Showing posts with label Hand Applique. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hand Applique. Show all posts

Thursday, June 6, 2024

To-Do Tues June 2024

 The Chookshed Challenge # for June is 10. This is Ella. For now, I have 41 blocks on the big design wall. We moved it into the SonRoon for the quilt retreat we had here a couple of weeks ago. That was a lot of fun. Deana from Dreamworthy Quilts and her husband Jim flew in for a few days. My Sweetie kept him entertained driving tractors and other fun farmer stuff and thus, kept out of the quilt room. Some of the girls who used to come here quilting in years past joined us in person and others virutally. We plan to do it again mid Aug. If anyone is interested in joining us, let me know and we can pick you up at the airport. We have had practice doing that. 


For now, Ella has just 6 applique blocks that need to be completed. I originally was going to make 50 blocks, but 41 will work. This will stay up on the wall until those 6 are finished and the sashing sewn on. Then the conundrum of how will it be quilted runs rampant through my thoughts. No idea at this point. If I intend to machine quilt it myself, then I will have to hone my machine quilting skills. So I have been revisiting Angela Walters blog for inspiration. 

My To-Do Tuesday list this week is:

  1. Pack my overnight bag for a weekend retreat I have been organizing for my mentoring women's group. 
  2. Go to the retreat and enjoy myself. I will not be teaching this time. 
  3. Plant those flowers and berries I bought last month that are still in their pots. Not sure where to put them. 
  4. Put in a few hand applique stitches on the Ella blocks. This will be my June OMG. Everything I need is right here within reach. 
  5. Continue to have fun and laugh. Laughing feels so good. 
Blessings,
Chris

Sunday, December 12, 2021

Hand Stitching for Today

 It is Sunday and very quiet here this morning so far. I have been up for about an hour and a half and wrote my Morning pages. What is that you may ask? Come back later this week and I will tell you. 

I was looking through my Ella project box looking for something to stitch by hand since it is the day we slow down and do Slow Stitching. 

Here is what I found. 


 Five blocks started and not completed. Three of them were partly stitched back in the spring and are just waiting for me to do some more back basting. Somewhere along the line, I placed each of the blocks and the extra fabrics in file folders to keep them nice and flat and together. One of the things that slow me down is continual rummaging through the fabrics and creating a mess. Now I know how to make a mess, but I am trying to get more organized so I can be more productive. 

I wonder how much progress I will make today?

Blessings,

Chris

Sunday, December 5, 2021

Sunday Slow Stitching

 I will be doing some needle-turned hand applique on this Ella Maria Deacon block. I started it around April. It is time to complete it. 


Linking up with Kathy at Slow Sunday Stitching
Blessings,

Chris

Saturday, September 4, 2021

Sept 2021 OMG Goal

My goodness! How can it be September already? I guess time flies when you are having fun. And fun we have had this summer. It was a time filled with family and rain and people and Covid. Our son tested positive last week and so did 7-year-old Jonathan. His parents were moving so he and David came to the farm for a few days. David was negative so he is isolated at the trailer with Mom. 

Dad is in the new house alone and Jonathan is asymptomatic (not sick) and is isolating here at the farm. He finally has 10 whole days where his little brother is not picking a fight and trying to beat him up all the time. He says he misses that. He has been busy helping Grampa around the farm. The rains finally stopped and we have had a whole week of sunshine so now we can bale dry hay.



Aug 7 was our 50th anniversary. We had a simple family BBQ. It was great. The weather was amazing until we cut the brownie cake that the grandchildren had made, and dished out the ice cream, then the skies opened and we got dumped with about 2 inches of rain. This would have been okay, except that all we adults were outside in the dining tent. The children all had the good sense to run into the house. 

Chooky has hosted several zoom parties this summer. Last night I joined some of the girls from Australia, the USA, New Zealand, and Germany for a few hours to stitch and catch up with what is going on in our parts of the world. 

This is what I worked on. I did so little quilting this summer. This is as far as I got on the Summer QAL from Quilting Gail. I had lots of the smaller units sewn up in July and put them all together last night. I still have to sew all 35 blocks together and add a few borders. It is a bit smaller than I want. I think a half-inch dark brown framing the center, then each of the 3 colours around that. 


