Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Mary's Quilt

     Thank you everyone who responded to my post yesterday. Help me out here, did Blogger change the responding protocol? Everyone who responded was as a no reply comment poster and I know you are not and have not been. Any ideas how to fix this?  

   My friend Elizabeth's sister, Mary, sews awesomely. She was a tailor/seamstress for many years with her own shop. She is now retired and taking on quilting. She made this absolutely awesome Drunkard Path's quilt with fabric she had been collecting. She embroidered these gorgeous flowers on the blank blocks that are all different and equally stunning. When she said she was taking it to a longarmer to have pantos (pantos are like finger nails on a chalkboard for me), I almost fainted. There is no way I could let someone quilt all through those gorgeous embroideries, so I offered to quilt it. I normally do not quilt for others- too much pressure and fear. I knew I had to quilt this one. I tried not to overwhelm it, but let the flowers shine. I love the way it turned out and so did she.







Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Just like the Last Rose of Summer

 



    Believe or not, there are a few roses, mostly bedraggled, blooming here in Buffalo, NY  even after a wintry blast a week ago. Today, I finished clipping all stalks and remnants as well as emptying out all the pots and containers even though I think some could still produce a bloom or two. 
    I think that is the perfect metaphor for where I have been.  I continued on sewing and quilting and cutting fabric, but went through a lot of physical pain, weariness and just unable to get photos and writing on the computer here. Just could not get it done. I followed all of you with blogs feeling like I could not make it to the party. No fairy godmother showed up with a pumpkin coach.
    No way I can make up for lost time here, so I will just intersperse what I have been doing. I continue to make comfort quilts and give them away, thank God. I went to an intense workshop with David Taylor at Quilting by the Lake, curated our every third year quilt show, and tried to figure out how to keep quilting on the longarm and get reorganized. 
     I did make some progress on getting help walking better and straighter, but no clear picture overall despite lots of tests and appointments. I still suffer from vaxx injury. Thank God I am walking straight again thanks to a new exercise physiologist (told by PTs they could do nothing else for me) and new program at a new place as the old cardiac rehab was shut down by the health system running it.  I am really trying every day.
    Our guild retreat was the first week of Nov. and I finished a bunch of quilts that I had set aside for webbing (thanks again Wanda for teaching me). One quilt I sewed together there after a hard time laying it out, was Good Vibrations 2 by Patti's Patchwork. The directions were not the greatest and it sat for 2 years because I couldn't figure it out. I just buckled down and kept trying. The fabric is Vicki Welsh's gradations that she no longer makes (sob). It was awesome fabric and I used every bit. I marked everything and measured repeatedly. I have to trim off the bottom and decide whether to add more gray (Kona Ash) around. It is about 60 x 80.

Laid out and marked


Sunday, June 1, 2025

Highlights and anticipation!

       One of my dear blog friends, Quiltdiva Julie, sent me present that graces a high spot in my studio- my very own squirrel!! It was such a surprise and accurate appraisal of what goes on in the sewing studio. He is always in the corner of my eye as I am working, unlike Rosie who likes to sit on my hands (why?). So grateful for my own personal squirrel, hope to make her proud of his shenanigans.

     Years ago, I was able to participate in a workshop at Quilting by the Lake with Victoria Finlay Wolfe. It was a great experience- the teacher, the other students and the sewing. Since Covid lockdowns, there has not been many affordable or close places to take a workshop. I am not real enamored with Zoom classes. I did some during the lockdowns to keep our quilt guild going, but it is sort of like living in a stainless steel sink.
    On a whim, I looked up Quilting by the Lake for this year and found David Taylor is offering a workshop on Animal Applique. My friend, Elizabeth, and I saw a him lecture years ago at the Houston Quilt Festival. We were amazed by his work, proficiency, enthusiasm and insights especially as none of it is raw edge applique which always makes me a little crazy (just my personal bias).
     I talked Elizabeth into applying with me, vowing we could find the cash. This year it is at Hobart College in Geneva, NY on Seneca Lake- just a gorgeous spot. Elizabeth is an ace appplique artist and animal lover. I have almost no applique skills. This will be a challenge for me, which is a good thing. I pushed her to fill out the scholarship application along with me and in the beginning of April, we found out that we won full scholarships for the tuition, just have to come up with the room and board. Wowzee! Better than winning a lottery.
     Some gorgeous spring flowers to celebrate:

Beautiful iris in Berlin, Ohio


Pink Tree Peony

Red Tree Peony

Saturday, May 31, 2025

Creativity, energy and pain

      There was no posting for awhile. I wanted to, was sewing, quilting, but could not get the energy to do it and fight with my computer glitches. It was like moving through molasses or quicksand. Today, I read a blog by the Zen Chic woman, Brigitte Heitland, and it all clicked! I knew just what she said. She wrote:

"Creativity needs energy.
And energy needs rest.

