Showing posts with label Quilting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quilting. Show all posts

Monday, January 6, 2014

The Mystery is Solved - Celtic Solstice

Oh my goodness!  I put in a block wrong!  Can you spot it?
Happy New Year!  On New Year's Day, just after midnight EST, Bonnie Hunter revealed the final Celtic Solstice clue that revealed the beautiful Quilt she designed for us.  I am loving the pattern, but the colors are a tad outside my comfort zone. 

Since I was diligently working on Clue 5 still, I did not post last week's progress.  I was able to complete all of steps 2, 3, and 4, with 1 and 5 cut out, but not completed.  Now I have pieces and parts enough for a king-size quilt that will never be completed. 

This is the quilt I am determined to make - a small-ish size quilt that I can snuggle under.  Likely I will use the other parts for other smaller quilts for charity work.  It's bound to make someone smile.

I have seen many color variations of this quilt on others' blogs and am dreaming about making a full or queen size quilt for our guest room or our room, but the orange and yellow?  So not my thing.

I want to take a few minutes to thank Bonnie for all the lessons I learned making this quilt:
  • Embrace color.  It gives a quilt a life of its own.
  • Get that 1/4" seam exact.  If the blocks are not the right size, do what needs to be done to get them to measure up.  Ok, so some of them had to be trimmed a tiny little bit, but that's likely due to improper cutting.
  • Speaking of Cutting:  Measure Twice - Cut once - I have a nice pile of mis-cut pieces to show for my efforts, but not too big.
  • Break down complex jobs into bite-size chunks.  Each of the clues was a piece to one of two different blocks.  It was easy to make all the half square triangles and pinwheels, four patches or chevrons together.  At the end when assembling the blocks, I only had to go to the right pile to pull the pieces together.
  • Follow directions and diagrams to the letter, but feel free to experiment with colors and methods.  The chevrons kicked my backside - those flippy corners were the pits.  Until I saw on the Monday link-up from Karen in CA who showed us how to use strips to do the same thing.  See her post here.  Thank you Karen!  I was able to crank out the last half of those chevrons in only a couple of days.
This was my first-ever mystery quilt.  I have been excited to be a part of it.  Joining up with the final Mystery Monday Linkup at QuiltVille.  Thank you Bonnie for an exciting month!  I'm going to let this project live on my design wall for a while as  I clean up the extra parts and pieces, straighten up my Quilting Studio, and start working on some other projects I have coming up for this year.  Stay tuned!

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Squeaking in under the Wire - Clue 3 Celtic Solstice

I've been pretty sick this week - a miserable time to be sick really - just before the holidays.  Darling Hubby's cold caught up to me and I've been laid low.  He was laid up for a couple of days just before Thanksgiving - this has been going on a week for me - it settled in my chest, and I think I've pulled a couple of ribs from coughing. Ouch!

I was able to get the 2" strips cut for step #3 of Bonnie Hunter's Mystery - Celtic Solstice, a few triangles cut and sewn (about 40).  They're working out pretty good, with only about 1% having to be tossed in the slush pile for another quilt.

 
I also finished a few (about 20) chevrons from Step 2.  All pieces are cut and marked, just need to feed them through the machine.

 

I'm linking back to Bonnie's Linky Party.  You should see what the others are doing.  I'm hoping to be caught up by the end of next week

Monday, December 9, 2013

Well, It's still a Mystery - Celtic Solstice Part 2

This week is Part 2 of Bonnie Hunter's Celtic Solstice Mystery Quilt.  I was able to finish about 50 Neutral and 40 Orange triangle units from Part 1.  This week it's Chevrons!!!  So I am practicing smiling when I say this because 'flippy corners' are not my favorite thing to do.
Since I'm using the scrappy look, I had many fabrics to cut into little 3 1/2 x 2 rectangles for the green part.  I dusted off my previously unused ShapeCut ruler and went to town

 See the purple painter's tape - that's so I only hit the correct slots for the 3 1/2" strips and the sub-cuts of 2".  This made cutting these strips and rectangles super fast. 
 
