Archive for the 'story of a quilt' Category

Quilt Monday: The Seedpod Quilt

Monday, January 14th, 2008

Who here remembers the Seedpod quilt block swap?

I finally finished my quilt. On a Monday morning, no less! I’d been quilting a block or two ever day for a couple of weeks, until - and I can’t believe this surprised me - there were none left!

The patchwork binding is left over from the pieced back of the quilt, and the fuzzy blur is none other than Ms. Hatbox. She makes a beeline for any quilt or top I lay down, anywhere, and rolls frantically around, so as to spread as much hair and dander as possible.

She calmed down considerably when I told her she could stay.

Friday, December 21st, 2007

Real quick - the chandelier fabric I posted about earlier this week can be found at Sew, Mama, Sew! Happy shopping!

Wednesday was my birthday, and it’s nice to be able to celebrate a new personal year only just before everyone else’s New Year - two new starts at once!

I’m not much for resolutions, because they’re well, stodgy, and it seems so mean to hold oneself to higher standards through the months of January and February, when we seem to need self-care most of all.

So I don’t want to make a 28th/2008 resolution, but I do think it would be really cool to make the next few months a year of quilts, and make, or rather, finish, 12 quilts.

I know it sounds like a HUGE undertaking, but it’s really just more of a huge (no caps) undertaking. I already have some projects at various states of completion, and I’d really like to finish them off. Not least of all because Hambone and I will be in the market for our first house soon, and I hate the idea of moving around a big pile of unfinished projects!

First up: I’m getting a head start on some hand-quilting on the project that includes the blocks I got in the Seedpod swap. Which can be tough, when it’s always in use:

In this pic, btw, I’m sitting cross-legged, and Hatbox is taking up just half of my lap. You can’t tell from close range, but she is a teeny, tiny little gal!

Stash management.

Tuesday, December 18th, 2007

Hi, my name is Jennicakes, and I’m a fabric addict.

I can quit collecting fabric any time I want to, only I don’t want to! So I’ve been spending some of my holiday down-time organizing my giant stash, and using some of it up so that I can get more!

I know, I know. It’s a vicious cycle. But I MUST have some of this yellow chandelier fabric to make myself a spring dress:

So I’m doing my best to make room for it!

Here are a couple of aprons I made yesterday that are a birthday present to me, from me, made from fabrics I couldn’t bear to part with:

I’ve also been weeding out some prints that I’m finding I’m just not all that fond of, and trying to match them with quilt tops. That’s one thing that’s great about being a quilter - if a print ceases to be useful, aesthetically, it’s still, at the very least, yardage!

I was able to back this quilt, which is about 4′ x 4′, without even touching my muslin! I’d like to show you a picture of the piecing I did, but as you can see, the quilt is occupied:

Other ideas for stash reduction:

- Wrap gifts for crafty family and pals with anything you realize suits their stash better than yours!
- Use it as wall decor, a la The Purl Bee.
- Swap! Granted, trading fabric for fabric doesn’t really constitute a proper purge, but you may wind up with some yardage you’re more likely to use.
- Make cloth napkins for yourself or others. They take about five seconds! This is my favorite thing to do with cute fat quarters I can’t bear to cut up, and it’s a great way to practice rolling hems.

I hope these ideas will help you out from under that mountain of fabric - and, if not, feel free to share your own!

New swap blocks!

Thursday, July 27th, 2006

Check out these beautiful blocks I received from The Crafty Scientist! And I'm not just saying that because I now have enough blocks to sew the top together - they are completely gorgeous!

We swapped because I wanted a little more pastel in my quilt - do you see the lavender she put in there? Brilliant! I never would have thought to add that color, but it just works. It works like crazy.

Thanks, Dayna! I can't wait to show how the whole thing comes together!

Quilting Hollywood

Thursday, July 6th, 2006

I can't believe I haven't updated in over a month! Well… maybe I can. It's been pretty eventful around here lately, and some of that has to do with the block I'm showing here.

A few months ago, I signed up to contribute some products to the MTV Style Lounge.. You can read a little more about that here. When I was putting my masks together, I made the pieced mask from half of a block I was going to submit to the swap, but ended up being a little small. That mask is now owned by someone, possibly kind of a famous someone, who went to the Style Lounge, and that's just fun to think about.

The half of the block you can see above is now the middle of this block. I think I've mentioned that I have some mixed feelings about the "improvisational" aesthetic, but there is one thing I love about it, unequivocally: recycled blocks that don't look like recycled blocks.

There's something unbelievably satisfying about - and can you tell I LONG for season three of Project Runway? - making it work. We live in the age of fabric plenty, so there was no reason I needed to reuse this or any other block that fell short, whether in actual size or just not looking quite nice enough to send off to some anxious stranger who has every right to my best work. But I wanted to get this one right. And it's not my favorite block I've done, but I like it a lot. I like it so much, in fact, that I wish I'd thought to rework it in time to send it off to the swap.

