Showing posts with label quilting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quilting. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Scrap Therapy


I finally finished quilting Phoebe's quilt. I'm trying not to have guilty mother syndrome. Hers ended up with two puckers on the back. Two tiny, little puckers. Eowyn's was pucker-free. Hopefully she won't compare and add the two wrinkles to her second-child syndrome. Now for my favorite, favorite part: binding. All that I need is a good movie and it will make for one snuggly evening.


I pulled out all the stops today and organized my fabric stash. I've heard interior decorators say that if you're not sure what colors you really like, you should look at what colors you tend to wear. Once I brought home a sea green sweater from the thrift store and happily proceeded to hang it in the closet. Husband looked at my recent purchase and said, "Don't you already own two sweaters that color?" Well, yes, but this one is different, dear.

My fabric stash is as severely lopsided as my clothing: Tons of greens, blues, pinks and reds. A handful of purple. And about six pieces of orange. Apparently I am not a fan of orange. When we moved in to our current home, the dining room was pumpkin orange. "Good," I thought to myself, "I'd never pick it. I'm broadening my horizons." But the orange and I just couldn't handle each other and I ended up painting it.

While I was folding and refolding, Husband was standing over me asking me the whys and wherefores of the collection. Finally it was, "Which do you like better? Fabric or books?"

I told him that was like asking me to choose between my children.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Hibernation

I'm afraid I'm going to go a bit crazy if Spring does not come, say, in February. My beloved 88 Corsica currently has no breaks, leaving us totally homebound after Husband goes to work. I try to tell myself peppy things about hibernation: "Just think, Self, of all the work you're going to have to do outside when Spring rolls around. You might as well hunker down and do all your inside projects. Yay." However, mid-January, I somehow lose the ability to listen to this chipper voice, promptly tell it to SHUT-IT, and mope about until it gets warmer. I even give my winter decorations the evil eye.

On the cheerful side of things, I finally finished the top of my scrap quilt. 3.5 years later. You can have a glimpse of the back and hear the full story when it's complete.


This week I started quilting Phoebe's quilt, which is a green version of Eowyn's quilt. In the spring (dear, sweet spring) we're going to combine the girls' rooms and bunk up the beds. This is the second round of identical quilts I've made. Making two nearly-the-same quilts is rather brutal; you can imagine why: quilting the second one is a total bore. No creative decisions to be made, same old, same old, just gettin' her done. While I quilt I dream about that tiny nursery room turned into my own little sewing nook.

Well, this was a totally depressing post; forgive me. I think I need to force myself outside for some fresh zero-degree air.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Hey there

So we decided to quit Xanga, but have taken our dear sweet time doing it. Here we are at Blogger. Here's to another year of the delightful mix of wonderful inspiration and wasting time, dosed up with a few of my "I'm going to quit blogging" threats. Cheers.

I finished Eowyn's quilt a while ago. She got it around Christmas time without a lot of fanfare. I thought about wrapping it, but couldn't find the point. After all, it's not like she hadn't seen me sewing it every day and stopped by to confirm that yes, it was hers, and yes, it would be done soon.


I am a fan of cotton batting, stippling, and crinkly vintage. I put several surprise messages in the quilting which I suppose she'll find once I get around to teaching her how to read :).

I'm happy with it. She is too. What more could you ask for?

Saturday, December 1, 2007

Basting 101

A well-basted quilt makes the quilting process a joy. A poorly basted quilt will make you never want to quilt again. Been there! I've never seen a tutorial for the way I baste my quilts. Read any beginner's quilting manual and it will instruct you to use safety pins or basting stitches. I've tried both methods and been incredibly frustrated by them. Not only do they not work for me, but I also have the added pain of removing thread or pins, accompanied by the quilting and requilting of wrinkles in the backing.

This is the way my Grandma taught me to baste a quilt, and it's never done me wrong. Warning: as with any method, it's a real pain and a guaranteed backache, but it's the only pathway I know to a nonstressful session of quilting from start to finish. So pick a day when you're feeling unusually chipper, and go at it!

What you'll need:

1. A pair of sewing scissors
2. A roll of packing tape. Not duct, masking, or any other type. $1 packing tape only!
3. A can of quilter's basting spray. This runs about $8 at sewing stores. You can get it at Wal-Mart, too. One can usually takes me through two twin quilts or 1 1/2 queen sized.

4. Your quilt top, batting, and backing.
You will also need floor space bigger than your quilt. Hardwood or laminate flooring is best. You CAN do this on carpet, but it takes a bit longer and tends to be a bit peskier. Step 1. Make sure your backing is fairly unwrinkled. If you've pieced your backing, make sure the seam is ironed flat. Lay out your backing wrong side up. Using 5-10" long sections of tape, tape down one edge of the backing. Your tape should run along the edge of the backing and be halfway onto the floor. Leave about 5 inches between tape sections.
Step 2. Tape down the opposite side, stretching the batting as tightly as possible.

Step 3. Tape down the remaining two sides. You may have to fiddle with the sections you already taped down. This is normal. Keep fiddling until your backing is as tight as a drum. Try to avoid walking on the batting, although if you can't avoid a few steps, it should be fine.
Step 4: Spray the backing following the instructions on the can. When you're done, the backing should feel sticky and tacky. If not, spray again.

Step 5: Lay out your batting. Be extra careful if you're using cotton not to pull on it too tightly, step on it (especially after it's been sprayed...you'll have cotton feet!), or it will come apart. Once you have it positioned, smooth all the wrinkles out. It may
look wrinkly, but when you smooth your hands over it, it shouldn't feel wrinkly. Make sense?

Step 6: Spray the batting.
Step 7: Lay out your quilt, making sure there's at least 3-5 inches of backing and batting left on each edge. Again smooth it out. At this point don't be afraid to get on top of the quilt. Smooth, smooth, smooth!

Step 8: Cut any access backing and batting (leaving those extra inches) and carefully remove the tape. Take a look at the back of the quilt. What's most important is how it FEELS. Can you smooth it over with your hands without feeling wrinkles? If so, you're good to go hit the machine.

Step 9: Pretend as if you're puzzled when someone mentions that the floor is sticky. After all, you worked hard, and they can't expect you to baste and mop in the same day!

Notes: I am always feeling the back of the quilt. I check the back after ever 5 minutes of quilting to check what I've done and make sure there's no problem areas. After every 30 minute session, I take the entire quilt from the machine, smooth out the top, and most importantly, smooth out the back. Before you begin a new session, check where you're going to be sewing and smooth out that area, too. If you hands feel a wrinkle, your sewing machine will, too. As you sew, the backing can shift. What's best about this method is that the tacky spray allows you to smooth the backing out to shift with the quilt. If you pin or thread baste, you don't have this flexibility. So sew, check, resmooth, and you'll be able to have a perfect back. It's all in the basting.
 

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