Sunday, May 15, 2022
Pandemic Grandson's Quilt
Saturday, April 9, 2022
Recovered Porch and Deck Furniture
We bought rattan thrift shop furniture for our front porch and back deck and I recovered all of it with various shades of denim scraps and an old green patterned table cloth that I had on hand.
On the back deck I repurposed, yet again, old scraps of denim that had had another life as covers on our furniture in our fifth wheel trailer.Below is the "before" of the front porch furniture.
Sunday, April 3, 2022
Tree Huggers Quilt
And my little grand-niece enjoying her quilt.
Wednesday, March 30, 2022
New Wall Art - "Dancing Colors"
I am transitioning from more traditional quilting to fabric arts more generally. I just finished this one yesterday and mounted it on polystyrene. I put a black cloth "frame" around it.
I used my stash on this, which included ric-rac and bric-a-brac. I had many colors and sizes of ribbons and hem binders and blanket bindings that I'd picked up in thrift stores over the years. I also did free-motion machine quilting, pebble style in a couple areas, and added some Kantha-style large stitching and French knots. A little international flavor, wouldn't you say? A friend of mine who is one of the original team that sequenced DNA, our wicked smart friend, we call him, looked at this before I'd framed it out and started waxing elegantly in physics lingo about the prism and color spectrum and all. We'd been imbibing over dinner and I want to just blame my failure to fully comprehend on drink and not lack of smarts on my part. It was fun though. I wish I'd captured his words for fun to add in here.Mom's Quilt
Here is Mom's quilt that I completed in 2020 but had stopped blogging for a while.
Like the one I did for my dad, I wanted it to keep my mom warm while she spent her days in a nursing home with remnants from strokes and Lewy Body Dementia. I used old lace doilies I'd found in thrift shops or that were given to me by friends. I also used some piece work some unknown woman had done but never made into a quilt. I found those in a thrift store too. I also added my own applique of a Carolina Wren since I was living in the Southern Appalachians when I made this quilt and the little fatty wrens were always serenading me and visiting me just outside my windows and on the porches and deck.
The browns I used in this quilt were done partly because they were already in the pieces I found at a thrift shop and wanted to use but also because I remember Mom and Dad's bedroom out on the farm in Iowa was done in brown shades and I had always liked it. It was part of the story of their life.
I wanted this quilt for my mom to also be feminine and it did have the pink with the brown in the applique pieces, but I used a touch of turquoise in the trim around the edges to give it a little pop, and then I used printed flowered brown squares at the intersection of each larger square, and I hand-quilted free-hand flowers in all the brown strips between the squares.
As with the quilt for my dad, this one for my mom is destined for a sister of mine after my mom is gone. The one for my dad went to my sister, Karen. This one will go to my sister, Barb.
Below is a picture of the layers, the topper, batting and backing, taped with painters tape to the clean wooden floor in preparation for hand basting. Note one of the knee pads in the left foreground of the picture. It's careful, grueling work crawling around on top of this to baste it starting from the center and going out to all the edges.
And below is a picture of when I was still piecing and before I hand stitched in all the vintage lace doilies.Friday, February 25, 2022
More Quilts - A Flannel One For My Dad
After a long hiatus from blogging, I hope to catch up and resume with a fairly regular schedule . I have done many quilts since I last posted.
The quilt below is a twin bed size. I started it using stash fabrics, most of which I bought in thrift stores. When I was sitting outside our fifth wheel trailer under the awning, hand quilting this quilt, a lady quilter came over to our campsite to chat me up. She wanted to know where I source my fabrics. This quilt was all flannel pieces. I proudly informed her that I purchased nearly all of it from thrift stores, estate sales, or repurposed it from old clothes (like most original quilters did). Her face changed to thinly veiled disgust. I guess it's not for everyone. I have become a fan of Cas Holmes who recycles or upcycles (whatever word you prefer) into fiber art. She has gypsy roots. I really relate to Bohemian lifestyle, traveling (wandering) and living small, reusing things, being content. When I read about Cas and viewed her work I loved it. I keep finding more and more of us out here and there in the world who work with found or existing items and fabrics.
