Tuesday, December 31, 2024

2024 in Review

Here are my accomplishments for 2024, followed by pictures and headings only. Details are in my past posts as indicated by a clickable completion date after each name. My own assessment of how well I met my 2024 goals is after the pictures of completions. Due to health issues, 2024 had a mid-year interruption for me. More information is available in my 6/13/24 post.

2024 COMPLETIONS:
  • 5 quilts
  • 3 quilt shows
  • 3 knitted or crocheted items 
  • 4 burp cloths
  • 1 blog book
  • 82 home decor
  • 3 miscellaneous items
QUILTS

1) Bin There Done That (9/14/24) ~55" x 55"


2) Spooky_Sweet (10/3/24) 30½" x 34½"

3) Chemo Chaos (11/20/24) 48" x 48"

4) Oh Deer (12/2/24) 41" wide x 40" high

5) Fireman For Jeremy (12/27/24 and 12/30/24) ~40½" wide x 43" tall


3 QUILT SHOWS

 Amador Valley Quilters Show in Livermore (6/24/24)



Delta Quilters Show in Brentwood (8/14/24)

Diablo Valley Quilters Show in Walnut Creek (9/22/24)




82 HOME DECOR ITEMS

1) One set of 6 international angel Christmas ornaments (1/5/2024)

2) Three sets of 8 Christmas house ornaments yellow, red, black loops (1/17/2024)



3) One set of 8 Strawberry Shortcake ornaments (1/25/24)


4) 7th and 8th of octet of angel ornaments (2/7/24)


5) Two critter Christmas ornaments (2/7/24)


6) One set of six, blue, round, Nativity ornaments (2/17/24)


7) Half dozen Christmas symbol ornaments (2/23/24)


8) Six Swedish Folk Art Ornaments (2/28/24)


9) Fourteen Gilded Ornaments (8/24/24)


10) Eight Nativity Scene Figures (10/7/24)




1 BLOG BOOK

1) Volume 20 of DianeLoves2Quilt (1/20/2024)

3 KNITTED OR CROCHETED ITEMS

1) Crocheted Strawberry the Axolotl (1/22/2024)

2) Knitted circular blanket (3/30/2024)


3) Yoda from Star Wars (8/8/2024)

4 BURPCLOTHS

1) Four alligator burp cloths cloths (2/29/24)


3 MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS
1) patches on 3 Adventure Guide vests (8/20/24)


SUMMARY OF 2024 GENERAL GOALS with approach for ACHIEVEMENT
see 1/8/24 post for more goal details

1) Work from my stash
Chemo Chaos was made from a layer cake; Bin There Done That was made from a collection of blocks of the month from Joann's
2) Utilize tools I have and learn how to use new ones
Used wave ruler for Spooky Sweet
3) Interface with other quilters
Continued to blog; attended guild meetings, small group monthly meetings, and quilt shows; got together with quilting friend alternating at each other's home
4) Intersperse small projects just for fun, growth, satisfaction
Made Xmas ornaments; sewed burp cloths; added patches on vests

SPECIFIC 2024 SPECIFIC GOALS based on 2023 SHORTFALLS

1) I aimed to knit or crochet at least one item in 2024 so I crocheted Strawberry the Axolotyl and Yoda; knitting a round blanket was a no brainer and used up a some of my yarn stash.
2) I aimed to reduce my stash by at least one kit in 2024 so I bought one kit (Spooky Sweet), made it up immediately and gave one kit (Utopia)to my daughter (does that count?) resulting in an overall decrease of one kit. Most recent kit audit is 1/17/2023 post. Whoops! Just remembered. In November, I did buy another kit that I had been eyeing (Moonbeams) from the Fat Quarter shop on 50% clearance. So I have maintained status quo on my kit count. Ooh, so close... I will try harder in 2025.

Monday, December 30, 2024

Final Fireman Finish

My son-in-law was gifted this wallhanging for Christmas (previous 12/17/24 post) even though I had only completed about 90%. The remaining portions to FMQ were the fireman silhouette and a wide red border framing it. These last areas had remained non-quilted since I had been incapable of deciding the pattern. I vacillated back and forth on the fireman portion and finally opted to take a chance on simple echo-quilting. Echo-quilting internal parallel curves was a lucky call since this approach accentuated the shape and enabled me to be vague about where the edge of the coat sleeve was.


I usually name my quilts but this one I documented for the giver and receiver instead. I made two corner labels, one label embroidered with DIC_2024 and the other label embroidered with FOR_JEREMY. The fireman wallhanging is my final completion for 2024. It took only five years to start it after the panel purchase in 2019.