Today is my 8th Anniversary of blogging. What a ride it has been! I have met quilters and farmers who quilt all over the world. I even went to Australia in 2015 and met some in person. I definitely want to go back. 




It is time to choose an OMG quilting goal for Sept. It has to be simple this time because  . . . 

drum roll please . . . 

 
I have 36 thousand yards of the most amazing colours of thread that I won for the May Aurifil Thread prize from OMG. I think there might have been an oops because there should have been a 3-pack. So, thank you Patty from Elm Street Quilts

My OMG for Sept will be to crack open a few of these threads and give them a try. I will use some for hand applique for slow-sunday-stitching on the 50th Anniversary aka Ella blocks 

and others for machine quilting on the Disappearing 9-Patch that I will be using as a sample for a new quilting class starting here at Quilting @ the Farm in 2 weeks. 

That should keep me out of trouble for this month. 

Blessings,

Sunday, March 28, 2021

April 201 OMG Goal

My OMG goal for April will be to stitch for at least 15 minutes almost every day. I have quite a few Ella blocks already prepped with back basting for needle-turn hand applique. This method goes on in layers as some of the pieces sit on top of others. There will be a few broderie perse blocks. I like doing them once I decide what fabrics to cut out. I prep lots of blocks at a time when I have time to sit with it for a few hours like on Sat mornings when I meet online with a few sisters and quilting friends. 



I am putting most of my other projects on hold for a couple of months as I endeavor to complete the rest of my academic courses. And if I can stay off Facebook and stop reading blogs and playing games, I have a good chance to do just that. But that is not the way I do things usually. 

We are back in lockdown this week, so I won't be able to go to the pool again for a while. It felt good to get some exercise but it did take time and energy. Taxes are getting done on Wed.  

blessings,

Chris

linking with: slow-sunday-stitching_  kate-life-in-pieces. 

oh-scrap-  quiltingpatch. design allmonday 

lovelaughquilt. needleandthreadnetwork. 

wednesday-wait-loss  midweek-makers  myquiltinfatuation.  

ninamariesayre. boms-away-  tishnwonderland

elmstreetquilts.

Thursday, March 25, 2021

March 2021 OMG Completion

 . 

I am calling it done for my March OMG. My goal was to work on The Curves for the QAL 2021. I do not have the flimsy yet but I did make up a lot of blocks. 

I put them up on the big design wall in a few different versions and asked my Sat morning group for ideas. So now, I plan to put it aside for a while and consider all the ideas. 



Another goal idea was to sew on some of the sashing strips to Ella blocks so I could put them up on the wall easier. And I did that. Most of the blocks around the outside are just prepped and some of them have some of the hand applique done. I work on these for my 15 minutes to Stitch each day. I think I missed one day this month. I had thought to start working on some of the machine pieced blocks but will leave them until June. I should have lots more time then since I am working madly trying to complete the last courses for my doctorate. So back to the books.
Here is a picture of the antique quilt I found. 

Blessings,

Chris

linking with: myquiltinfatuation.  needleandthreadnetwork.blogspot.

off-wall-friday.  wendysquiltsandmore.  finished-or-not-friday 

katiemaequilts.

Sunday, February 21, 2021

Ella Maria Deacon Quilt Blocks

 

This has been an amazing week of hand stitching, movie watching, and snow. We do snow here in Feb in our part of Canada. It is, after all, winter. The calendar may suggest that Spring begins on March 20th, but we had snow on May 9th last year. Yup. Mother's Day weekend. I had the snow tires taken off my car that morning.
I stitched every day for at least 15 minutes and some days 3-4 hours. So, it is not surprising that I completed 5 blocks this week. Most of these I had prepped last summer and fall. It is easy enough to do the prep work. I like doing the prep work. Most had been done on zoom meetings with amazing quilters from around the world as well as some of my family and friends here. I tried doing some machine work one Sat morning but messed up both blocks I was working on so limit myself to doing handwork that requires not much thinking. I cannot talk and stitch at the same time.

This block caused me no end of grief.  
There are several curly-cues in the corners of the original, but I skipped them this time.
 
