Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Friendship Quilters Guild Auction Quilt
This is the fourth one of these that the guild gave me to quilt. I have done some of these auction quilts for other quilters, as well. This is all blues with some pink floral and what appears to be a medium weight home decorator fabric. I may have some difficulty with thread breaking when I hit the seams of that home deco stuff. I think that I will use a PermaCore thread in a perfectly matching blue color on top and possibly So Fine by Superior on the back. I plan to do a swirl pattern on it. It is queen-size.
Flower Bouquet Shop Sample
This is a flower bouquet panel by Moda with 5 borders. This is a shop sample for the Crazy 9 Patch quilt shop in Ramona. I will use Signature cotton thread in Parchment and Quilter's Dream cotton in the Select loft. I plan to free-motion it since it is so small. I would like to put a trapunto hummingbird in there butnot sure I can manage that. The flowers are in a bouquet though not in a vase. I think that a hummingbird is a bit over the top but we'll see.
Did you hear it....?
At 8:34 Pacific Time, there was the sound of the entire country exhaling. Did you hear it?
It's almost as if we have all been holding our breathe waiting for the "new guy" to get elected. We have been weathering the storms (economy, wars, banks in crisis) brought to us by a collapsing economy, 2 wars stripping us of our strong young people and banks and credit companies imploding as the rascals that run them flee with their pockets stuffed with the dreams of hardworking Americans.
When John McCain went onto that platform in Phoenix to concede to Barak Obama, I think the country finally exhaled. John McCain has always been a class act and my hero. He would have made a good president. But Barack Obama will be a good president, too. I didn't vote for him but I will support him, because now he carries the burden of cleaning up the mess that he inherits.
OK, the campaigning and elections are over. Now we can start to rebuild our trust in government. If you watched TV last night and it was on channels 4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11 here in San Diego, President-elect Obama's speech was about healing and fresh starts. The look on the faces of the 100,000 people gathered at Grant Park in Chicago park told the story of hope and new beginnings.
Let's get to work.
It's almost as if we have all been holding our breathe waiting for the "new guy" to get elected. We have been weathering the storms (economy, wars, banks in crisis) brought to us by a collapsing economy, 2 wars stripping us of our strong young people and banks and credit companies imploding as the rascals that run them flee with their pockets stuffed with the dreams of hardworking Americans.
When John McCain went onto that platform in Phoenix to concede to Barak Obama, I think the country finally exhaled. John McCain has always been a class act and my hero. He would have made a good president. But Barack Obama will be a good president, too. I didn't vote for him but I will support him, because now he carries the burden of cleaning up the mess that he inherits.
OK, the campaigning and elections are over. Now we can start to rebuild our trust in government. If you watched TV last night and it was on channels 4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11 here in San Diego, President-elect Obama's speech was about healing and fresh starts. The look on the faces of the 100,000 people gathered at Grant Park in Chicago park told the story of hope and new beginnings.
Let's get to work.
Monday, November 03, 2008
Trick or Treat
I remember a costume party that I attended back in 1986. It was such fun seeing all my workmates dressed in costumes. Some of them were disguised so well that we had to try to figure out who they were. The Electronics Technician Master Chief was dressed like a big black hairy gorilla. Nobody knew who he was. He would only grunt and shake his head when asked questions. His identity was finally revealed when his wife came over and removed the gorillas head. Hey, I didn't even know tht this guy could laugh, nevermind party with the rest of us.
Seems like a hundred years ago. I wore slacks, white shirt buttoned up with a big pocket protector filled with pencils in my shirt pocket, vest buttoned up, garters to keep my sleeves up, and carried a calculator and a briefcase. I was a bean-counter back in 1986. Today, I would probably call myself my 401k but I would wear a trenchcoat with pennies glued to it. Sad.
Seems like a hundred years ago. I wore slacks, white shirt buttoned up with a big pocket protector filled with pencils in my shirt pocket, vest buttoned up, garters to keep my sleeves up, and carried a calculator and a briefcase. I was a bean-counter back in 1986. Today, I would probably call myself my 401k but I would wear a trenchcoat with pennies glued to it. Sad.