I planned to stitch stars with my new star template in the upper and lower sections of the red border framing the fireman. Red thread for the stars would minimize the visibility of a goof should there be template shift; black thread would make the "oops" obvious. I made two red stars and decided they did not show up at all! Foregoing more stars while I rethought what to do instead, I stitched wavy lines in the vertical red borders. Those lines barely showed up also, but at least they added more texture. Plus, I could convince myself that those waves were symbolic of fire hoses. I painstakingly picked out the teeny tiny stitches of the two nearly invisible stars, and instead stitched nearly invisible spirals freehand in the upper and lower bands of the red frame. I convinced myself that spirals were symbolic of coiled hoses. These symbolic artistic interpretations are surely a stretch of my poetic license. Jeremy interpreted the swirls as the water entering into or coming from the ends of the fire hoses.  Looks like I am not the only one with a good imagination.


Here is my son-in-law Jeremy posed with his now fully completed fireman wall hanging, front and back views.



On the back side, Jeremy further interpreted the straight lines between the outlines of the Maltese Crosses as the skyline of the city buildings through which the firetrucks wind their way, or even the network of the roads themselves.  See? Active imagination! I am so glad he likes the quilt.

Friday, December 27, 2024

Fireman Panel Wallhanging

During my Country Heritage Tour in March 2019 I bought this fabric panel and coordinating fabric at a Cinnamon's Quilt Shoppe in Jacksonville, Florida. The panel height is the width of fabric.  A tape measure beside the word-and-symbol fabric shows its scale. The panel is by Sykel Enterprises, Pattern #FIREFIGHTERS-1181.


My grandiose plans of making the panel into an attic window style quilt dissolved as I considered the logistics. Too much of the unique fabric would be consumed in seam allowances. Instead, I changed to a simpler plan where I bordered each side of the uncut panel with the coordinating fabric. I fussy cut the side strips so that the emblems aligned horizontally and so that the long vertical words of FIREFIGHTERS were symmetrically placed on either side of the central panel. This approach also handled the issue of how to handle the emblems on the top and bottom of the panel. The emblems have significance as stated in the following diagram.


The four lobed emblems on the fabric are the Maltese Cross, some in red with flames around the outside and others in black, both with a scramble in the center. A "scramble", I learned, is "a group of fire symbols on the center seal of a firefighter's badge that represents preparedness. Scrambles can include a ladder, axe, helmet, fire hydrant, or pike pole." The Maltese cross is known around the world as a symbol of the fire service. The History of the Maltese Cross is quite interesting and I have repeated it here in this post.
The Badge of a Fire Fighter is the Maltese Cross. The Maltese Cross is a symbol of protection and a badge of honor. Its story is hundreds of years old.

When a courageous band of crusaders known as Knights of St. John fought the Saracens for possession of the holy land, they encountered a new weapon unknown to European warriors. It was a simple, but horrible device of war. It wrought excruciating pain and agonizing death upon the brave fighters for the cross. The Saracens weapon was fire.

As the crusaders advanced on the walls of the city, they were struck by glass bombs containing naphtha. When they became saturated with the highly flammable liquid, the Saracens hurled a flaming torch into their midst. Hundreds of the knights were burned alive; others risked their lives to save their brothers-in-arms from dying painful, fiery deaths.

Thus, these men became our first Fire Fighters and the first of a long list of courageous Fire Fighters. Their heroic efforts were recognized by fellow crusaders who awarded each hero a badge of honor — a cross similar to the one fire fighters wear today. Since the Knights of St. John lived for close to four centuries on a little island in the Mediterranean Sea named Malta, the cross came to be known as the Maltese Cross.

FMQ is a challenge for me so I selected my pattern with ease of execution in mind. Non-contrasting black thread would provide texture only and not distract color wise from the panel itself. I quilted diagonal straight lines between the stars in the upper left corner of the flag and quilted vertical lines along the flag's stripes.  Unable to decide an all-over filler pattern for the two outer strips, I chose a combination of straight lines that avoided cutting though any words and accentuated the emblems by stitching around them. Although the FMQ does not show up on the front, the stitches show up very strikingly on the back, forming some unique geometric interest. This batik from my stash just screamed FLAMES to me for the backing.

This wall-hanging measures 40½" wide by 43" tall and is a gift for my son-in law who currently works as an Assistant Fire Marshal in the safety office of Oklahoma University. It was supposed to be smaller, narrow enough to hang on a door, but as with many projects, it grew. I fussy cut the binding so that the words are repeated and do not drift. I sewed on the hanging sleeve and readied the quilt for wrapping before I ever made my final decisions on the quilting motifs for the broad red border and the graphic black of the fireman's coat. Perhaps a flame motif in fireman's coat...? Spirals? A simple meander...? Internal echo-quilting of the silhouette...? I will use black thread on a black background. The quilting will barely show and I know I am overthinking this. Maybe stars in the red frame... ?  In red thread...? Once I've decided the pattern, stitching it should be straightforward.