And I tried, I really tried to put a fussy cut center into the middle, but just could not. 
I did not l like the way it looked. Then considered adding a white circle on top but decided to do it in reverse applique. 


The reason being, I had cut the end of that one petal too short and did not have enough to turn it under. 
Okay. I did that with 2 petals. 

So, I did some unstitching, adjusted them, and appliqued them down again. 
After that, I turned under the ends and did some reverse applique. I usually enjoy reverse applique, but that was a lot of seams to turn under and my circle is not round. At this point, I am calling it done. If I still am not happy about it, after I complete the rest of the blocks, I will revisit it. 
I still have to get the T4 summaries all made up for our 14 farm employees. I have never done this before and I spent a good 2 hours on Fri trying to find the forms to fill out only to discover it already in my downloads. Then I spent the next 2 hours trying to make sense of the monthly Payroll Summaries and printed them all off. That was a lot of paper. I will do all the input by hand first, then into the computer. But, for the life of me, I have no idea, yet, how or where to submit them, other than printing off copies and stapling them to each of the employees' payslips. 

This will be my Slow Sunday Stitching block for today.  

Blessings

Chris

Linking with:

slow-sunday-stitching

kate-life-in-pieces.

quiltingismorefunthanhousework.

design-wall-monday- boms-away

monday-making  tishnwonderland.  needleandthreadnetwork. midweek-makers wednesday-wait-loss

myquiltinfatuation  off-wall-friday.  wendysquiltsandmore. alyciaquilts.blogspot.

Friday, February 12, 2021

15 Minutes to Stitch

I used to go to a $10 Quilt Class at my local quilt shop. The class I went to met in the mornings a half hour before the store opened. It became a very popular class with 35-40 women packed in a small classroom smaller than my quilt room here at the farm. I found it a bit claustrophobic so entered the room just as the shop owner greeted the participants. I often pulled out the stool from under the cutting table and sat in the doorway. I once sat on the ledge at the back of the room but my back hurt for days after. The game became getting there first to get a front-row seat, but even then, we sat elbow to elbow and that was a bit too close for me. You could say social distancing had not yet been invented. At the end of the half-hour class, there was roll call and we had to show our completed block from the previous month in order to receive the next free block pattern and fabric. 

Going in the mornings was a bit of an accomplishment for me in those days. I started my day at 5 am by milking my cows. A quick breakfast and shower before driving into town for a waterfit class. After another quick shower, I drove the 4 minutes to the quilt shop. We were free to shop and everything was 10% off for participants. Everyone wanted the 10% off. I would not sit through the whole instructions on how to put the block together because I liked to play the game of figuring it out for myself. Then I went for groceries or other errands and eventually got home for a late lunch. So in the end, I did not start working on my newest block until, not don't be too surprised, the night before the next class a month later. So the pressure was on to complete the thing and I usually chose the more challenging block because that is more fun.

Eventually, the class was so popular that in addition to the 3 weekly classes, they opened up an evening class. Five pm on a Friday. I signed up one year and a friend joined me. We came back to the farm and cut out our blocks and talked. It was great. It was easy to sew the thing up with lots of time to spare each month.  

And why do I say all this? Because here it is nearly midnight and I have not yet done my 15 Minutes to Stitch today. It is not a big deal. It is only 15 minutes. I have learned through experience not because I listen to reason, that if I want to have some stitching to pick up throughout the day, I need to have some stitching prepared and waiting for me. I do love to prep several applique blocks at a time. Last month I prepped 6 Ella blocks. I already had another 6 or 8 partly done. Some of the blocks are on the design wall in the quilt room. I put together a small project box with thread, scissors, and a block or two. Last week I  set up my new floor lamp by my chair in the living room and started watching movies. We are watching The Dig for our Sewing at the Farm class this week. 

However, I now have a new workspace upstairs with my new laptop all set up to write. I took up a new kettle I bought last fall in anticipation of having this space and be able to make my tea and not have to go up and down the stairs because that is not fun when you have arthritis and the knees resist all the fun exercise and those stairs are bigger than the ones I have traipsed up and down for the past 49 1/2 years and there is a bathroom up there and all that sort of logic. Then what did I do? I took up another small project box to that room and it is sitting up there and not down here. Seriously. I do overthink things sometimes. And over prepare things. Somehow today I have no stitching to do by hand here or by my armchair. And we watched about 4 episodes of The Great Canadian Baking Show. It was decadent to say the least. 

