heritage was the best, all I could find locally was Hobbs Heirloom. No one could tell me exactly what the difference was except the other one was folded.

Wool batting is very thin. Thinner than even any of the really nice cotton battings. This one does have some slightly thicker and thinner spots but nothing like the cabinet full of cotton batting I used to use. I also hear wool is very warm for its weight and washes beautifully. I’m really excited to see for myself.

Heirloom Wool Batting

My friends over at Celebrate Hand Quilting highly recommend wool and I can now see why. They also gave me a little tip to get it nice and smooth before basting. Use a hair dryer. You can actually just watch the wrinkle melt. Well, not melt, that doesn’t sound good, but they do just disappear in seconds. And those big humpy lumps left from being on the outside of the roll? They just blow off the edge of the batting! What a brilliant cure. Reason enough to use wool on every quilt!! This needs just a little more time under the heat and it will be ready to baste.

Hair dryer removes wrinkles from wool batting

I’m using a Bohin mechanical chalk marking pencil and marking for 1/4″ outline stitching. This pencil works really well. Nice thin lines. This is one of the few quilts I’ve marked before basting. Normally I wait until after because I’m not sure how I’ll quilt it, then I have to mark over pins and puffy batting. It doesn’t make for as accurate marking, doing it after it is basted, but enough to show me where I am going.

And while I almost always quilt 1/4″ outside the seams, and should be able to do it without marking it, this one is going to have some confusing contours to it. I decided to go ahead and spend the hour and a half marking it, instead of removing screwed up quilting, later. I’m getting smarter with every quilt.

Marking a quilt

Pin-basted and ready to start the quilting. Well, not exactly. I should probably finish my  current project, I’ve only got about 10 hours left to go on it.

Grow*ing* Benzie quilt

That’s what I’ve been working on. How about you???

Linking up with:

Quilty WIPs
Fabric Tuesday
Design Wall Monday

WIP

Posted in Books, Fabric Tuesday, Quilting, Reading, Sewing, WIP | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

The you won’t Believe They are Gluten-Free Peanut Butter Cookies recipe

I haven’t made a dessert or snack in forever. Like months. I actually can’t even remember when the last time was. This coming from a kitchen that had homemade snacks on the counters every day. Every. Day. It’s probably a natural evolution from having kids at home to cooking for just the two of us.

Anyway…

This afternoon I was feeling the need for just a little something sweet. Something we don’t have. Digging around in the pantry, with a headache (that I believe is related to the lack of sugar in my diet) trying to think of something simple, that I had all the ingredients for and the gumption to throw it together. Normally, on a day like this, I would make Rice Krispy Treats, easily made gluten-free, but I didn’t have marshmallows. Peter can’t eat chocolate before bed, it keeps him awake, so Mississippi Mud cookies, another go to gluten-free, pantry staple, snack was out.

Then ding, ding, ding! I remembered these no flour, making them gluten-free(!), peanut butter cookies. They are so good I dare you to even notice that there aren’t any flours in them!

Gluten free peanut butter cookies

Gluten-free Peanut Butter Cookies
printer friendly recipe

1 egg
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1/2 cup packed brown sugar
1/2 cup creamy peanut butter
1/2 cup extra crunchy peanut butter
1 teaspoon vanilla extract (make your own or check to be sure it is gluten-free)
½ teaspoon baking soda

Preheat oven to 350°.
Line your cookie sheets with SilPat or parchment paper and set sheet aside.
Using a spoon, blend all ingredients together until incorporated.
Use a cookie scoop or spoon to portion tablespoon-sized balls of dough. Roll these into balls then dip the tops into sugar and place 12 to each cookie sheet (sugar side up). Press top of each cookie with fork tines twice crosswise to form a classic crosshatch pattern. Sprinkle with additional sugar if you like.

Bake for 12 minutes. Be careful not to overcook them. They will still have a little puffiness to them, then they will fall as they cool but still be moist. Allow cookies to cool, on baking sheet, a few minutes until they firm up. They are fragile until cool. Remove to a rack and cool completely.

Makes 24 cookies about 3 inches in diameter. Store in an airtight container.

You could toss in some chocolate chips for variety, if you like.

You can use whatever peanut butter your family prefers. We like both extra crunchy and smooth at our house. The extra crunchy has larger pieces of peanuts in it and by adding the smooth you don’t get too many nuts, to cause inclusions that can make your cookies break apart, but fewer larger ones instead.
Nutrition Facts
Serving Size 1 Cookie
Calories 99
Calories from Fat 50
Total Fat 5.6g
Saturated Fat 1.2g
Cholesterol 7mg
Sodium 79mg
Total Carbohydrates 10.5g
Dietary Fiber 0.7g
Sugars 9.3g
Protein 2.9g

Enjoy!

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Is it warm, yet, where you live???

The last time you saw me working with Liberty of London, I left you here.

Liberty Tana Lawn multi

And I did finally finish it. I cobbled together a few different patterns to make a sleeveless blouse. I am not much of a blouse person, I lean towards knits, and I still I love how it turned out. From all the tiny photos of choices, on Purlsoho‘s website, debating which Liberty tana lawn to choose, I couldn’t have picked a better design. I love everything about it, especially since I already own a golden-yellow cardigan and this seems to be the spring and summer where I will need a cardigan, or more, every single day….

This was one of only a handful of days, over a month’s time, where Florida was warm enough, in March, to sit out at our favorite lunch waterfront spots in a sleeveless shirt!

The view at I swear The Bridge Tender, has the best black bean soup on the island of Anna Maria. Seems as if everyone serves a “their” version. It usually consists of black beans, over a small scoop or white or yellow rice, topped with onions, jalapeño peppers and sometimes sour cream. The view might sway the vote just a tad, but nonetheless, in my opinion, you just can’t beat a good bowl of black bean soup, while watching the water!

The best black bean soup on the island.

I could use a bowl about now. April 20, and in Michigan it’s still snowing…….

April 20, it's still snowing in Michigan

Linking up with:
Finish it up Friday
Can I get a Whoop Whoop?
A Stitch in Time

Posted in Eating, Finishes, Sewing, Travel | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments