I had a post about this quilt over on my secret projects blog, but I don't think the mother of the baby reads my blog. So I am going to update it here.
About 6 weeks ago I bought a set of these pinwheel blocks. There were 42 of them. None of them were the same sizes. So I took one apart and made correct seam allowances, etc. Took too much time. I just cut them all down to 6-1/2" square, regardless of lost points. My sewing-est daughter saw them on my design wall and did not notice the chopped off points until I pointed it out.
Here are the pics. I had to add some "muslin" to this block because the seam allowance was ripping:
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
{Post #976} Vintage Block Baby Quilt
Sunday, February 24, 2008
The End of The End
The slightly busy design hides the quilt starts and stops and any tiny mistakes (I know--you don't make any, but I do).
I've also had questions about how I get things done so fast. I always think I could be doing things more efficiently or faster. But here's some things I do when making a scrap quilt like Plan B, which is my current leader/ender project.
I have a shallow plastic basket that I always keep beside my sewing machine. Right now it has nothing but 2" squares in it, creams and colors.
I have a separate box for finished units. It's a shoe-box sized plastic box with a lid. Beside my sewing machine I keep small pieces in the basket (not units, which are at least 2 pieces sewn together). When I'm sewing something else, I end with a leader/ender from that instead of the scrap of trash fabric I used to sew on until it was thread-filled and then throw it away. This way I'm "sewing" all these units without actually spending time on them. Occasionally, I'll sew lots and lots of the units together if I'm not working on another project.
The units go into the box loose. After I iron and trim them to size, I safety pin them together in groups of ten so I can count them easily. I usually iron and trim a lot of them at once. They go into the box unironed and untrimmed. I count how many of each unit I need ahead of time so I can slow down on that one once I get close to my goal. Sometimes, the actual numbers can be ovewhelming. For example, for Plan B, I will need 204 four-patches made from 4 dark/colored 2" squares. That's a lot (816 squares!), but I'm over halfway there. I am cutting all my scraps into 2" squares and putting them in a shallow basket for leader/enders. Same with creams, but that's another unit.
~Joan
Saturday, February 23, 2008
Cancelled Trip, Finished Quilt
Our trip for today was cancelled. We were heading to see and surprise my FIL for his 75th birthday. Yesterday, all day, my DH was not feeling well. He just kept feeling worse. He has been in bed for most of today as well. Nothing serious, but he is miserable. He was concerned about spreading it to us as well as extended family, so we stayed home.
We had a day and a half free, but what to do? All of our mental planning was going towards a long van trip, but now we were free as birds.
I finished machine quilting my Double Pinwheel Quilt (above) and just moments ago put the last stitches in the binding. It's now in the washer. I even put a label on this. I'm coming along! Before long I'll have this quilting thing down.
Off to play a game with the kiddos.
~Joan
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Dust Bunnies & Finished BREIT Quilt
Above is my bobbin case after two days of sewing and machine quilting. Dust bunnies be free!
Below is the quilt Emily made for a customer. It has prairie points around the edge and is about 45" square. She did the piecing and I did the quilting. We are a good team like that. If it weren't for this quilt, I'd never have found the magazine with my next quilt pattern in it. It was when I was buying the thread for this that I found THE magazine.
The Engelbreit quilt is machine quilted with loops and hearts. Perfect for a baby quilt, I think. It will be off to its owner tomorrow.
I quilted one border of my Double Pinwheel quilt with a feather and tendril stencil. I LOVE it. I need to stop for today because it's time to get the van ready to head to youth choir practice. See ya...
~Joan
Marking Stencil and Quilting It
Here is the quilt border after being marked with Quilt Pounce. Click on the words to look it up on the web. You don't actually tap, tap, tap the Quilt Pounce like the name indicates. You wipe it over the stencil. I also have one with white powder, but I've never had to use it. The blue shows up on everything I've pieced.
This is a continuous-line stencil, meaning that one doesn't have to start and stop constantly. That's great for machine-quilting. It doesn't matter as much with hand-quilting because you're starting and stopping all the time anyway. Here is the stitching from the back...not perfect, but after washing, it will look acceptable, perhaps even lovely.