 
The Greens and Neutrals are all done
 



 
And Hubby was kind enough to help me with drawing the lines on the squares for the neutrals.  Now I only have the yellows to do!

In other news, I finished quilting a quilt for a solder-son of a client.  The binding is on, I only need to finish hand-stitching it down before I get it in the mail this week.



Join me at Bonnie's Linky Party and see all the progress others are making on their quilts!  I'm loving some of the alternate color combinations.

Thursday, October 31, 2013

I never really thought about it before....

What would it be like to Quilt in Space?  In a weightless environment where your needles, pins, fabric, scissors will float off... Oh my goodness!

NASA Astronaut Karen Nyberg talks about Quilting in space, what it's like, the challenges she's faced, and shows off her own hand pieced star block.  I know this has happened to me, gone on a trip with a project and forgot a key piece of equipment.  How easy is it to pop into a LQS or Wal-Mart for pins or a rotary cutter blade?  There doesn't seem to be a plethora of Wal-Marts in space, however, and like our pioneer ancestors, she had to make do. 




She's also inviting quilters to contribute a star block to bee included in a quilt that will be exhibited at the 40th International Quilt Festival in Houston.  See more information at Quilts.com about this awesome opportunity.  Deadline for entries is August 1, 2014.  It will be here before you know it!

Her block is awesome.  In my book it is a masterpiece.

You can read more about Karen Nyberg and her amazing journey here

I'd love to hear your thoughts about this.

Kathy





Friday, October 25, 2013

FMQ Friday - A great finish and other fun stuff


It's been a busy week here at the family homestead.  Our son and his lady friend were going to make an appearance with their two fur babies (very large dogs) so we needed to pick up and dog proof our home.  To say Buffy and Sassy were not happy is an understatement.  But the deal was he'd come to visit if he could bring his friend and the dogs.  Since we haven't seen him since July - the joys of having adult children - we agreed. It's interesting how the dogs are attracted to me, and are at my side every time I'm in the same room.  I'm a CAT person!

On the quilting front, I was able to find the fabric I wanted for the Quilt of Valor I'm working on for a client.  I love how the flag fabric sets off the blocks.  Now to make the time to piece the rows together and get the border on!   Because of all the white in the top, I decided to pre-wash the border fabric.  Good thing, because it took 3 washings with color catches to get the red to stop running!

I'm really excited to get  this finished and given.  I'm hoping they'll have many hours (years) of snuggling under the quilt.
 
 

My little quickie project this week is a fabric box.  We've been talking about them a lot at the Missouri Star Quilters Forum.  They are so quick and easy to make!  Check out the Tutorial from Seaside Stitches.  Tina Craig shows us how to make them.  I have plans for many boxes in the future for gifts and giveaways. 

This test box was made from a 10" piece of striped fabric with a great green piece from a layer cake. 





But by far, my favorite and best finish yet is the Big Brother quilt I made to go with the Baby quilt I told you about a couple of weeks ago.  I found the Tutorial at Wedding Dress Blue called Brotherly Love.
 
There are  many half square Triangles in this quilt!  I scaled it down to use 4" and 2" finished Half Square Triangles.  Buffy was right here to give her seal of approval.

Quilting it was a bit of a trial with all the seams and intersections.  My thread broke a lot!  But its done and on its way to a special little boy with his baby brother's quilt tagging along.










I'm linking up with Sarah at Confessions of a Fabric Addict
 
 
Until Next Time ~ Happy Quilting!

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

A Peek into My Creativity Zone



... Warning ... It's pretty messy!

This is the new ironing center that I picked up at Joann's a few weeks ago.  It's nice and big - but following the flat surface rule - it's starting to get piled up too. Do you know the flat surface rule?  Something about the project expanding to fill the surface area of the available space.  I have a lot of surfaces that are covered like that...
 See the calculator on the end of the ironing center?
 
Behind the center is a 4' x 4' design board covered with flannel, and test blocks of various shapes, and a multitude of other things.  Between the ironing center and the wall is a TV tray to catch the fabric from going on the dirty floor.  See all the clip-on lights hanging off the shelf?  The light in the room is behind me when I stand at the ironing board.  This illuminates my work surface, at least until I find an under-shelf light that works better.  I love the "daylight" CFL (Compact Fluorescent Light) bulbs I picked up from Walmart for $.88 for a set of 4! 
 