Monday the newest Ella blocks will be released. There are only 4 more months of blocks in the program. I will probably print off the patterns, pick some fabrics and begin the prep work to have yet more blocks to stitch by hand for at least 15 minutes each day. In my Swiss Cheese brain, if I miss a day, it will be so easy to miss another and then forget that I was doing it at all until the next month when the new blocks are released. 

So even though I have worked on at least 4 different blocks this week, I only completed this one so far. It will sit on-point in the final layout.

Blessings,

Chris

linking with: Slow Sunday Stitching, 15 Minutes to Stitch

patchwork-quilts quiltingismorefunthanhousework.

katiemaequilts.boms-away-  design-wall-monday- -friday-night-sew-in- needleandthreadnetwork.

midweek-makers-  wednesday-wait-loss  myquiltinfatuation  off-wall-friday. 

wendysquiltsandmore.  can-i-get-whoop-whoop- tishnwonderland.

Saturday, February 6, 2021

New Laptop

This past Thurs I got a new laptop. Yup. Brand new. I messaged my son at noon and he brought one home for me that night. I said it had to have a touch screen because I am spoiled. Now I have the fun of setting up a new computer and figuring out how to find things. First off, it has facial recognition. This simply means that when I open the lid and press the on button, it starts up. No password needed. And I have it upstairs in my new workspace. I met with my Sat group there this morning and had a great time visiting with sisters and friends from 4 different countries. 

Last week we (I) impulsively suggested we watch a movie to talk about and mentioned The Dressmaker. Highly recommend it. It is quirky, sad, funny, and unexpected. Next week we agreed on The Dig. That is based on a true story practically in my sister's backyard in Suffolk England. Then I suggested Agatha Christie the Truth of Murder for the following week. 

And why am I suddenly watching movies? Because I can. I found these on Netflix but not every country has the same choices Then I discovered movies on youtube. This on my new laptop upstairs in my new workspace. My Sweet Husband suggested I wait until after the summer before moving my 100 boxes of quilting stuff up there. 


Also, I bought a floor lamp. One with a weighted base so it will not tip over on the thick carpet in our living room. Most of the couches are too uncomfortable for my body but I can sit in the leather easy chair. Now I can stitch as I sit there and so I am. This is revolutionary for me. I usually sit here at my desk or table by the computer. After all, I am trying to complete Ella blocks and do the 15 Minutes to Stitch thing every week. 



Today we went next door to wish Great Grandma a happy 92nd Birthday. The girls made a batch of brownies and took her one-piece with 2 candles in it. It was bitterly cold and since I cannot walk that far, I got a ride. The girls made cards and our daughter and the boys showed up with cards and snow gear to go sledding on the hill behind the drive shed.

I completed 2 blocks this week. I have 9 in-process blocks to choose from so bring on the Super Bowl!

 Blessings,

Chris


linking with: off-wall-friday.

wendysquiltsandmore  confessionsofafabricaddict. alyciaquilts. 

 link-party-patchwork-quilts-   tishnwonderland. ortheloveofgeese.  quiltingismorefunthanhousework.  sugarlane-designs 

slow-sunday-stitching  kate-life-in-pieces.  whatahootquilts.

Saturday, January 30, 2021

February 2021 OMG Goal

 I always find it a challenge to settle in on just one OMG goal. What will it be?  


What about Bright Jane? I made 5 pink blocks for RSC to add to the 7 I already had made. 

Feb's color is yellow. My quilt needs 11 blocks for that colour. 

I have been sitting here hovering near the girls doing their school work. Ellyse is so much like me Totally distractable.



