Saturday, June 19, 2021

Third Saturday of June 2021

The theme for "Hang Your Quilt Day" this June was a choice of  "June's Blooms" or something patriotic. I chose to hang my Out of the Blue quilt made from Kaffe Fassett florals. I do not have many floral quilts mainly because I rarely purchase floral fabric. Hmm... I will need to remedy that. The florals in this quilt came from a kit. Details about my FMQ on Out of the Blue and how it got its name can be found at my post dated 8/16/17Out of the Blue measures 63" x 63".


When I photograph my quilts on "Hang Your Quilt Day" I always like to include our WELCOME sign and its inverse shadow in the image.


Just the other day – June 14, Flag Day – I grabbed some images of our front area – the blooms looked so pretty. I also lingered outdoors that day to enjoy; but not today or yesterday when the temperature reached over 105° both days. I will just gaze on the June blooms in these photos instead.



Hang Your Quilt Day Beginnings
Beginning April 2020, my quilt guild members began a tradition of hanging quilts in the front of their homes on the third Saturday of the month as a source of enjoyment for the community and as a thank you for the essential workers during the pandemic. My initial post about this practice is dated 4/22/20. I am pleased to see the displays are still going on and even more pleased that the pandemic restrictions are easing up.

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Sewing-Themed Project Bag

I am hooked on making these project bags from the free pattern Piecekeepers ByAnnie. This is my twelfth one. The first six were for my son's family and one for my sister (post dated 4/9/21), the next four were for my daughter's family (post dated 6/6/21). This one is intended as a thank you gift to a quilting friend.The fabric choices were fun: a fat quarter of buttons for the main fabric and a fat quarter of straight pins for the inner lining. Pink mesh went best with the button and pin prints hence I added a pink houndstooth as my third fat quarter to be used for the binding and handles.



In my post dated 4/9/21 I summarized the needed supplies and the steps in the instructions. When assembling the front of the bag, there is a step to trim the bottom of the mesh – about ½" – before adding the bottom band and lining. That ½" matters so that the height of the front matches the height of the back. Twice now I have forgotten to do this trimming prior to adding the band. The first time I had to pick out a line of stitching (in my batch of four bags). The second time I had to pick out the line of top stitching as well as the stitching line itself (hint... this bag!). I am hoping that in future bags I will have finally learned my lesson. 

And there definitely will be more bags. I have bought sufficient Soft and Stable plus zippers and mesh in many colors from the ByAnnie website to make several more bags, enough to last To Infinity and Beyond.

Sunday, June 6, 2021

Superhero Project Bags

Every one in my daughter's family of four is an Avenger or Superheroes fan. For their visit from to CA from OKC in June I made each of them project bags from the Piecemaker Project Bag pattern offered ByAnnie.  In this post I show the front, the back,  and the inside for each of the four bags I made for my daughter Robin's family. I have a published post dated April 9, 2021 featuring six bags I made previously for my son Dan's family of six.

This first bag is for my grandson, five-year-old Isaiah. He might claim he is too old for these primary colors but I think he will like the characters. I have been studying movies from the Marvel universe in preparation for his visit and at least now I can recognize Thor, Iron Man, Hulk, Captain America, and Falcon.




For my granddaughter, Autumn, age 8, I drew from my fat quarter bundle of DC Comic characters because of the female options. That cast of characters included Wonder Woman, Catwoman, and Supergirl.
 



For my daughter, Robin, I again stayed with the DC line of female superheroes. I centered an image of sexy Wonder Woman on the back because any woman who holds down a full time job as an electrical engineer and manages to keep a family of four functioning and happy is a wonder. She serges up a storm with knit clothing plus bakes a fantastic pumpkin pie and yummy chocolate chip cookies.




Finally for my son-in-law Jeremy I featured the collection of Marvel universe characters again ,but in a more adult color palette than his son and a finer scale print for the lining. The muted grays and black are more subdued but I could not resist zapping up the project bag a bit with the vibrant turquoise trim and handle.




My daughter's family arrived yesterday and I gave them their bags. I had placed them on the central counter top upstairs outside their bedrooms for a "formal" presentation once they got settled from their traveling. But, since five-year old Isaiah discovered them early and dug in, there was a change of plans. "formal" does not work with kids – free for all is much more successful. All is good and everyone got his own bag. When the fabric did not give it away, the contents I spiked them with did...Legos, handy tools, magnetic Avenger and Frozen "paper" dolls, fancy socks, magic markers, etc. They were fun – both to make and open.

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

Sewcializing MegaBlocks

Last fall the Fat Quarter Shop began sponsoring a quilt-a-long titled the Sewcialites in which participants sew one block a week. I thought it might be fun, keep me engaged in the sewing room during COVID times, and not be an overly involved  commitment. One block per week – I could certainly handle that! Also, I could use some of my buildup of scraps. Per the Fat Quarter Shop:

We’re celebrating our quilting community with a free block of the week quilt along. We’ve joined forces with 18 talented designers to bring you a 38-week quilt along with amazing sampler blocks and sew many options! ... We’ll release one block every Friday, starting on Friday, September 25, 2020 and ending on Friday, July 2, 2021. ... The block patterns are offered in three sizes: 3″, 6″ and 9″ finished.
 
