Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Vintage Stocking for William Begun

My grandson, William, arrived on April 13th, 2018. He is my second grandson and fifth grandchild. He had the good grace to plan his birthday with plenty of lead time for me to make his vintage stocking in time for his first Christmas. These stockings are a family tradition and I have made them for my son-in-law Jeremy, my daughter-in-law Carrie and four other grandchildren. For William I gathered my essential supplies – yarn&needles, instructions, tips from past that I had documented in my blog, and charted name.


When I set out to chart his name, I found William is quite wide. I needed to narrow the M, W, and L to fit on the alotted space in the white  band of the stocking. When compared with a portion of the alphabet chart from the instructions it can be seen that the L is one space narrower (four instead of five at its base) and the W and M are seven spaces wide instead of nine. All are still recognizable as the letters they are meant to be.



The following photo is not upside down. The stocking is knitted from the top down so it is easier to read the chart inverted. As I knit the rows of the chart, I highlight them with yellow magic marker. I put arrows at the edges to remind me from which direction I should be reading the chart when knitting.


Last night was my first night and I completed the William name band. Yay! That is the most fun one.


The dates below are clickable links to posts about stockings previously knitted for other family members. Autumn and Isaiah are sister and brother. Vivian and Lillian are sisters. William is the little brother of Vivian and Lillian. The post for Vivian's stocking has the most knitting tips. I'd learned a lot by then, having made three other stockings previously.

December 31, 2011 Jeremy and Carrie
December 10, 2014 Autumn (born in October 2012 - I was late completing hers)
December 17, 2014 Vivian (April birthday)
December 28, 2015 Isaiah (July birthday - completed before the stroke of midnight Christmas eve)
November 29, 2016 Lillian (May birthday)
October 31, 2018 (this post; a later post upon completion) William (April birthday)

The original 1945 pattern can be downloaded for free from
http://www.knitting-and.com/knitting/patterns/christmas/1945-stocking.htm.
Linking up now with Let's Bee Social #248.

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Square Pegs in Round Holes

In the first quarter of 2018, I last worked on this quilt from a John Flynn pre-cut quilt kit. I had pieced it, assembled it, and prepped the backing for it. Now was the time for the free motion quilting.


Here are my progress posts on it:
This week (~ six months later) I "rediscovered" the quilt hanging neatly as a quilt sandwich on a hanger in one of my closets. [Quilts in progress are stored in more than one closet, are they not?]  Feeling brave after recently completing the FMQ on a yet-to-be-revealed quilt, I decided to keep the momentum going and FMQ this one. I should have reread my own blog posts first to jog my memory on my status. Having been unusually decisive on the pattern, I whipped the sandwich off the hanger and quilted away on a roughly 12" tall section by the width of quilt before moving on to another area to be similar patterned. Not very far into it, I discovered that this new area had a huge tuck in the backing fabric. Huh?

Apparently I had stored the quilt in a tidy sandwich but had not smoothed out all the wrinkles nor spray basted it. So pleased was I to find a sandwich ready to quilt, that I had totally failed to notice I had left out that pretty crucial step. I set out to smooth and spray baste with one end already quilted. That maneuver involved quite a bit of crawling around on the floor, taping and re-taping, adjusting and re-adjusting, smoothing and re-smoothing. The backing wound up a tiny bit catawampus at the far edges from where I began quilting, but thank goodness not so much so that the front hung over the edges anywhere. Whew! Breathe a sigh of relief. I could have needed to take out that entire band of FMQ but that was not necessary. I only needed to remove a small amount in the center of the quilted section where the seam of the backing was leaned over to one side and not open as everywhere else.


Angela Walter has a book Shape by Shape that I love to use for inspiration.


In it is a design for square blocks that I like to use. I have shown Angela Walters' sequence for quilting in the following diagram.


I adapted it for use in my four-sided blocks using curves instead of straight lines for the center cross. It works for blocks that are concave at the circumference of the circle ( ~wheels)...


... and for blocks that are concave at the circumference of the circle (~webs).


I made myself paper templates that I folded in quarters to help me visualize and mark with a dot the block center where the diagonal lines should cross. This is the template for the "web".


This is the "web" template folded in half, aligned, and marked with the midway point for transferral.


This is the template for the "wheel".


This is the "wheel" template folded in half, aligned, and marked with the midway point for transferral.


I have not yet decided how to quilt these odd shaped blocks that look like steer horns or angular bottomed leafs.
  

These are some patterns I am toying with but I am not thrilled by any of them. The feather one (upper right) would be fun to do but I do not know that it goes with the petals. The loops option (lower left) is within my skill level and could pass for tendrils on plants. The blocks are almost triangular so I may peruse that section of the Shape by Shape book for ideas. Also, if I split each along a "stem line" they do become two three sided sections.


I could echo quilt the shape but my echo quilting is wobbly. Notice how non-smooth this corner quarter circle came out when echoed with simple concentric arcs.


I tried petals as an option for the quarter circles instead, but feel that then there would be too many petals.


Besides if I did petals for a full circle, it would remind me too much of an atom symbol. So the circle pattern is also up for grabs.


Decisions, decisions. I am taking my time. This is slow going for me on my sit-down HQ-16 but that is perfectly fine. I like to decide as I go along and exercise my learned muscle memory in all similar sections at once. I need to come up with a quilt name too. Although Wheels & Webs as a working name is descriptive, I am not fond of spiders. At the rate I am going perhaps Petalmania?  The kit name Carnival does not float my boat. I already named a quilt Out of the Blue. I am seeking an alternative. Until then I am off to share with others at Let's Bee Social #247.