The quilt below was made for my dad who had had a major stroke and ended up in a nursing home. He was a tall gentleman, 6'3" and over 200 pounds and also had initial signs dementia so home care was not going to be an easy option and my mother who was relatively healthy at the time opted for nursing home care. She and my dad had nursing home insurance that was so good that its not offered anymore as an insurance choice.
Dad was hurt and very angry, fit to be tied, to be put in a nursing home. He was hard to be around. It seemed even as if he was being tortured, so great was his distress. He had been a successful farmer and was locally involved in government and education for most of his adult life. He had put seven kids through school or saw them launched in houses and careers. It has a sad way to wind up what was an almost 92 year life, with the last couple in a nursing home. I had trouble seeing him and I know it was a cop out not to spend more time with him at this stage of his life. He was in a nursing home that one of my sisters worked in as well as a sister-in-law so I knew he was as well cared for as possible outside of being in his own home.
I loved him so much and thought of him though I was not there often. We were traveling in our fifth wheel a lot and did not stay in Iowa full time to visit him as I'd done a couple years before with my sister who was dying of cancer. Maybe because of the toll it took on me being the primary care giver to my sister during the day for almost a year, that I couldn't be around my dad all that much in his last years.
So I felt a strong urge to do something for him. Something that was within my capability and that took a lot of thought and a lot of my attention. I made this quilt to go on his bed, to cover his body and provide him warmth and love, whether he was aware of it or not, and I don't think he was aware of that fact by the time I was finished with it. After he died, I gave it to one of my sisters. At the viewing for his funeral, she had it covering a table holding photographs.
I look at the pictures of this quilt and remember laying it out on a bedroom floor in a friend's house in Maryland. I remember planning it, piecing it, layering the finished topper and the sandwiched batting to the backing, all of it carefully taped with painters tape to the clean, wooden floor and carefully crawling around on top of it to baste the layers together. This took several days. I remember getting a couple calls from a niece reporting on my dad's condition as I was carefully moving over the top of this quilt with a curved needle and long stretches of thread.
So this quilt was stitched with love, carefully planned, neatly done. It is one of my favorites and I'm really proud of my work.
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
Latest Projects
Here are some projects. I did though I only quilted one and didn't get pictures of it after having quilted it. Forgot.
It was fun piecing this together inside the bowl, cutting strips of different widths, fitting them together, finger pressing seams down before sewing, working the fabric, establishing rapport with it as I made it curve up and down the sides yet link to it's mates. One of the fabric artists at the Sew Fair called this making the fabric "mind" like making children mind. That was cute and we all laughed. But I prefer to think of it in the win win model of establishing rapport. More Zen-like for me.
So the basket above got quilted in the pebbles style but I forgot to take pictures and gave it to a friend, filled with examples of my first two batches of homemade soap each individually wrapped up with rustic brown bags and tied off with either twine or vintage fabric ribbons I'd bought at thrift stores over the last couple of years during my travels.
And the baskets below I haven't quilted yet. This blue one in the picture below needs to be reworked before I quilt it. The small circle on the bottom is a little off center. I plan to pull those threads and re-attach it, then quilt it with the machine using wavy, swirly lines inspired by the fabric on the outside.
And this bowl, below, was the first one I did and actually probably turned out the best. I liked it as it was and was afraid to ruin it by quilting it. I didn't trust my beginner skills and this is ironic but probably not that uncommon among other budding artists, or any other new endeavors. How do you learn if you don't try? And the whole reason I started working on these fabric bowls was just that it would give me fun, small projects where I could practice machine quilting rather than just doing pieces of scraps in a quilt sandwich.
T-Shirt quilt - University of Maryland Theme
T-Shirt quilt I made for my daughter with her University of Maryland era T-shirts. I loved doing machine quilting on this and had fun going...
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Recovering cushions is pretty easy. I literally deconstructed the old ones and used them as patterns to sew the new ones. I even reused t...
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My on-going quilt projects. Teddy Bear Baby Quilt. This is a multi-color Teddy Bear baby quilt, as you can see. I was inspired to ...
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I made these denim frames for prints I'd bought in Alaska. The prints were inspired by a marathon there and seem to have Klimt's ...