The suggested complete quilt as shown was not cohesive enough for my taste but the concept of a block a week and the variety of blocks, all consistent in size, intrigued me. Time passes quickly. I had definitely decided on the 9" size but it was not until May, eight months after the September start, that I experimented with my first block. I picked a light and a dark fat quarter, both in the green family, and not my favorite fabric choices. I felt no compulsion to start with Block #1 and try to catch up. Instead I chose #28 Hope Block. Ironically the block was named "Hope", perhaps a good omen of my upcoming endeavors. I read somewhere on the site that I could get two blocks out of one fat quarter. Therefore it stood to reason that I could get four blocks out of two fat quarters. I laid the two fat quarters face to face and cut all the pieces for the background and main color as well through both layers at once. I would get two pair of blocks, each member of the block pair being the color reversal of the other. I was pleased with my experiment. By alternating a predominantly dark block with a predominantly light block and rotating 90° I wound up with an intricate 18" block, which I dubbed my MegaBlock. There were two options for arranging those four blocks which I show in a follow-on photo. This was cool! I was becoming excited. I very well may make this block again in preferred colors other than green. As a bonus, I had so little waste that I was not tempted to keep the remains of each fat quarter – well, maybe an occasional strip for a future strip quilt of scraps.

 #28 Hope Block: April Rosenthal, Prairie Grass Patterns


My green experiment was successful. But then logic got the better of me and spontaneity fell by the wayside. I would set aside these practice blocks. If I continued to make more with random fat quarters, then at the end I would have 38 blocks in a variety of scraps that had a snowball's chance in hell of blending together. Instead of scraps, I would press into service one of those fat quarter bundles that I am so prone to buy on impulse because a few of the prints in it are just too cute to pass up. I also noticed in February that I had no appropriate red and pink quilt to display. I decided to unbundle my fat quarter collection of Moda's A Walk in the Woods by Aneela Hoey. I set aside some of the large scale prints, like the foxes or the little girl strolling through the woods. Some blocks had small pieces that would chop up  the whimsical print  and fall short of showcasing it to good advantage.


I was not going to buy a background fabric but draw from my stash. Instead I planned to pair a light and dark combination of two fat quarters from the bundle for each set of four blocks. First up were pink and red, and I chose a block pattern that would rotate 90° nicely, especially if I reversed the colors. #4 Spirited Block was a good pick and I liked the four block assembly that resulted, shown in follow-on photo. Has it become obvious yet that my one-block-a-week has now become four-blocks-a-week?

 #4 Spirited Block: Vanessa Goertzen, Lella Boutique

Next, to be different, in #11 Cheer Block I tried a pink and blue combination – not my favorite, but it does seem to work somewhat due to the little blue birds. I learned something interesting with this block design. When I reversed the colors in the block partner, I had to also reverse the rotation direction of the "arrows". In the pink-centered block on the left of the middle blue-centered block, the colors are reversed but the arrows spin counterclockwise in both. In the pink-centered block on the right of the middle blue-centered block, the colors are reversed but the arrows spin clockwise in the pink-centered block on the right and counterclockwise in the middle blue-centered block. I scratched my head on that one for a while. By rotated the HSTs at the four edges I "fixed" it and all meshed much better. When the four blocks are joined, in the follow-on photo, the pink arrows go counterclockwise in the blue-centered blocks and the blue arrows go clockwise in the pink-centered blocks. The bi-color arrows that appear at the block joining seams are an engaging surprise. I think that #4 Spirited Block had symmetry about one diagonal but #11 Cheer Block had planned asymmetry around both diagonals. This Sewcialite challenge is teaching me in ways I did not expect. I "cheered" when I finally got that 18" mega-block together to my satisfaction.

 #11 Cheer Block: Me & My Sister Designs

My next block was the #25 Virtue Block. My color selection of red and blue pops. No rotations are needed to get the two toned layout and neither fabric is directional. It is said that patience is a virtue. I did require patience to assemble all those flying geese – 8 per block, times 4 blocks – 32!

#25 Virtue Block: Bonnie Olaveson, Cotton Way


In #30 Gratitude Block I tried again the pink color, this time pairing it with gray. With this block and fabric combination, I challenged myself to get the rows of circles in the gray pieces to line up the way I wanted them to. It took pre-planning on how to flip those gray corners on pink-centered snowball blocks. Note to self: avoiding pairing a directional print with another directional print. I will drive me bonkers.

#30 Gratitude Block: Camille Roskelley, Thimble Blossoms


I needed a break from 45° angles so the #23 Steadfast Block was a welcome relief. It was not entirely mindless however. I wanted the gray/red railroad-track-like fabric to orient a certain way. Due to tight fabric limitation, the rectangles all had to face with the "tracks" lengthwise. They therefore fell at 90° in some places in the block. I do enjoy the varying size checkerboard pattern that appears in the four block mega block photo below.

 #23 Steadfast Block: Sherri McConnell, A Quilting Life


For my next MegaBlock I paired a white/red basket-like fabric with the mini-mushrooms. How else does one gather mushrooms during a walk in the woods? (Yes, I realize in the previous MegaBlock I referred to the gray/red as railroad-track-like fabric.) Since I had fun challenging myself with fabric orientation in the #23 Steadfast Block, I advanced to fabric orientation of #29 Delight Block. My self-imposed constraints were that the spikes in the basket or the background behind the basket spikes should all face the same way. The pieces within the basket base should also face the same way as if they were woven that way. Thankfully the mini-mushroom fabric was not directional. I very carefully laid out the fabric orientation in both color options before assembling. 

 #29 Delight Block: Me & My Sister Designs


I have made 6 MegaBlocks so far out of the fabric from my selected Aneela Hoey fat quarter bundle. I can make 5 more MegaBlocks out of the remaining five fat quarter pairs for a total of 11 MegaBlocks. I will have remaining the 7 large scale prints and 1 mini-print I initially set side from the 30 count bundle. Let's see where this particular Walk in the Woods leads me.