 

This is a project I'm working on.  I love my bins and containers!  The cardboard container on the left is from Hobby Lobby.  It's helping me corral the pieces until they are ready to go up on the design wall.  The little cup is an applesauce cup (that I washed) and now holds a few pins or whatever I need handy...

It's all sitting on top of my extension table next to my spare machine that I'm using for piecing while my lovely Elna is set up for FMQ. 






 
Here's another project I'm working on - it will be 1/4 square triangles, but first I need to mark them.  One of those projects for when I get 'a few spare minutes'... Yeah, right.  Hubby and I have a road trip coming up, so I thought I could do that while he's driving.



This is my cutting table.  It's one of those big drop-leaf jobs from many years ago.  There are little tubs and boxes all in and around the pile of 1 1/2" squares cut from scraps, 2 1/2" HST cut from scraps, Dresden plate blades to be sewn into Dresden plates, extra fabric for projects I'm working on, and well, just a pile of who knows what.  One of these days I'll get it cleared off





There are days when I wonder how the heck I even function in this clutter.  But I know, if I put everything away - I'll forget where I put it! :)

Until next time - Happy Quilting!

Friday, October 4, 2013

Not MIA - I've been Quilting!

It's been a busy couple of weeks here at Kathy's Cache.  In my other life, I'm a bookkeeper, and with the late-filing tax season winding down, I had my head in someone's books for a good 2 or 3 weeks.  I was still able to snatch a few 15 minute breaks for cutting, sewing, quilting, pressing and trimming, but mostly book work.  I'm glad that's behind me until after the first of the year again.  Now I can concentrate on my list of UFOs...


Last weekend I went on a Quilting Retreat at Susan's Calico Creations in Fulton IL.  I had a blast!  I sewed to my heart's content until late into the night, and was up bright and early the next morning to sew again.  I made great progress on a number of different projects...

First up is a Quilt of Valor I'm making for a client's son and his wife.  Recently married, he's done his time in the sandbox (more than once).  On my last business trip to visit with her, I showed her some Quilts of Valor blocks I was making for the national block drive for Quilts of Valor.  She instantly fell in love with one of the blocks and claimed it as her own.  She signed her name to the block, and I added it to the pile I dropped off at the local quilt shop to be added to the others from across the country.

I was able to pre-cut the pieces before the retreat, so all I had to do was sew the blocks together.  I was able to finish 25 of the planned 30 blocks.  I'm going to have to re-think the plan because, well the numbers aren't coming out right - so I'm thinking on it.  I need to have it finished by November 7 when I plan to present it to her to give to her at a workshop we're both attending.  She will have it in plenty of time to give to him for Christmas.   A triple blessing.  Stay tuned for pictures of the finished quilt.


Big Brother quilt is assembled.  This one is made up of something like 300 half square triangles.  Did I mention I spent a lot of 15 minute work breaks pressing and trimming?   This one is from one of my favorite designers at Wedding Dress Blue - a take off of her Brotherly Love quilt.   I scaled it down to 4 1/2 inch and 2 1/2 inch half square triangles, and made a toddler-size quilt for the big brother of the baby whose quilt I wrote about last time.  The pieces were also pre-cut and the triangles were made, so this one went together in a snap once I got the pattern figured out!  Wouldn't you know, I left the directions at home!  Thank goodness for Wi-Fi, and a very generous hostess who let me tap into her internet.




I also made 7 pillowcases for gifts 21 split nine patch blocks, and a big batch of chili (sorry no pictures it was all gone!)

I really enjoyed my time away from home, pushing the fabric through the machine and visiting with all my new friends.   I'm planning on doing this again in the future.


So a big old Whoop Whoop for getting so much done in one weekend!  Linking up with Sarah at Confessions of a Fabric Addict!



Linking up with Leah Day's FMQ Friday

Sunday, September 15, 2013

So what else have I been up to?

