Saturday, May 22, 2010

In For a Penny


in for a pound. Okay Jane, two rows done, I'm hooked. But really, I'm behind in my batik challenge, and I only have some feathering yet to do on the 6 inch oriental border so I really can't start another row just yet......but as we speak I'm printing out the patterns for the first row of triangles.....darn you Jane.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Funny Story



So I'm watching Fons and Porter, and one of them says, "CARDINAL RULE: You should make a habit of only ripping a block three times and if the points still don’t match up...."
Here's where I finish the sentence in my head with a...."Just run with it, life's too short."

WRONG, their advice "after three times make the entire block over or it will be stretched out of shape beyond recognition.." I guess that's why they have a TV show and I line blocks up on my rug to post on my blog.

But then again who's to say who’s happier?

Saturday, May 1, 2010

It Works!!!



I‘ve been apprehensive about sending freezer paper through my printer, but with the daunting task of piecing an entire Dear Jane, I thought what the heck. What’s the worst thing that could happen? A major paper jam…
I even planned on purchasing precut sheets. (30 sheets for $8.95). When I brought them up to the counter to pay, I asked the woman cutting my fabric if she had used them. With a big sigh, and slight hesitation she said, “No, but she’d been told they would work if you ironed a regular piece of 8.5 X 11’ paper ever so slightly around the edges onto the freezer paper. This gave each sheet the proper weight without the slippery feel."
I decided to cut my own sheet from the roll I had at home and give it a try. I returned the paper package to its hook and was on my merry way.
It worked like a charm, NO MORE TRACING!!! (Well at least for the DJ blocks because I use EQ’s DJ software)
One Roll of Reynolds Freezer paper (75 sq.’) is $2.69. It will give you 106 sheets per roll, which if you cut the entire roll saves you $28.62. 2 cents per sheet vs. 29 cents per sheet if you bought the fabric store package.
This only works on an inkjet printer, hope it helps someone and Happy Quilting!

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Maybe It's The Pins







A tad off I was on some of my DJs. A friend noticing A7 in progress on my last post remarked, “Those pins are big, maybe too big to line the seams up correctly!” Hmmmm I thought…. PINS. I literally have thousands of them,… thousands. I’ve got two large cookie tins of bent safeties for sandwiching, and then there are my clover flat heads and Bohin short appliqué plus the two overflowing magnet dishes of pearl heads and THE TIN, the tin, my mom’s tin. My parents are buried 600 miles away in New York State and I do visit their graves from time to time on Google earth but it’s the objects t I took from their house that keep the memories for me. For my mom it’s her pins. The red scotch tape tin was in her possession for as long I knew her. I was in my 50s when she died. It was never in the closed position, always at the ready for all kinds of calamities. People would bring their fabric/garment dilemmas to my mom, and if she got up to get her pins, or asked one of us to bring her her pins we knew the problem was not only solvable, but that she would solve it. Symbolically, I closed the lid and packed them away with some of her other sewing paraphernalia after her death. I rarely open them, but now I was curious to see if there was a difference with size. No not really, but it was nice to remember.

PS I did manage a slight correction on the red checked block.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Dear Jane


How did you do it without freezer paper? (Because even with it, and an "add a 1/4 ruler" I am still off a tad.)

Sunday, April 11, 2010

A Minimalism I'm Not



So after all the busy wallpaper of 19 years came down,and the entire interior of our house was painted Benjamin Moore Putnam Ivory I started seeing places to put little quilts like this adaptation of a free pattern for an appliqué matryoshka doll at http://www.ottobredesign.com/

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Piercing Question of the Day



Piercing Question of the Day
Exactly what machine is finessing your latest creation? I’m a relative newbie to quilting, it became my salvation back in 2003 when my first, second and third loves, cross stitch, crochet and needlework became too painful because of hand problems. I joined a quilting guild, and it just seems more and more people either have longarms, or send their work out to be longarmed. As you can see, I don’t even have a computerized machine. Somewhere deep in my psyche I have an aversion to them. Sure I use computers for everything. I work in a computer lab, but there is just something solidly reassuring about a good old fashion all metal machine. If I dig even deeper that film “Red Dawn” lurks. Hey, if there’s ever a power outage can’t I still be among the select few who can still sew. I'd find a belt and foot throttle somewhere. Okay sarcasm aside what machine do you use? I have been following 365 Days of Free Motion Quilting Filler Designs and noticed that she uses a Juki. Hmmmmm all metal parts, larger opening..... Bernina are you listening? I know you've spent 7 years or so developing the new 830.... I love my old 840 and 830 by the way. But how about an all metal machine work horse with needle down (I covet that) just to do machine quilting? And for all you non longarms out there, what do you use???

I just thought Tuesday needed a piercing question of the day.