~Joan
Pinning to Machine Quilt
Here is the table that I am using to pin baste the Double Pinwheels Quilt. It was a table my DH's office used. When they were downsizing, they sold office furniture to the employees who wanted something. We got two of these tables. My DH built a base for the other, and it serves as my cutting table. The base brings it up to the perfect height for saving my overworked back.
In this picture, the center of my quilt is already quilted. Now I'm getting ready to pin the outer pinwheel border. I will quilt the cream inner border after the pinwheel border is quilted. The reasons for that...I'm using a stencil to mark the inner cream border. I didn't want to quilt it with lots of pins in the quilt. Once the pinwheel border is quilted, the cream border will be more stable and won't need any pins at all.
This table is about 30" x 60".
The quilt top, batting, and backing really stick together. To get the pinwheel border in the proper place, I had to lift it off the batting and let it lie down again. In some places I could swipe my hand across it and see that it was flat. Others needed firmer measures. One of the nice things about laying it on a table is that you can see that the edge is relatively straight. I don't get a ruler out or anything, but you can see that the dark brown outer border is straight "to the eye".
I don't use tons of pins, but I use ENOUGH. That varies from quilt to quilt. Since the inside of the quilt is already quilted and I'll be machine quilting at high speed, I only put 2 pins per 7" block here. I put them in the same place in each block so that my brain gets the "pin ahead...pin ahead" message while I'm quilting so I don't hit one and break a needle. I do not sew over pins.
Notice that the pins have large glass heads. That makes it easier to grab them quickly while machine quilting. I usually pull them out while I'm quilting (I don't stop).
Why am I blogging all these details? Because it's payback for all the tips I've gleaned from other quilters from reading their blogs. It IS possible to machine quilt on a domestic sewing machine (DSM). When I sent quilts out for quilting, I only had them stippled because I didn't want to spend money for the fancy quilting. This is a time-consuming process, but I think it's worth the money saved and the satisfaction of knowing I did it myself.
One more note on machine quilting. I am more choosy about my quilt BACKS these days. I make sure I can use threads for the top and back that are fairly close in color value. It is annoying to not be able to get the thread tension perfect. One of the quilts I did recently (hanging head in shame) had dark brown thread on the top and cream on the back. I could not get the tension perfect, and it nearly drove me to insanity. I kept getting brown dots on the back, then cream dots on the front. Even the most minute adjustment on the tension knob reversed the polka dots. Fortunately, after washing, the threads somehow miraculously went back to their proper places and one would never see the dots. It was hard to hold my breath the whole time the quilt was in the washer and dryer though.
I'd be glad to answer any machine quilting questions. I am by no means an expert, but I do quilt all my own quilts, a few by hand, most by machine.
~Joan
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
2/3 of Center Quilted
My goal is to get the center of this quilted tonight. I'm already 2/3 finished. The left part in the picture still needs to be quilted. I like to machine quilt this type of quilting in one day if possible, with short breaks. That way I can keep the motion and size going instead of starting out large and changing size by the time I get to the end. Benjamin (11) helped me lay this out on a table for pin basting. I had cut down a large batting and somehow cut it one inch too short. Instead of freaking out about it (like I normally would, beating myself mentally about the head and shoulders), I had another packge of batting, so I just used it. I'll save this one for a slightly smaller quilt.
Benjamin had high-tailed it out of the MPR (multi-purpose room) by then, so I enlisted Elisabeth for helping lay it out.
I lay the backing out with equal amounts hanging off the table on all sides. I have a helper on the other end of the table. I lay the batting down and gently arrange it so that there aren't any lumps or pleats in it. We center the quilt top on there. Since I've been doing these past few on my DSM, I only pin one part at a time. I use straight pins and make them all point to the left. I'm right handed. That makes it easy to pull them out and throw them towards the magnetic pin cushion. I always have several bobbins threaded to keep the momentum going.
On something this size, I do a couple blocks' worth from top to bottom, removing pins as I go. Then I move over to the next couple blocks to the left. I do that until I reach the middle. I'll flip the quilt around the start at the top right corner again, meeting in the middle. That way there isn't as much under the sewing machine arm at one time.