Bin dumped out on the cutting table
 While my machine was set up and being used for FMQ this week, there were times I wanted to play with my fabric, but not necessarily quilt.  Do you get that way too? 

Pile of strips on the ironing board
Pressed and hanging on a drying rack
I finished up cutting strips for a swap, and got a good look at my 2 1/2" bin of strips.  I knew I would have to do something sooner or later with this mess, so in my 15-30 min of fabric play at a time, I pressed and sorted out my strips by color.  And pressed, and sorted, and pressed and sorted....




 This is what I ended up with by the end of the week.  Strips of fabric sorted by color, just waiting for me to do something with them.  And an empty 2 1/2" strip bin. 

For now, I'm going to enjoy looking at them, I think.  Except, that monstrosity is in the way of the cutting table.  Maybe I'll put them in Ziploc bags by color family and put them back in the bin.  What would you do?


My next challenge will be my 1 1/2" strip bin.  I wonder how many of those I have?

Friday, September 13, 2013

FMQ Friday - Lots of Quilting Going On Here

 
 
First up:  Welcome Home is completed, with the binding finished and everything!  We're hoping to be able to present to our Soldier friend very soon.



Next up:  Bella's Beauties is done but for the binding (see all the clips?)


Just waiting for a few hours of quiet time to stitch down the binding.   Chief Inspector Buffy is checking the workmanship.


 I love the bright pink binding.  It makes me smile every time I see it.  I'm thinking I'll have to use the rest of that fabric for a pillow case for Miss Bella...  Maybe for Christmas.  The quilt is for her birthday next week.  Nothing like a deadline to push a project along!
I used a Lollipop Chain for the pieced border



Next:  100 Hugs a Day - Blue

The binding needs to be finished on this one too.  Notice how neither of the cats wanted to get too close?  I wonder if they know it's not all the way done yet...  Nothing fancy in the quilting here, just an all over loop and circles design.

On the machine now:  The Grinch Won't Steal This Christmas!

 
This was a kit from Quilts for Kids.  Not sure I would have chosen the white backing for a child in the hospital, but this is what they sent, so this is what I used.  I'm on the last corner for quilting, then I can get it bound, washed and on its way back to the organization to be given to a child in need. This will be my first foray into machine binding (I usually do mine by hand).

Quilts for Kids is (are?) asking for volunteers to make quilts and donate quilts.  With so many projects on my plate through the end of the year, I would be hard pressed to squeeze out another quilt this year.  Maybe you can help? 


I'm linking up with Leah Day's FMQ Friday, and Confessions of a Fabric Addict

Check back later this weekend for what else I've been up to this week.  It sure has been a busy one!  Until next time - Happy Quilting!


Thursday, September 5, 2013

Something of a Quandry

I'm working on Bella's Beauties this week.  I want to have it finished in time to send it to her birthday later this month.  I may not make it, and that's ok, there's always Christmas.

I started with an idea and a pattern.  The idea was to gather up fabrics of things she likes, pink and purple, music, puzzles, ladybugs, butterflies and all that princess and fairy stuff.  The pattern is Falling Charms from the Missouri Star Quilt company
 I started auditioning background fabric back in May, and had a really hard time deciding.  Did I want the lavender with butterflies and flowers?






Or lavender with Stars



Or Deep purple batik?
 

 Ok, so the deep purple didn't work so well, and I chose the lavender with butterflies and flowers.


I put it together on the design wall and realized I had the pattern wonky - try again.



And the inside of the top is done.  Now I'm looking at borders...

I know the deep purple has to go in,  But do I want the bright pink with flowers, or the marbled light pink?


 
Ick - neither one!  How about a pieced border?  Piano key sounds good and fairly quick and easy... But do I want...





With the background mixed in?

or not?





Here's where I ended up last night - with the piano key gone and 2 3/8" squares - like a Chinese coin.  (ignore the pink, it's left over from the audition process, I haven't put it away yet.)  But still I need it longer - so maybe a 2nd row with the border fabric repeated on both sides?  I'm still trying to decide.   Before Borders it was 44 x 50.  Add first border it's now 47 x 53.  I want to get it up to at least 60" long so that she has room to grow with it.  Did I mention she's going to be 7 this month?  According to my son and her mother she's between 4' and 4'6"...


