Showing posts with label sewing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sewing. Show all posts

10 May 2014

Soul Blossoms: Caille's own

After Caille finished Armando's quilt, she had just enough time left in her spring break to sew up a quilt top for her very own quilt. I (slowly) finished it off by doing the back, the quilting and the binding. 

This is my first attempt at "the baptist fan" quilt-stitching (the pattern the quilting stitches make). 

This is made from Amy Butler's Soul Blossoms fabric collection, Moda solid white and Warm & Natural cotton batting.


16 March 2014

Jelly roll race II with a split

My husband, Mike, and I have been living in Houston since May. He has Acute Myeloid Leukemia and is being treated at MD Anderson Cancer Center. Caille came to spend her spring break with us last week and we got busy with a sewing project.

Armando and his family are friends of Mike's from his high school days back in Miami. In some strange synchronicity, he happened to be getting a stem cell transplant here about two weeks behind Mike's. He is still inpatient and going through a very difficult phase of the process right now. Caille and I decided we'd make a quilt for him.

We started with this Jelly Roll Race II quilt explained so well in this video tutorial from Missouri Star Quilt Company:

We were inspired by an episode of Fons & Porter, called "Stitch and Slice Quilt."

We used World Tour jelly roll (https://www.missouriquiltco.com/shop/detail/13265/free-spirit-fabrics/parson-gray/world-tour-jelly-roll), plus less than a two-yard cut of Barcelona Tin from that same collection (https://www.missouriquiltco.com/shop/detail/13192/free-spirit-fabrics/parson-gray/world-tour-barcelona-tin-yardage) for border and a backing treatment.

Ending up with this:

Then, horizontal to the strip seams, we ironed on paper-backed fusible. We marked a zig-zag pattern on the paper, then sliced it apart. It was a bit scary, slicing right through a perfectly good quilt! This is what it looked like on the wrong side:

And this is what it looked like on the right side:

Next, we removed the paper from the fusible and ironed a piece of white cotton fabric down the middle of the split. It was a little fussy getting the stips to line up across the white piece, but worth it to get it right. Wouldn't want a wonky quilt, would we?

Then we used a blanket stitch along those edges to make sure it would hold securely and to add a bit of a decorative touch.

We made the border out of the Barcelona Tin yardage. 

Rather than have a plain white backing, we cut one 2.5-inch strip horizontally from the edge of the quilt top (basically yielding a strip of 2-inch blocks) sewed it between two 4.5-inch strips of Barcelona Tin, and then offset it between white. 

We quilted with the walking foot, folowing the zig-zag pattern in the zig-zag, then jus stitching in the ditch every other strip for the rest of the quilt.

For the binding, we used alternating white and Barcelona tin. I hand sew my bindings.

Finished quilt top:



Finished quilt back:


A gift for Armando:


26 July 2013

Sew-sick

Ever since my dog, Dory, chewed the cord on my iron, I've had to put all of my projects on hold, and I am really missing my machine. So, to keep myself busy, and to not go insane, I've been cutting up old shirts, jeans, fabric scraps, etc. and sewing them together.

13 April 2013

Pieces coming together

A quick progress snapshot of the paper foundation pieced quilt I'm making for Mike.

Anyone out there share my challenge? Working 60-65 hours per week leaves little time for sewing, which makes really big, long projects seem even bigger and longer.

Ah, well. At least it's fun, no matter how long it takes to finish!


09 April 2013

Official teenager: halter tops from old t-shirts

It's official! Caille turned 13 today!

While I've been busy making Mike's quilt here in Waco, she's been in San Antonio, transforming old tees into halter tops for the summer.
















17 March 2013

She's gone wild in the sewing studio

Apparently, Caille's art teacher loves giraffes. Caille found this fabric in the clearance section at the Joann's store, added a punch of lime green from my stash, an adorable appliqué embellishment and personalized it with her teacher's name in embroidery.

The perfect apron for her art teacher!

It is amazing what Caille has accomplished in the last week!



Mustaches and color blocking during spring break

Color blocking can add dramatic impact to a garment. Caille loved Alaexander Henry's Where's My Stash fabric, so I ordered some for us to make something over spring break. She cut some of the pieces from black to break up the mustaches.






Pillowcase dresses

Caille has been busy this week working on her first commissioned sewing project... Pillowcase dresses for my friend, Brodie.











03 March 2013

Episodes of "lost time"

My sewing room might be an "overlapping time cave" (as described in my favorite podcast, Mysterious Universe).

Once I enter the room, I suffer severe episodes of "lost time." Friday and Saturday nights I usually emerge from the sewing room shocked to realize it is long after 2am.

Mike has been accusing me of "staying up all through the night sewing." I guess it might seem that way to him. But to me, it doesn't seem like I was in there for very long at all!

So, I have now added the retro wall clock, but it hasn't really made any difference.

24 February 2013

Inspiration

Do you seek inspiration? This is my 12-year old granddaughter's room. I don't know which I love more... The quote, or the fact that it's above her sewing (creative cat) space. What's NOT to love?

When was the last time YOU went out and TACKLED (or clubbed down) inspiration?

We should all remember the possibilities we had ahead of us when we were 12 years old, don't you think?

...and what inspires me? One thing that certainly inspires me is my granddaughter, Caille, my little creative cat.

22 February 2013

Quiltz r us

Forgot to post these at Christmas.

I made Ceres the yellow and lime kalaidascope pattern. It took me almost 3 years to finish hand-quilting this.

I made Shawna the batik blues and purples. This was my first attempt at free-motion machine quilting, which was a little bit scary. But fun!