Wednesday, January 10, 2018

Pre-Cut Curved Piecing

My goal for quilting in 2018 is to "maximize happiness and minimize guilt". In keeping with this mantra, a new year deserves a new project! I bought this Carnival pre-cut kit at the Houston Quilt Festival in November (that trip was a real happiness maximizer) and have been itching to try it. It was a rainy, dreary day here, plus I have been nursing a cold so I opted to start a new project to lift my mood. I did not even have to think to cut it out, since the precision laser-cut pieces were all ready and waiting for me to assemble.


There were four main pieces to the block. A, B, and D were symmetrical and C had a left/right handedness to it. D also had somewhat of a handedness D subunit assembly since the position of the light D and dark D relative to each other had to be consistent.


They were sorted by light and dark color and stacked in the product container by shape. In other  words I had a stack of light A's, dark A's, light B's dark Bs, etc. Originally I laid them out in alphabetical order with light on the left. Then I went to my well-organized, well-defined specific storage place on my open shelving and directly placed my hand on my container of Alphabitties to label the pieces.


I was stumped when I opened the container, dumped out all the tags and discovered that the plastic tabs for A, B, C, and D were missing from my storage container for them. Aaargh! I have no idea what project they were put away with! Letters E through Z were there. Numbers 0 through 9 were there. Letters A through D – not there. Go figure. So much for "a place for everything and everything in its place". No problem. They will turn up eventually. Or I will buy more.


The absence of the AWOL Alphabitties was not a major stumbling block. It made much more sense to orient and lay out the precision laser cut pieces as they would be assembled and surely I could remember three letters. I positioned the stacks so that lights and darks were alternated as they would be in the assembly. The next photo shows light and dark stacks in the upper left and a set of two assembled B/C sub unit and one D sub unit in the lower right in the corresponding positions.


Sewing the curves was not as hard as I imagined and there are several YouTube instructional videos available online. The one I found best was presented by Sherri McConnell for the Fat Quarter Shop YouTube series. I knew one tip was to pin a lot, but I was unsure whether to put the convex or concave side against the feed dogs when stitching. Someone had told me once to "sew with a saggy bottom" so the feed dogs would ease in the excess fabric. I struggled with that advice since if large piece was underneath, then I would be unable to see if the excess was pleated. I actually had a revelation in the Sherri McConnell video.



OK. Maybe I did go overboard with the number of pins. But putting them in was kind of relaxing and almost a therapeutic opportunity to let my thoughts wander while I quasi-meditated. I pinned with the convex side up, capturing all those fabric poofs before they could turn into tiny tucks or puny pleats and allowing the pin heads to protrude beyond the edge. Then... the revelation! I sewed with the pin side DOWN, flipped from the way I had pinned it. Sounds simple but it had never previously occurred to me that sewing from the side opposite from which I had pinned was allowed! My pins had large, flat heads so I was able to use the tip of my forefinger to slide them out toward the right as each pin neared the toe of the pressure foot. I sewed slowly but I was able to sew continuously along that curved edge without interruption. I never sewed over any pins. 


I could also chain piece any pairings I had pre-pinned. I did a set of three subunits at a time.


Then I used my magnetic pin cushion inverted to whisk all those pins out from under the throat of the machine. Worked like a charm.


I pressed each seam in the direction recommended in the instructions. They lay flat beautifully with no nip or tucks. I am placing the sub units on my design wall as I complete them. I will arrange, rearrange, and re-rearrange until I like the color distribution. Here are twelve partially completed blocks so far. The kit calls for twenty. The small corner A components are not placed yet. I love how a segmented spoked wheel and a segmented smooth edged color-wheel type wheel emerge as secondary patterns. The designer mentioned that inspiration for this pattern came from a tile floor laid in three shades of gray.
  

So how am I doing on my 2018 goal to maximize happiness and minimize guilt? I am happy with how nicely this is coming together. I am happy to be in the excitement phase of a new project.  I am happy that I am learning to do curved piecing and am progressing toward kit reduction – both goals I felt guilty about failing at in 2017. I live in sunny California and this was the atypical rainy, cloudy, dreary view out my sewing room window at 2:00 pm in the afternoon; but I am happy to be ensconced and pleasantly occupied indoors within the walls of my sewing room. 


The skies may be gray but the blues of this quilt are an excellent diversion. I can also be happy socializing with others at Let's Bee Social #211.

Thursday, January 4, 2018

2018 Goal: Maximize Enjoyment, Minimize Guilt

My 2017 goals were too ambitious. Plus, they read like a business plan and I do not have a business. I assessed my performance of them in the tail end of my post for 12/27/17. I truly do not think I am exhibiting the sour grapes behavior as in the Aesop tale about the fox and the grapes - criticizing my goals because I achieved so few of them – but I now realize I need to rethink what I want to strive for in my quilting, sewing, knitting, and crocheting.


Most important and foremost is to know myself.
  • First off, my crafting is a hobby and a means of expression for me.
  • Being organized makes me more creative – not less so.
  • Trying new things should be part of the equation. 
  • Liking the process and not just the product should also figure in. 
  • I am a list maker and like a visual show and reminder of my accomplishments so having a TA-DA list per Katie Fowler’s An Artist’s Journey through Wonderland is every bit as important as having a TO-DO list. 
  • I like to write and take pictures so keeping up my blog is a positive. Having people comment on what I do gives me a lift. 
I took a strong interest in the wooliemammoth.blogspot.com posts promulgated through The Quilt Show that proposed the Seven Habits of Highly Effective Quilters in the Steven Covey way of thinking. Here are those links. They are worth reading in Anna's original words but I summarized them for my own behalf as I apply them to myself. So here are some guidelines to being an effective quilter.
  1. Make my binding when I make my quilt top so I avoid frustrating delays
  2. Organize beautifully so I can see my stash
  3. It’s never too late to repurpose abandoned projects
  4. Allow inspiration; do not avoid shows and stores for fear of overbuying
  5. Quilt in a group can be interpreted as quilt guilds or online networking
  6. Stitch in time whatever moments I can grab
  7. Regular inventory; stroke that fabric and remember what I’ve got
But what does effective mean to me in my world of quilting and crafts? The wisdom of self-knowledge, a TA-DA list, and effectiveness guides all combine to boil down to one goal for me.

Maximize Enjoyment and Minimize Guilt

These gentle reminders, roughly correlated to those seven effectiveness guidelines, will help me attain that goal.
  • Organize only for the frustration free joy of finding what I want when I want it (1, 2)
  • Take a serious look at those UFOs and assess my true level of interest (3)
  • Buy for aesthetic appeal, not bargain price, thus avoiding guilt and buyer’s remorse (4)
  • Enjoy my blogging. Comment regularly and generously on other's posts (5)
  • Leave projects in progress out to continue in a moment, for a moment (6)
  • Refold and admire my fabric to my heart's content (7)
Hmm. But how do I measure success in this goal? I guess I will just be HAPPIER!

Sharing these thoughts with other quilters at Let's Bee Social #210.