I'm not sure why this one is such a struggle.  Maybe its because her grandmother was also a quilter who painstakingly made a quilt for her as a baby that was 'put away for good' and she doesn't get to use it.  Maybe because I want her to love and cherish it AND use it! for a good long time.

I am open to suggestions.


Monday, September 2, 2013

Labor Day Yard Sale

On Friday, Bonnie Hunter over at Quiltville announced she was going to do a linky party for the Labor Day Yard Sale.  I started looking around and found a bunch of fabric I know I won't ever use again.

Long story short - in a former life, I was a crafter who made crafts and gifts to sell  at craft shows.  I stopped doing that back in 2006, and I have all these unfinished projects and fabric for projects that is taking up space. So I took a few pictures and will link up with Quiltville's Labor Day Yard sale and see if I can find a new home for them.

I've tried to price everything to move.  I'll use the proceeds to make charity quilts for Quilts of Valor and Quilts for Kids, and other various charitable organizations next year.

Country Christmas Squares
Country Christmas Squares


Up first I have 7 6 sets of 4 strips of this fabric I'll call Country Christmas Squares.  I have 7 6 sets of 4 strips (sorry they're already cut into strips) for sale.  The strips measure approximately 8 1/2" by width of fabric (WOF).  100% Cotton design by Leslie Beck.

I used this fabric to make hotpads, combining it with a solid green or red backing, thermal ironing board fabric and batting.  I sold the hotpads for $2.50 each finished.  Price is $5.00 per set of 4 strips.
 
Up next Birds!  I have a single piece of 47" long by Width of fabric of various birds.  This screen printed fabric.  I'm not sure of the fabric content.  It could be a blend.  This has been around since the 1980s at least!  The background is off white, with mauve and blue in the birds. 
 
The price is $7.00 for the full piece.

SOLD

 
 Cats  -These playful kitties were also made into hotpads... hundreds of them... and also have been around since the 1980s.    This piece of fabric is approximately 2 1/2 yards by 44" wide.  The patches measure approximately 7 3/4" square. 

 CATS are SOLD


The two rows repeat  all the way down the length of the fabric.  The colors are neutral brown to tan and black.

Price for this full length of fabric is $12.00










 Santa's!  These primitive Santa are printed on 100% cotton neutral background 10 across the row.  The patch is 4" x 4 5/8".  There are 4 yards in this piece. I made coasters with this fabric and sold in sets of 6 for $12.  Price for the full piece of fabric (uncut) is $20. 

The picture shows half the width of the fabric (fold to selvedge).










Lastly I have 2  pieces of Debbie Mumm Teapot fabric.  Each piece measures 35" X width of fabric.
The  squares measure approximately 4 x 4 3/4" with 9 squares across x 9 rows for each piece.  I made coasters with this fabric too. 

Cost per piece of fabric - $5.00.













SOLD




JUST ADDED


I have several hot pad kits made up of this adorable Snowman fabric by Diana Markam fabric.  Each kit contains the makings for 5 hotpatds, 5 ea. front fabric, coordinating backing fabric, ironing board fabric all cut to size, 5 loops
for hanging and a strip of 8 oz polyester batting.  Yes I know poly is not all that heat resistant, but I've used these hotpads many times over several years before they needed to be replaced.

Each kit is complete for 5 hotpads, all you need is thread!  Kits are $5.00 each.  Designs vary, but all are in the same fabric line.





I'm sure I have more fabric to purge, and depending on the response, I'll take more pictures and post them here on my blog.  I also have dozens of books and patterns that I've never used.   

The picky details:  I'll ship anywhere in the world US Priority Mail, Flat rate if it makes sense, and the buyer pays shipping and insurance if requested.  I'll accept payment by PayPal or money order.  Leave me a comment or email me at kathycrofoot@gmail.com and I'll get back to you by email with a total and shipping cost.  Payment in USD only.


 Be sure to check out the other offerings at Quiltville's  Labor Day Yard Sale Linky party