Thursday, July 06, 2006

Scarecrow quilt is finished


A few weeks ago I bought this Debbie Mumm scarecrow print fabric. I decided it was so cute I didn't want to disturb the pattern. So I did a Just Can't Cut It quilt. These quilts usually end up square.





I prefer a rectangular quilt so I added a top piece from the same collection and put some trapunto pumpkins in there for fun. My first trapunto. They come out so plump. The half-square triangles coordinated well with the scarecrow and seed packet border.

Monday, July 03, 2006

Butterfly Garden 101

(Yellow Lantana in forground; passion vine in background)


Three or four years ago I was at a garage sale and there were dozens of orange (Gulf Frittilaria) butterflies flitting around. She told me how to build a butterfly garden. Here is what you need to make a buterfly garden.
1. In the spring, purchase a a lantana plant and passion vine (passiflora) from you local garden shop. Lantana comes in many colors. It is a perennial which means it comes back year after year. I cut mine back in November so I get lots of growth in February. The passion vine also comes in a choice of colors, some are even fragrant. You don't really want the kind that produce fruit. Look for a passion vine plant that has leaves which appear to be 'nibbled' and you may be lucky enough to bring home caterpillars. Some nurseries pick the cats off. A plant without cats just takes a little longer to produce butterflies.

2. Plant these plants witin 10 feet of each other. They do quite well in full sun but they do not flourish in shade. The passion vine is the maternity ward for eggs and caterpillars. The cats build their cocoons in or near the passion vine. When the butterfly emerges from the cocoon, they are hungry. The lantana must be close by; it is the chow hall for grown butterflies. As soon as the Fertilizer is OK but never spray these plants with pesticides or butterflies will avoid your garden.

A water source nearby is a plus. My sprinkler system provides enough water for these plants and the butterflies. Both plants die back in cold weather but they'll be back in early spring. Reduce water when the plants are dormant.
Wait for the show in the summer...

Sunday, July 02, 2006

My First (and last) T-Shirt Quilt


Danielle is only 15 years old. She started quilting last year. She is amazing and when it comes to learning new things, she is fearless. She decided to make a T-Shirt quilt for one of her high school friends. She carefully stabilized the t-shirts and pieced some fun fabrics. It was 64 x 88 with the borders. She asked the local quilt shop owner to con somebody into quilting it for her. I was the lucky volunteer.
I SID around the t-shirts to avoid the stabilizer. I was afraid it would gum up my machine. I echo quilted the logos on the t-shirts. It was tough going. My stitch regulator kept choking and burring needles. I stayed with it despite 4 burred needles and jams. And I learned something from the 15 year old quilter. T-shirts are meant to be worn not quilted.

My life has changed in the last couple of years - some bumps, I retired from quilting, and then I moved to Texas. I'm anxious to see what new adventures await me in the next phase of my life.

About Me

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Ramona, California, United States
I started quilting when a quilt shop opened in our little town in January 2004. I have been hooked ever since.

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Books I"ve read lately

  • The Help (Kindle)
  • The Appeal by John Grisham
  • Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
  • Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen
  • To Kill a Mockingbird (again) by Harper Lee
  • Bleachers by John Grisham

This is called Fruit Cocktail

This is called Fruit Cocktail
It is all batiks