Sometimes, rest comes wrapped in sunshine.
Sometimes, in a thermometer and a hot water bottle.
Inner Shift – From Doing to Feeling
In that silence, one thing became very clear:
Creating from the heart matters more than ticking boxes with the brain. "
 
It was pain that was draining all my energy. I was just mechanical and not able to think or create words or ideas.  I have been dealing with pain that prevents me from just doing simple stuff. I have to psych myself up to just walk up or down the stairs or across the room. It is upsetting to not be able to walk freely, move freely and stand without pain. I have no particular illness, just joint pain, muscle pain and rolling fatigue. I turned 71 in March, maybe it is part of it. I eat low carb, no processed foods, cook at home and take vitamins. If I read anymore articles, I will go insane trying to figure it out. I work out at cardiac rehab 3 times a week for 2 hours and do not sit and watch TV. The doctors are no help unless I want to take a plethora of meds and shots. Been that route for 21 years with migraines, until TMJ help solved it, not doing it now. No more whining. I know why I could not post or create anything other than mechanical sewing. No energy- Pain took it all.
I miss being part of the blogsphere and want to continue on. One step at a time. I continue to finish quilts. I am quilting, but oh so slow on the longarm. I can't stand for a long time, lots of breaks. Here is "Oh My Stars", a swap I did long ago, but now it is quilted on the bed in the guest room where it looks lovely.
Back

Final

Rosie wanted her photo here

Friday, May 30, 2025

Not what was envisioned...

      You think I would learn by now not to buy a kit/pattern/fabric thing. Never has it ever been anything but trouble. I am not sure what I was thinking when I saw the picture on the Quilted Twins, but I must have been not running on full capacity. I do like Jason Yenter's fabric, but I should have known better than deal with the blacks and darks. I do not like black in a quilt, I don't use it. I will use another dark, that is me. Nothing wrong if you use it.
      The pattern was not written well. It wasted a lot of fabric- back to that in a bit. When I got to the point that it was on the wall, the orange pieces put me over the edge- like teeth on edge. I ordered the other colorway, a turquoise, tried the two colors, went with just the turquoise, recut and re-sewed. When I put the whole sewn piece on the wall ready to add the borders, it was the same reaction when I put the blocks on the wall for Grand Illusion (gifted those blocks)- yikes and yuck! Lamenting my despair to my good friend, Elizabeth, she took it from me, added the borders so it was big enough for a good size comfort quilt and had it longarmed as I could not bear to look it anymore.
This comfort quilt is available by referral to someone suffering with cancer treatment (Elizabeth specified this in her sister's memory). So, it is done and someone will love it. I am not sure why I had such a strong reaction to this quilt- but we call it the "Yenter Yuck".
     So, I have pieces of the fabric left, some border, some sewn in a bag. If anyone wants it, I will send it to you. Gladly. The fabric is a great quality. The problem is me.



Final, longarmed by someone else, just couldn't do it
      So, I have pieces of the fabric left, some border, some sewn in a bag. If anyone wants it, I will send it to you. Gladly. The fabric is a great quality. The problem is me.
Leftover pieces for giveaway

Thursday, May 29, 2025

Time for Tea--cups that is!

    An awful long time to not post. I made a new banner and will start again. This post was a draft for too long and I have about 100 teacups now, but none of the photos yet. I wanted to get started, so I got this post out.

     When I saw these teacups on Lynn's post, I fell in love- both with the red and whites and the bright florals. So, the squirrel strikes again! And to top it off, I have a big box of Kaffe scraps someone sent me and solids someone else sent me to make the colored frame cups. But also, I have lots of floral pieces that I can make floral cups with white frames. So, two squirrels from one idea.






Friday, February 28, 2025

Loving the octagons!

      I truly love making One Block Wonder Quilts. You never know how they will look which is the hard part and the Eureka part. I hate making jigsaw puzzles because the photo is already on the box, so why am I doing it?
      I have had this fabric for a while. Cutting it up properly is a precision thing and a goof up can hardly be fixed, so that is why it sat. I am always looking for large scale florals to make one and I need eight repeats, so it is difficult. I have not found one in a while. Only certain fabrics work. The ratio of background and print has to be just perfect. This fabric could have used a little less black and more flowers. If anyone knows of any candidates out there for sale, drop me a note. I don't see any right now in my searching.
    I cut the fabric up before that last retreat in November and have been slowly piecing the octagons in pairs as leader and enders. Finally, all octagons sewn! I follow the assembly in the One Block Wonder book for the octagon blocks because they end up being sewn together as square blocks, not weird half blocks like the hexagons.
    At first, I had them in a long rectangle shape, but that did not work out. Once I had them sort of settled in a different configuration, I started adding the "Sensational Squares" as the author calls them. Then things get even more interesting. There are scores of photos of ideas but here are some. Still not decided what layout.






Wednesday, February 26, 2025

I need flowers, now!

      It is that time in February where I have had it with dark, cold winter. Lots of ice with constant snow this year. I love houseplants and outdoor plants. I have to settle for indoor gardens this time of year. In the fall I bought some new African violets and some small orchids besides what I already have. I am very grateful for blooming growing things right now. It helps keep me motivated to keep sewing.