The borders will take much longer than the center. This is free-motion, just filling it in. I have a heart in heart for the first cream border, then I'll do a medium stippling in the outer pinwheel border. I'm going to try another stencil in the outer border if it's the right size. I haven't checked yet.
~Joan
Double Pinwheels, Anyone?
This is a cheerful quilt top. Most of my quilts are more dark than light. I purposely made this one lighter just to have a little variety on my quilt stand!! These blocks are so easy to piece. I already have quilt plans. I just need to piece a back and get started.
I recently received a package of stencils, and there is one that I want to try for the border of this. It's a feather with tendrils coming off occasionally. I will quilt the center with freehand pinwheels, then try the stencil in the border. The border will be kind of tedious, but I'm willing to give it a go.
This finished at about 72" x 88". Only the right half is pinned to my design wall in the pic; Emily is holding up the left half. Doesn't she have nice fingernails? LOL!
Off for back piecing...
~Joan
Monday, February 18, 2008
Do I Have to go Sleep??
I did all the things I was supposed to do tonight, and still got the center of my Double Pinwheel quilt pieced! It's after 11 PM, and I need my beauty sleep though. Tomorrow I only have to add the outermost border.
I'll just leave you hanging to see how it finishes up. It is 56" x 70" right now. I wish I had noticed this earlier, but I had enough blocks to make the inside 6 x 7 instead of 5 x 7 blocks. I wish I had made it larger, but this is fine. I'll either sell the extra blocks or use them in the backing.
As Tigger says...TTFN.
~Joan
Double Pinwheel Top in Sight!
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
MORE Double Pinwheel Blocks
Here are close ups of two of my new blocks, then a picture of all of one set (when you make these, you get two sets, one "spinning" in each direction). I have run out of room to show these with the border of opposite spinning blocks around the outside. My design wall is not that big. So, now I have 40 of these beauties finished. I will soon need to figure out how many more blocks I want to make to have a throw large enough to cover a 1/4" shy of 6 foot 14-year-old son.
Off for Nakata leftovers and a nap (for some reason I got up at 4 this AM--sigh).
~Joan
Nakata What?
This is not Nakata. This is DD1. She is 17, going on 45, LOL! Yes--the hair is naturally curly. Her driver's ed teacher (last spring) asked her if that was one of those "add-ons". Then he asked her if she was wearing contacts to make her eyes that color. She replied, "I'm all real--nothing artificial!" She has been begging me to show her in my blog, so there she is.
These are not Nakata either. This is my progress as of last night (1-14) on these double pinwheel blocks. They are so stinkin' cute.
Nakata is where my DH took me for supper. It's a Japanese steak house. What a hoot! The whole meal was a show. I don't particularly like Japanese food, but I stuck it out and actually enjoyed it very much.
The meal started with us sitting around a large grill. The tabletop goes right up to the grill edge (the cook can reach each plate). He began his food preparation by doing a watch-me-twirl-throw-catch-and-repeat-my-cooking-utensils act. It was marvelous. Then he methodically cooks and serves various dishes. It was all yummy. First is fried rice. Everything is scooped and slid over the grill, then served around the table. There was a mountain of rice. He occasionally squirts this or that (I have NO idea what this or that was, other than water, soy sauce, and oil) onto the food mountain. Then there's more chopping, flipping, scraping, and serving. You start eating your rice (I even was adventurous and used chopsticks for the first time. I tried reading the directions, but they were in Japanese!). Meanwhile, he is preparing a shrimp and vegetable appetizer. Then he goes around and cooks everyone's meat...ribeye steak, chicken breast, shrimp, etc. Everything is sliced and diced before cooking so it can be easily thrown around--er, I mean eaten. So fun to watch! I took pictures with my phone, so I'll share them later if we miraculously find the cable that will allow me to download them to my 'puter.
~Joan
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Double Pinwheel Progress
My DS2 notified me that our quilts are all getting too small. He was "complaining" that he couldn't cover up with a throw anymore when laying down on the sofa. If his feet were covered, it only came up to his elbows. Could it possibly be that he is nearly six feet tall now??
Pressing on,
~Joan