Oh, well - lessoned learned, and now I have a block with kind of an interesting history.

Two curries

Thursday, May 18th, 2006

Dayna, aka The Crafty Scientist contacted me about swapping EVEN more blocks. We're both in the predicament of wanting a bigger quilt than we've got the goods for (and of course, we have extra fabric from the first round of block construction) so I whipped up a couple of curry-heavy blocks in exchange for a couple of mint-heavy blocks.

We have both discovered that color balance is a real challenge when you're piecing together work from 9 different strangers. Who knew?

Looking at the pic, I'm kind of taken aback by how personal these are. I've been raiding my scrap pile to make my blocks, and every fabric I've used here, other than the solids, is left over from another quilt. The fabrics in the curry on the left (is it obnoxious that I want to refer to these like Indian food?) is made up of leftover bits of a quilt I made last year and haven't sold yet, and some binding from one of my eye quilts that is long gone. The curry on the right is made up of more bindings from eye quilts, plus scraps from these commissioned quilts that were only in my life for what seemed like seconds.

Fans of improvisational quilting will probably think it's bunk that curry #2 was pieced in just that style - but I can't help it if I have a more leftover straight-grain binding than the average crafter!

So these are packed up and ready to go, and won't make into my quilt, but into Dayna's. I can't wait to see what she does with them.

Planned Patchhood

Tuesday, May 16th, 2006

Yesterday I was on about the beauty of solid fabrics and seams, and, never being one to leave well enough alone, put this together:

I found the method at Quilter's Cache, which is a great site for free quilt blocks. This one is called Planned Patchhood, which totally cracks me up.

Of course, like everything else that strikes me as instantly charming, it didn't yield the right sized finished block, so I added a cute dotty border that also appears in a block I received in the swap.

Log cabin + paisley

Monday, May 15th, 2006

When I first saw, in person, my laundered Kona cottons for my swap blocks, I decided I just HAD to try a log cabin.

Log cabin quilts never appealed to me much before, but that's because, in many of their incarnations, they are too darn busy for me. But one of the cool things about sewing solids is that you can really notice the beauty and craftsmanship in a seam.

I know, I know. You pretty much have to be the ultimate quilting nerd to fetishize the SEAM the way I do, but and intricately pieced block all in one or two solid fabrics just gets right down to the point: cutting the fabric and sewing it back up just makes it better. It may sound like an exercise in futility, but if you look at a log cabin block, you know that's not true. Materials + time + effort + know-how = craft. It all adds up.

So a two-tone log cabin seemed perfect, especially since I wasn't loving the squash and curry fabrics in and of themselves, but I did like the way they contrasted with the mint and robin's egg cottons.

So I eagerly got to it, and here's what I made:

Pretty, isn't it? Too bad my know-how is a bit lacking on the math front, and it didn't add up to 10.5 inches. I set it aside, disappointed, but reasonably sure it would make a nice potholder or something.

After receiving my final blocks, the dearth of mint led me to want to make a whole mess of new blocks of my own to add on. Unfortunately, I'd used up so much mint on the blocks I sent away, I wasn't sure how to make that happen, unless I really embraced the old, "use what you have" spirit. And since I was already doing that with the blocks I received, I decided to pull out my inadequate log cabin and add a funky half-border.

What's funny is that, initially, that's exactly what I didn't want to do. I mean, I could have saved the whole situation by adding that little border and tossing it into the out-going pile, but I just wasn't feeling it then. I didn't want to throw off the symmetry, or add another color or pattern. Now, though, I'm happier with the log cabin + paisley version than I was with the perfectly symmetrical log cabin. Go figure.

Yay!

Saturday, May 13th, 2006

I've already linked to the Seedpod block swap, but since a little bird told me it was Jessica's birthday, I wanted to give her a shout-out for arranging the whole swap for us. She did a ton of work, including posting all these beautiful shots of various blocks, so you can see what kinds of submissions there were.

So, thanks again, Jessica, and Happy Birthday!

Chapter 1

Friday, May 12th, 2006

Today I received nine quilt blocks from a block swap I signed up for a few months ago. The rules were to make 10 blocks (1 for charity) using fabrics from your own stash combined with Kona cottons in some combination of four colors: squash, curry, mint, and robin's egg. Under the "links" section of this blog, you can find a link to the rest of the rules.

I participated in the swap thinking that when I got blocks from nine strangers, I'd turn them into a quilt, and that would be a done deal. However, when the blocks arrived, I was immediately fascinated with their history, and even more fascinated with their future.

I started blogging about them to investigate the past of each of these blocks, and to brainstorm ideas about what they might become.

People are always asking me about my quilts, and it's ironic that, as a writer, I'm not better at telling their stories. This is an effort to change all that.