    A friend I had not seen in a long time, dropped off this bouquet to me as she received it from someone and is not a fan of flowers and she knew I was. I certainly am!

Monday, February 24, 2025

Multicolored Squirrel

       So I was in my sewing studio minding my own business putting fabric scraps away when I came across this strip set of Kaffe fabric strips sent to me by Quiltdiva Julie in a plastic box with Kaffe scraps. All else faded. I opened it up and pinned it on the design wall. Squirrel! I pressed it and cut it into 2 1/2" strips and put it back on the wall. I arranged the strips a few times. Ah, the colors washed over me and smiled.
     Once I figure out the layout, I auditioned fabrics for above and below. I got to thinking that the top was like a sky and the bottom like grass for the band to float. I chose a blue with mottled values and a number of greens. Once I drew all the strips on graph paper and and numbered them all with tape, I cut the top and bottom pieces according to the sizes I figured out on the graph paper.




     Now, I have all the strips stacked and ready to sew the long edges. What a squirrel!

Saturday, February 22, 2025

Crop of cards

      Valentines Day has passed, but not without card fanfare! This year, I wanted to make humble, cozy cards. I did a variety of styles and I used old jeans and heart fabric. I tried some hand stitching, but I was too slow. I gave up and pulled out a Pfaff machine someone gave me that has a zillion stitches on it, but is a creaky, plastic machine where you hold your breath while sewing on it. It has a blanket stitch that I use sometimes. I tested out a bunch of stitches and sewed the hearts with Glide Red thread. I made a total of 80 and have one left. It was quite a process- cutting, sewing, glueing, etc. And I found some heart buttons on Ebay and glued them on. Then I realized I had to put cardboard pieces in the envelopes so that the cards could go through the cancellation machine. Lastly, I had them weighed at the post office to make sure the stamps were enough postage. The address labels for some reason malfunctioned so that took another day to solve. I was glad I got them done in time to get to everyone on time except Maureen in New Zealand. Some process photos:


Buttons not glued on yet

Friday, February 21, 2025

Not quilts, but fun making

      I don't look to make anything other than quilts, but sometimes little projects just sneak up and grab me. I had been rummaging through a box of Kaffe scraps given to me (super!) and a lot of the strips were under 1 1/2". I had tried some Jack's Chain blocks and was using the strips for the nine patches, but I balked on it. More on that another time.
     So, in my internet searches for scraps usage, I found tutorials for twine and rope bowls. I tried both and they are both fun. The Rope bowl Youtube from the UK where you use both hands to twist is the superior way to go. Whenever I have a spare 15 min  or so, I pull out the box of strips and go twisting away. I never thought I could sew a rope bowl, but my trusty Singer 401 just claws right through it perfectly.

Of course, Rosie also had a use for the scraps in the box.


Isn't the twine full of lovely colors? I just keep making it and will figure how to use it later.

Nice start!

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Black box mystery

      A while back, I hinted when I bought the magical bookcase there was a black box on the floor next to it. This was the box.

A lot of you know what this is.
I can recognize it across a football field.
     I did polish it up with black shoe polish and polished the hinges before I took the photo, but still, it is pretty remarkable. You can imagine my excited anticipation when I was opening the lid. What would I find and in what condition?
    Inside was a very lovely Singer 221- the Featherweight. All the attachments. I have fixed and cleaned many of these machines for people (Sew much fun!), so I can figure out the condition pretty quickly. I came back to the store with a cord and footcontroller from one of my machines to put it through the paces before I bought it to make sure it ran well. It even had the keys for the case!!
     The Featherweight is a kind of cult sewing machine. On the positive side, it sews an absolutely perfect straight stitch due to the fine machining and rotary bobbin. It is lightweight and very simple to operate. It is a tough machine- not finicky or tempermental.
They are so easily fixable and parts are easy to come by. On the downside, it has a tiny motor and is not fast, although perfect for piecing that requires slow precision like curves or paper piecing. Its light bulb must be replaced by an LED so you don't burn your wrist while sewing. Some people do not realize they can't yank the threads at the end and so bury a broken thread piece in the precision hook mechanism and blame the machine. It is so darn cute and a workhorse, what else would have lasted so many years?

     And there you have over a 70 year old machine that works like the day it was made, creating quilts and piecing memories. When I examined it, I saw it needed new cords as the flat aluminum wiring cords it had are dangerous. I ordered from the magnificent Singer-Featherweight shop, changed the cords, changed the bulb, cleaned and polished the paint and we are ready to roll with precision piecing! Black box mystery solved!

Wednesday, February 19, 2025

Another finish

      Exciting title, right? The Fading Charms quilt has been done for, er, a long time. I finally quilted it and I just love the eye spy squares and colors. It was fun to quilt. It is ready to be a comfort quilt. It would be perfect for a child. I have plenty more scrap 2 1/2" kid squares, so I could make another one. I hate square quilts as people are not square, so I would modify the shape somehow.

I finished this so long ago, my buddy, Tugger, was alive and inspected the unquilted top.

Detail on longarm

I love Stripe bindings!