Ellyse joined me and Chooky and the girls Monday night on zoom. We cut out a whole lot of green and white pieces for The Curves. It was hard work and I let her do the cranking. 
She had a paper cut on her finger and "had to" change the band-aid every 4 hours (a bit OCD maybe). She was asking if she still needed yet another new bandaid but I said no, the cut was healing up very nicely. Then I reached down into a box on the floor to pull out some papers and what do you know? I came back up with a very big bloody paper cut on the ring finger of my right hand. You know, my-push-the-needle-through-the-applique finger. Ouch. So. she put a bandaid on it. It is healing very nicely. I only changed it once when it fell off washing dishes. 







I continue to do my 15-Minutes of Stitching daily. So far I am 100%. 
This Ella block was a bit daunting. I started with back-basting the yellow centers in each corner. Then I added the red petals on either side. 

 
I forgot to take a picture of only one of the brown curlycues that frame each flower. I am doing these in 4 separate applications. I probably could have done it as one piece, but I wanted to do it the way the original maker switched hers. 
This will be my hand stitching for the next few days. 
There will yet be a cluster of flower petals at the end of each of those brown stems. 




My OMG goal for Feb has to be The Curves.  I must have all 64 units done so I can put together the required 16 blocks and complete the rest of the things by the end of the month. I plan to get Ellyse to help cut out more pieces. 


Blessings,

Chris


linking with: off-wall-friday.

wendysquiltsandmore  confessionsofafabricaddict. alyciaquilts. 

 link-party-patchwork-quilts-   tishnwonderland. 

Friday, January 22, 2021

The Storyteller

I did the High5 Quiz online recently and it tells me I am a Storyteller. You think?  That's part of why being a writer is so exciting. I get to tell stories. Here on the blog, I tell stories about quilt blocks I make or the process of making them. I tell stories about my grandchildren. To be challenged to tell a story without words, is, for me, well, a challenge. I could post pictures but always want to be explaining things.

This is as far as I have gotten with the January RSC pinks for Bright Jane. I still have a week so I might get more made. 


The craziest thing here on the new Blogger. All my photos came up in reverse order. No problem. I will just change how I write up my story, even though I have been writing bits and pieces throughout the week. 
This is the back of one block with the back-basting. I used a regular pencil this time. I figure it will be hidden on the back under the appliques. That fabric is white, really. 


When doing the back-basting thing, you stitch the bits in layers. This is the first layer of this block. I stitched down the top part of each petal and cut a tiny notch for the curve but realized it was perfect for transitioning from the stitched part to the flat part that will be under the next petals. You will have to wait until next time to see the progress. 

I made this block a while ago but finally finished the Broderie Perse applique. Devan is claiming this block for her name. I had to convince her to wait until the quilt was done, as she was already looking for a Sharpie. You can read that story here.
Wait until you see what this block will look like. I hope my process works. I like process. That is part of why I like blogging so much of my quilting journey. I can document the process of making the blocks. I make a lot of blocks.  
And, I did get in at least 15 minutes stitching every day. Sometimes 3-4 hours.
I prepped 6 applique blocks for my 50th Aniversary Quilt aka Ella. One of the other girls in the group tucked in a scene in one of the blocks. I will see if I can find one for this center. Otherwise, there will be more 8 petal flowers inside, inside a square inside a circle with skinny petals in the corners.

I just realized that I am doing a lot of hand stitching these days. Why? Because my hands do not hurt quite as much as they were. Stopping eating so much sugar cannot possibly be the reason.

I was looking at my 50 Goals for 2021. One of them is celebrating our son-in-law's 50th birthday. We had plans and a little boy sleepover and something other than pizza with the cake, but we are in a stay-at-home lockdown this month so will have to wait until another time. You only turn 50 once. We had pizza anyway.

This the other block I completed this week. I was liking the softer colours - the creams and butter and coral and chocolate and aqua. My Sweet husband of nearly 50 years thought it was rather underwhelming. But when I put the egg yolk and cranberry together with a touch of chocolate, that the thing started looking exciting. 


My OMG goal for January was to complete 16 units for the QAL The Curves! I found the fabrics I needed and pulled out the GO cutter and the 7inch Drunkards Path die. Oops. The way the die is designed, I will be wasting a lot of fabric cutting the way I want. 


We shall see. I still have a lot more cutting to do. I did make my OMG goal for January.