Jacob's Ladder for Brenda
I have a customer quilt from a very special customer named Brenda. She is a beautiful frosted blonde; well, that's when she is not a gorgeous redhead; ok, she has fun with her hair. Stylish with jewelry and accessories to match her wonderful wardrobe. You can tell that she likes to look good and does not mind spending time to get the look she wants. Brenda is surrounded by angels. She loves them and uses them in her decorating at home. Actually, angels are part of her personality. She helps many people in her quiet way, never looking for attention or praise. She just steps up and does what is right. That is what makes her beautiful on the inside, too. She has a beautiful smile and laughter bubbles just below the surface. Her laugh is quite contagious. So when I got two quilts from her, I knew that I was going to treat them special. I would have to ruminate over them until I got some ideas going.
One is a small (64 x 64) Jacob's Ladder from a class that we took from our friend Debbie at the Crazy 9 Patch. The other quilt, a king-size with black background is two, or is it three, years in the making. Brenda attends the same adult quilting class that I do on Tuesday nights at the high school. It is more for fellowship than learning. We all have a good time. The blocks in this king size are the result of a sampler that Janet, the night class instructor, taught the year before I joined the class. But that kingsize quilt will be in another blog post. For now, I am working on the Jacob's Ladder.
This layout looks like an and O pattern. Brenda used a Magnolia print called An East Wind by RJR done in beige with pale taupe and rust accents. The Musical Instruments inner border pull out the rust accent colors from the mmagnolias. I decided that I needed three different threads. The thread for the main background will be Signature cotton color is Linen. I will use Bottom Line #616 Copper for the SID and feather spine accents. The sides of the ladder will be a German thread I found at MQS 2008 made by Gunold Co. 5455-7316 no name. I will also use the Gunold thread on the musical instrument printed inner border using a sashing pattern I learned at Deloa Jones' class at MQS 2008. I will also use the Gunold thread to stitch the CCs (continuous curves) in the ladder sections. Brenda likes Quilters Dream deluxe cotton which I have on the roll.
I attended a Helen Squire workshop a few weeks ago. The class taught me to look at a quilt with different eyes. First, Helen recommends that you hang the quilt up and then leave the room. Come back later with fresh eyes and look at the whole quilt, not just the pieces or blocks. Ask yourself, "What is important?" "What do you see?" Seeing the "whole" quilt will greatly improve your perception of size. It also helps you see secondary patterns in the piecing that can be accentuated. Though there are 2 different sizes of blocks in the quilt, the "most important part" of the quilt are the 4 large stars created by the setting used in this Jacob's Ladder. So the ladder sides will appear as star-points in this quilt. The center part of the star is 12".
I wanted to put something special in this large 12" block that would make the stars stand out. I looked through my new Helen Squire pattern CD and found the perfect center for the star. It is called Cupid Wings and the wings are doubled and then surrounded by open heart shapes. It is like this pattern was made for Brenda.
The outer border is my challenge. Since the rest of the quilt is somewhat formal, I wanted to try formal feathers in the outer border. I call these hump-bump feathersand they are, without a doubt, the most difficult feathers to do on a longarm quilting machines. The complexity is made worse by my own hard-won tendency to use open longarm feathers. Feathers are a sophomore or junior skill. So when I finally learned how to do them, I put feathers on everything. These hump-bump feathers require me to go slow and stay focused lest I fall back into my funky feathers. Oops.
I also do not normally put double spine lines in my feathers. I decided that I wanted to drag that rust color from the magnolias out to the border by doing micro-stitching ribbon candy in the double-line spines in the corner pieces. The 12 SPI is not small enough to do micro, I had to turn it to 'manual' and crank it up to 30 and off I went. I have a couple of baubles but I'm OK with the results. And it gives the exact color effect that I wanted.
Here are the photos and thanks for looking. I sure hope the angel named Brenda likes it.
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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
- Ramona-quilter
- 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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Followers of my blog
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