Jeremy opened this gift as a Christmas present even though it was not 100% complete. I'll get my daughter Robin's input and finish the quilting before she and her husband return home to Oklahoma with my two grandchildren, Autumn and Isaiah, right after New Year's Day.
 

Saturday, December 21, 2024

Christmas Ornament Count Up

When I took down my stuffed ornaments that had been displayed about the home during the 2023 Christmas season, I decided to do a count, tossing them out on the bed in the master bedroom. 

Here is my PRE-2024 count:
153 Christmas  + 15 repurposed toys = 168


Borrowing this collage photo from my 1/14/2024 post in my other blog WanderOr Ponder, it is clear that these little cuties are nearly everywhere in my home at Christmastime. So why do I need to make more? Because they are quick, fun, and generally, I just want to. One could say it is a disease, but that is too judgmental for something so soft, squishy, inexpensive, and harmless.

So in 2024 I decide to sew up all the random panels and cut-outs I had lingering in my stash along with all the panels I bought at a recent fabric sale at 50¢ a panel. What a deal! These are the designs in the recent panels I bought before they were sewn and stuffed.


Photos of the finished ornaments are in the following individually cited post links and will also be gathered together in my 2024 Year in Review post.

Here are my NEW completions in 2024
6+24+8+2+2+6+6+6+14+8= 82

One set 6 angels (1/5/2024)
Three sets of 8 houses each (1/17/2024)
One set of 8 Strawberry Shortcakes (1/25/24)
One pair of 2 angels (2/7/24)
Two critters (2/7/24)
One set of 6 nativities circles (2/17/24)
One set of 6 Christmas Symbols(2/23/24)
One set of 6 Swedish folk art ornaments(2/28/24)
One set of 14 gilded ornaments in 8 shapes (8/27/24)
One set of 8 Nativity figures (10/7/24)

Some of these sets completed in 2024 I gave away, but I kept most for my collection. Still to be located is a second panel of 8 largish nativity figures and two panels of 12 calico ornaments each. They dematerialized in my sewing room somewhere. Oh well, those 32 ornaments can be sewn up in 2025. I fell short of my goal to sew up ALL the panels in 2024, but the objective of that plan was to have them not adding to my sewing room clutter. 

Philosophical question: If you can't find or see something, does it still count as clutter?

Monday, December 2, 2024

Oh, Deer Completion

Piecing this quilt is described in my previous post dated 11/26/24. The next step, selecting my FMQ pattern for the quilting, is always a challenge for me. Doing an allover meander is probably the simplest approach except that I am terrible at meandering smoothly and not getting stuck in a corner. I generally opt for ruler work instead which is time-consuming but provides me with guidance. I compromised by doing free-hand arcs in the two bands of stars at the top and bottom of the quilt to give a tufted pillow effect. For the major section of the deer head I did something more controlled.


I used my Handi Quilter multi clamshell template for the deer portion. Orienting the clamshell "upside-down" gave the effect of the roof on a gingerbread house or draped garlands.



A portion of the deer section quilted in clamshells gives the nice effect that I was seeking.


Now, what to do in the narrow white bands on either side of the inserted blue stripe? I have a Handi Quilter wave template with an 4" wavelength and two different depths of the waves. I used the shallower 0.75" wave in the inner border and the deeper 1.5" wave in the larger outside border. I attempted to line them up relative to each other and centered on each side. I started in the middle of each edge and worked my way toward each corner. The quilting lines on the corners will fall where they may but at least they will look similar among the corners. A black and white pinstripe binds the outer edges of the quilt and relates back to the deer's antlers.



The backing was from a  fabric called Glad Tidings by the Whole Country Caboodle for Henry Glass. I thought the fabric title of Glad Tidings was clever since the hanging ornaments say "comfort and joy". I knew it would be perfect paired with the Deerly Loved pattern because of the Christmas balls hanging from the antlers. The following image is a closeup of the backing fabric. 


I made cranberry colored labels with white embroidery out of grosgrain ribbon for the two lower corners. Cranberry blended with the backing fabric better than a bright Christmas red would have. The quilt name, my name, and the year completed are recorded on the labels. The pattern by Coriander Quilts was called Deerly Loved but I have named this quilt Oh Deer


The back side of the quilt is also fun. The stripe on the backing ran parallel to the selvage. The height was adequate since it was the width of fabric. But, because I'd bought the remnant at a craft show already cut to a one yard length, I did not have enough width. Hence, I added the white edges. 


Here is the front view of the completed quilt. Oh Deer measures 41" wide x 40" tall. I plan to hang it on the wall of our stairwell next to the Christmas Moose canvas shown after. The canvas measure 20" wide x 16" tall. The moose is half as wide as the deer so I will have to see how they look side by side. No matter where they are placed, each will add to the festive "Deck the Halls" mood of the season.