Strawberry basket

Hey, look! It’s another quilt block from the Farmers Wife Quilt! This one is also paper pieced. I really like the more modern fabrics.

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Pretty, pretty points!

One of the women at the last club meeting said that it takes as long to choose the fabric as it does to make the block. To her I say, “REALLY?”

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Another block

Graph paper, my friends, is one of the greatest inventions of all time. It allowed me to design my entire studio while recovering from surgery, it helped me to pass multiple math classes, and it allows me to participate in the joys of paper foundation piecing without even breaking out a ruler. Just look at all those corners and be amazed at the wonder that is Graph Paper.

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Farmer’s Wife Quilt

Above is a block from “The Farmer’s Wife” quilt, from the book of the same name. The book contains designs for 111 six-inch blocks, which finish off into a full/queen-size quilt.
This definitely falls into the “millions of tiny pieces” category. I’m doing this as a year-long class/club through “Quilters General Store,” a local quilt shop. We complete nine or ten blocks each month. As part of the class, they provide additional rotary cutting and the occasional paper piecing instructions.
I have decided, however, that paper piecing is more suitable to six inch blocks with millions of pieces, for me.
So, out comes the graph paper! I draft my own paper piecing using standard quarter inch graph paper, which simplifies the drafting and makes fabric placement during sewing easier as well. I keep the blocks on their paper backing in order to make connecting them to their sashing easier, too. Millions of little pieces… One year-long project!

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Chaos in the Garden

Chaos in the Garden
Inspired by fireworks, all hell breaks loose.
Seedlings, so lovingly tended,
have sprouted into unruly adolescence.
Spinach and lettuce, those early season darlings,
have bolted in rebellion
while radishes’ bright red caps push skyward,
begging to be noticed.
Carefully chosen varieties of tomatoes
cross-pollinate with abandon,
abetted in their promiscuity
by those industrial anarchists, the bees.
Zucchini offer fruit like new lovers giving chocolates
– more than can possibly be consumed –
as cucumbers struggle to keep the pace.
Winter squash invade their neighbors’ beds,
flaunting giant yellow blossoms
upon leaves as large as dinner platters.
Once-frail basil crowds stubborn rosemary,
attempting in vain to intimidate its woody neighbor,
under the imperious gaze of gangly dill.
Green beans take revenge upon bullying weeds,
shoving them aside,
while sweet peas climb proud stalks of corn,
challenging these lords of the garden.
Into this jungle
    – this bit of wildness in my tidy back yard –
I wander,
          accepting,
                  enjoying,
                        embracing
the chaos of summer.
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Freehand Feathers

Block number three. This free-motion machine quilting design was done without marking or guides.

I did, however, prepare for it by drawing feathers on about twenty pages of a composition book while waiting for videos to upload. This is why I buy my own office supplies.

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I see London, I see France: My Journey to Panty Perfection

I see London.  I see France.  I can see Russia from my house.  I’m sorry.  I couldn’t resist the cliché with the political twist….

While Lisa was here on a working vacation in July she, with the help of the book “Lingerie Secrets: Sew a Perfect Fit for Every Body”, helped me draft a pattern that would–once lowered and louvered; nipped and tucked; clipped and snipped–enable me to make my own, customized panties.

I have what I call an athletic build: short and lean but built like a Hobbit with an appetite to match.  Manufactured clothing never quite seems to fit.  In the case of panties, they always seem too long in the rise without enough coverage in a very crucial portion of my anatomy.  It seems like all underwear are  “creepers” or “peepers”:  Some sneak into places they don’t belong and others show themselves where they shouldn’t.  I don’t want to go around tugging at my keister or showing my underwear to the public.  Oh…heh, er…I just did (giggle).

In recent times, it’s also become increasingly difficult to find the right cut combined with lace elastic (to hide panty lines) combined with 100% cotton.  We all know that it’s not healthy to wear synthetics on “that” portion of our anatomy so why are all the underwear either synthetic or combined with a synthetic?   The only 100% cotton underwear I’m able to locate these days are built like men’s underwear minus the fly and who wants that?   Then there’s the issue of finding 100% cotton, low-rise hipster panties with lace elastic MADE IN THE USA.  Do these even exist?  So many reasons to make my own.

The origin for all things panty-like is based on the granny panty.  Below is Lisa’s original drawing based on my measurements with my prototype panty pattern and “final” paper pattern on top.  Her original paper pattern had an untimely death with a pair of scissors as I learned to draft patterns.   The prototype is made from an old shirt I pulled out of the rag box.  They’ve had the seam ripper taken to them many times.

Below is the beginnings of fitting.  During the frustrations of fitting, I did indeed try to disassemble a pair of my favorite underwear to make a pattern, but, once disassembled and compared to my pattern-in-the-works, I realized the store-bought panties really didn’t fit that well:

Below is the assembled panty.  Fitting nearly perfect but still a ways to go.  Notice that there is a seam up the center and a tuck or two in the seat.  I didn’t tuck in both sides as I only need one perfect cheek-fitting for the pattern:

Two days of fitting and a day or two of assembling and tweaking later, here are my finished, customized, well-fitting, 100% cotton panties made in the USA of recycled and imported materials (Sigh, I’m not sure where the elastic lace is made.).  They don’t look absolutely perfect, but wear like clouds.  Besides who’s going to see my underwear?

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Structured Meandering

This free-motion quilting pattern is structured on a 2×2″ grid, which is marked my painter’s tape guides during the quilting process. I practiced it with pencil and paper before-hand, a good thing to keep busy while watching television.

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Clockwork bird

Pencil on paper.

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Let the quilting begin!

I love machine quilting. I love it so much that inspired me to purchase my Bernina 440QE. I don’t regret it at all.

When I am quilting a project, I like to consume one bobbin of thread a day. Sometimes it feels like I am limiting myself, since I make a rule not to sew after the bobbin is gone. It’s for my own good, since moving a large quilt around wreaks havoc on my shoulders and wrists. It is also a good signal for me to clean the machine and change the needle.

Other days, it feels like that bobbin will never end. I know it must be running low, but every time I peek around behind the presser foot, those stitches are still trailing along. Still, I know that if I use up that one bobbin a day, I will see a satisfactory amount of progress.

Why do I find it so difficult to apply this principle to the rest of my life? If I did, my house would be clean, my yard would be weeded, and all my projects would be finished.

Maybe it’s just not as satisfying as quilting a bobbin a day.

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