 

In the meantime, the little girls decided they wanted to do some quilting. Sigh. I am so lazy sometimes. I have kept putting them off saying it was too cluttered to work here and with them and their school work, it is even more so. But Devan would not let me get away with that. So, they both started a new quilt. Five-inch quilt as you go hexagons. They are learning to use the rotary cutters. But we still have to make a bit more room for them both to work, because they have to do it at the same time. These both are Devan's blocks. Then she decided to make some pillows for her stuffies, but I would not let her use the machine because I have it set up with my sewing, so she pulled out the biggest needle in the pincushion and started stitching by hand. 

Friday, January 8, 2021

A Day at the Farm

I have had a blast writing up blogs to post every day for December and beyond. But it is time to refocus my writing time on academics and authorship. Post-Christmas life here on the farm in wintery Canada is a bit different than other years at this time. We are in lockdown again, but this time the schools are closed for at least 3 weeks. This means the grandchildren are doing home learning. With the joint custody thing, I get the privilege of overseeing them 2-3 days a week on this. We got through this week. Sort of. I got a new internet provider that finally kicked in New Year's Eve at supper time, but the promised higher speed forgot the memo. So, Wed morning, while the 3 girls were all on with their teachers, I called and was on hold for most of an hour with them tweaking the connection and increasing the download speed, which means they turned off the signal not once, but twice, while the poor little girls were trying to do interactive, live schooling with their classes. Oops. But all is good now. The whole purpose of getting a new provider was to get faster internet for the schooling thing. 

One girl was on Daddy's laptop in the living room. One was in the quilt room on her cell phone and laptop, and one was on my desktop. So where was Grampa supposed to watch his Good Morning Foot Ball show? Not in the living room nor have his after-morning-chores nap on the living room couch. So, upstairs he had to go. Speaking of Grampa, we gave each of the grandchildren an Amaryllis bulb to plant and have been enjoying the flowers. Each bulb came up different. 


And where was Gramma supposed to do her stitching and reading and "other stuff"? At the kitchen table of course. Those wooden chairs are hard when you have to sit in them for up to 6 hours. 


But all is good. the girls have scheduled nutrition breaks (they no longer have lunch and recess) twice each day. They had smoothies with dad at 6:30 and a bit of tv but breakfast wasn't ready in time for them to log in at 9 so they had their bacon and eggs for the first nutrition break at 10:40. As it turns out, Gramma has to get out of bed before 9 am in order to have them ready. They had to wear real clothes, not pajamas. 





So I will be posting only once a week for now and try to get everything in. FNWF is happening right now (I think). It is 1:10 AM Friday, Jan 8 here in Canada. I did hand stitching for a couple of hours today as I was listening to lectures from my writing coach. Great insights into why I am struggling with my writing.  So, I get to log in with 15 Minutes to Stitch with a perfect score for this week, even though they report on Sundays. This brings me to Sunday Slow Stitching. I will continue working on these hand appliqued blocks for the 50th Anniversary Quilt aka Ella.  

Now, did I miss anything? 
Blessings,
Chris
linking with: off-wall-friday. 

Sunday, January 3, 2021

15 Minutes to Stitch

I have considered joining this 15 Minutes to Stitch a number of times and always waver at committing to following through. That is one of my weaknesses. Following through. Thinking about it and talking about it and making plans about it do not actually get the job done. 


I do track how often I stitch. Sometimes it is only 2 or 3 times a month. This was actual thread in fabric stitching. When I made the Cherries Quilt, I just stitched whenever I felt like it, or when I was on a trip or babysitting. Some of those times were 2-3 hour sessions and I eventually got the thing to a flimsy in just under 6 years. 


But I have a 50th Anniversary Quilt I want to complete by June and the only way I am going to meet my goal is to do some stitching every single day. I am only making 50 of these nine-inch blocks. Some are machine pieced but most are hand appliqued. 




So my 15 minutes to stitch will include hand stitching, machine stitching, prepping applique, cutting fabric, tearing out papers, as well as sorting and choosing fabrics. Twelve done and only 38 to go with 9 of those half done. I can do this. 

Blessings,

Chris

linking with: needleandthreadnetwork.