Keeping the volume on low…

First for all thanks for all the well wishes over the last two weeks… it has been slow going but after 10 days of wallowing in self-pity I am slowly getting back into quilting.  Yesterday I finally put the machine back up and sewed a little… I thought I was at last okay enough to “operate heavy machinery”.

twins quiltsSo I have been slowly, very slowly quilting a darling low volume quilt I had pieced before I got sick.  Actually I have pieced two quilts which are almost identical – they use the same fabric but just arranged differently.  It is a custom order for two gorgeous twin toddlers who happen to really like pink… girls after my own heart.

twin quilts 2I have also discovered another joy of quilting in the last two days – you can do a little sewing and then have a lie down when you need to.

I promise I will be back on schedule next week…

 

Oh the plans I had…

This week has been a lost week for me.  I got smacked hard by the Flu and have not sewn or been near fabric since Monday..yep I have been that sick!  I had so many plans for this week… so many things that needed to get finished.  Oh well.

I was going to just write this blogging week off as well, but for some reason, in my Flu state, I thought it would be a good idea to share the quilt top I finished a little while ago.   It is a quilt top that I was not originally going to post pictures of, as my husband had declared it the “ugliest” quilt he had ever seen.  Now emboldened by an assortment of cold and flu medication here goes…

PMQG Sampler quilt

Now in defense of this top, it was made using a bunch of unloved orphan blocks from the PMQG charity drive.  There are some lovely blocks in the top, but overall the colour scheme is not me.

PMQG Sampler close upPutting the top together I took apart some blocks, cut up others and generally took liberties.  I just loved the challenge of seeing if I could make this work somehow.

PMQG Sampler cuIn hindsight I think I would approach the task differently and use more negative space… putting in solid fabrics instead of some of the cut down blocks.  Next time… and there will be a next time because there are more of these orphan blocks.

So on this Friday I say it is time for the ugly quilts to come out of the closet.  Share your fuglies.  Photography them.  Facebook them.  Instagram them.  Let them have their moment in the sun.

Okay I am now going back to bed with my tissues and my Dayquil.

 

 

Simple, easy, quick and fun

Monday night my husband decided to abandon me for some fun and games with some of his friends.  I was a little excited to have the night to myself and decided that I wanted to try to finish a quilt top in a night. I found the perfect fabric for my plan, some 1/2 yard cuts of three prints from Michael Miller’s “Les Monsieur” I bought a couple of months ago.

fabric detail

Using this fabulous print from the collection as my focus,   I pulled supporting green and blue fabrics,  tone on tone white and some mustaches from my stash and got to work.

Les Monsieur fabric

I cut strips from my stash fabric and fussy cut the Les Monsieur fabric and hours later I had this…

simple kids quilt

It was a fun and somewhat liberating experience making this quilt.   Once I knew my colour scheme and had some of the main prints fussy cut it was an easy process of putting blocks together.  Other than trimming your blocks to size (I used my 9 1/2 inch square ruler) you do not have to worry too much about precise measuring.

Les Monsieur quilt top detail 3

The fussy cut centers are different sizes, as are the borders surrounding them.

Les Monsieur quilt top detail

I did make sure there was a good balance of blues and greens in the blocks in the top…

Les Monsieur quilt top detail 2

…as well as some dark tones to make things pop – I used a dark blue print and a nice Kona brown solid for this purpose.

Les Monsieur quilt top detail 4

I also made sure that there was plenty of white bordered blocks to help the contrast.  And voila… a quilt 45 inch square quilt top made in a night!

As it is Friday I am linking up with Crazy Mom Quilts Finish It Up Friday and Forth Worth Fabric’s Fabric Frenzy Friday.

My blue period continues…

This week I got a little side tracked by a pile of scraps sitting around my sewing space.  Most of the time I do a good job of keeping my creative urges under control – I usually jot the idea down in my note-book and go back to what I should be doing.  This week the “should be doing” was quilting my sister in laws quilt... instead I took the scraps from that quilt and made some of these…

log cabin block

Yes the scraps from the project I SHOULD have been finishing tempted me into making log cabin blocks.   In my defense I had a whole pile of 2 1/2 inch strips of fabric already cut and lots and lots of scrappy little ends of fabric.  They cried out to be made into a log cabin, and I could not ignore it.  The end result of this diversion is this lovely little top…

baby blue quiltThis 40 x 40 inch quilt top took me about 4 episodes of “Top of the Lake” to make and came together really easily.  I already knew the colours worked together and all the cutting was done I just had to make log cabins.

baby blue quilt detail 3

I am really beginning to love what you can do with solids.  I struggled with the first quilt with the lack of pattern, but now can not wait to make my next solids quilt.  I have a cunning plan already.

baby blue quilt detail 2

This fun little exercise not only distracted me from my quilting to do list, but also added another UFO to my pile, but it was worth it.  The only hard thing about this quilt so far has been photographing it in the howling wind this morning…

blowing wind

Baby it’s cold outside…

I woke up this morning to find that Portland is covered in a lovely layer of snow.  This does not happen often, and as an Aussie it still absolutely delights me.  I was jumping round the house opening all the curtains and gleefully claiming “ohhh it is so pretty”.  Then I realised I needed to photograph my quilt this morning.  Glee gone.

As much as I love snow I am not a huge fan of being cold.  But I rugged up, 4 layers deep, put on some gloves and bravely ventured out to photography my just finished quilt top.

easy paper pieced quilt top

This was the perfect quilt to photograph in the snow, and I have decided to call the quilt “Icicles”…it seemed like a fitting title.

icle quilt in snow

This quilt is a Do.good.stitches project.  I recently joined the “Hope Circle” and when it was my turn to set the block I knew exactly what I wanted to do.

Icle quilt detail We used Julie at 627Handworks “Icky Thump” block – one of the easiest and most effective paper piecing patterns EVER.  You can find the free pattern here  and my original post here.icicle quilt detail 3I love how much variety there is in this quilt.  If I had made all the blocks myself the quilt top would not be this interesting – I would have stuck with light greys and turquoises.  The wonderful ladies of my quilt circle instead provided me with such wonderful blocks, such variation in greys that the quilt really sings.  icicle quilt top detailI can not wait to get the back made and the quilt finished.