Monday, July 20, 2015
Flowery Granny Squares
I first saw these botanical granny squares on a jigsaw puzzle that I got at Piece Time Puzzles in New Hampshire last week on vacation. I found the book on the internet and ordered it right away. These are the first four squares. More to come. They are: Strawberries, Queen Anne's lace, some kind of dahlia, and a red day lily. It will be an afghan for my mom.
Sunday, April 19, 2015
Pouf!
When we moved to Sherborn, I went to Bloomingdale's furniture department and asked to work with an interior designer. They assigned me Andrew Reczkowski. Eventually they let him go because he was not interested in selling me furniture from Bloomingdale's. He went to work at Zimman's in Lynn and for a while continued to find us rugs and furniture that fit our lifestyle. One day he showed up with two large shopping bags filled with strips of upholstery, because, of course, I make quilts, so I could do something with it. Eventually I put the strips in a giant cylindrical basket, and as the years went by the basket moved from room to room and became one of those things you don't notice anymore.
How I came to make this pouf now is a long story. Briefly, a couple of months ago I walked around my sewing room making a list of things that I needed to deal with—piles of clutter, old projects, etc. The cylindrical basket went onto the list. Every few weeks, I would choose an item at random from the list and deal with it. The many-square Trip Around the World quilt that I'm working on now is one such project. I wanted a break from that project, so I chose another one at random. The choice was the basket of upholstery strips. I chose again. Randomly, the basket came up again. (My list is in an Excel spreadsheet, and I use the random number generator to sort the list. The first entry after a new sort is the choice.) I chose a third time, and the result was something else that I didn't want to work on either. So I decided to search the internet to find a pattern to make exactly this pouf, which is more or less what I had in mind originally. The pattern was easy to cut and sew, and the pouf is stuffed with all kinds of otherwise useless fabric that people give me because they think I can make a quilt with it.
I went back to Zimman's last year to get the sofa reupholstered that Andrew had had reupholstered for us all those years ago. I found out he had moved to Los Angeles and that he had died. He was only 59 years old when he died in 2007. He had a wife and kids, and he was from Chelsea, Massachusetts. That's all I know. RIP Andrew. I miss you.
How I came to make this pouf now is a long story. Briefly, a couple of months ago I walked around my sewing room making a list of things that I needed to deal with—piles of clutter, old projects, etc. The cylindrical basket went onto the list. Every few weeks, I would choose an item at random from the list and deal with it. The many-square Trip Around the World quilt that I'm working on now is one such project. I wanted a break from that project, so I chose another one at random. The choice was the basket of upholstery strips. I chose again. Randomly, the basket came up again. (My list is in an Excel spreadsheet, and I use the random number generator to sort the list. The first entry after a new sort is the choice.) I chose a third time, and the result was something else that I didn't want to work on either. So I decided to search the internet to find a pattern to make exactly this pouf, which is more or less what I had in mind originally. The pattern was easy to cut and sew, and the pouf is stuffed with all kinds of otherwise useless fabric that people give me because they think I can make a quilt with it.
I went back to Zimman's last year to get the sofa reupholstered that Andrew had had reupholstered for us all those years ago. I found out he had moved to Los Angeles and that he had died. He was only 59 years old when he died in 2007. He had a wife and kids, and he was from Chelsea, Massachusetts. That's all I know. RIP Andrew. I miss you.
Saturday, April 4, 2015
Progress on the Big Trip Around the World
I spent many hours today picking up 2 1/2 inch squares off of the floor. Many hours.
Here's the final layout, before I picked it up off the floor:
Initially I sorted the squares into color groups on pieces of card stock. The groups on the left are missing a few squares, because when I took the picture, I had already started arranging the layout. The cards on the right have all the squares for each color group - 112 total.
Here's what the layout looked like when I started - note the magenta square in the corner that stands out like a sore thumb. I had arranged the 29 color groups in a color wheel. I could have chosen any color to go in the corner, but I had one particular set of squares that separated exactly into 8 and 20 groups of four, so that set became #8 in the scheme. That gave me two choices for #9, and one of them made more sense. This made bright magenta be the #1 color. In the first picture, it repeats right next to the main diagonal, and that's great, but eventually I found some more subdued colors for the outside corners.
These are mostly scraps from other projects I've made over the years. In a few cases, the set of squares was sort of awful, so I cut some new ones from my fabric stockpile. In other cases I needed one or two more squares to match what I had, and I was able to piece together squares from two bits of 1 1/2 inch wide scraps.
Here's the final layout, before I picked it up off the floor:
1/4 of the quilt is visible. Each small square is actually a pile of four similar squares. The center is at the lower right. Here's what it looks like now, ready to start sewing:
Here's what the layout looked like when I started - note the magenta square in the corner that stands out like a sore thumb. I had arranged the 29 color groups in a color wheel. I could have chosen any color to go in the corner, but I had one particular set of squares that separated exactly into 8 and 20 groups of four, so that set became #8 in the scheme. That gave me two choices for #9, and one of them made more sense. This made bright magenta be the #1 color. In the first picture, it repeats right next to the main diagonal, and that's great, but eventually I found some more subdued colors for the outside corners.
These are mostly scraps from other projects I've made over the years. In a few cases, the set of squares was sort of awful, so I cut some new ones from my fabric stockpile. In other cases I needed one or two more squares to match what I had, and I was able to piece together squares from two bits of 1 1/2 inch wide scraps.
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Next Project
Here is the design for my next quilt. I have approximately 3435 2 1/2 inch squares. The next lowest odd square is 3249, 57 * 57. So if I make a Trip Around the World with those dimensions, using 1/4 inch seam, it will be 114 x 114 inches. This is slightly too big. So I could use the wider presser foot as a guide, and the squares would work down to 1 29/32 inches (I did this and measured). 57 times this is 108 plus a fraction. This will do - it will make a quilt 9 feet x 9 feet. I think it should actually end up a bit smaller than this.
57 is a magic number for me this year, it is how old I am right now, and it is the year I was born. So time to start. In the diagram above we can see we need 4 x 28 (112) loops with 29 different colors each, plus one extra square for the middle. So I need 112 each of 29 different colors.
I think rather than go through the exercise of sewing 112 loops and then picking them apart at different points and creating four panels with rows going in different directions, I will use this diagram to arrange each quadrant and then make piles of squares for each column. I'll have 57 columns. I want the first pass to yield 32 columns, so I'll sew together 25 pairs of columns. Then 7 left over makes 32. Then I'll sew pairwise sets until I have all 57 rows.
Then sew together 25 rows, then sew rows pairwise until the thing is finished. Done! Easy.
Saturday, February 28, 2015
The rest of the triangles and squares
One by one I am getting rid of my boxes of fabric scraps. I've used up pretty much all of the contents of my old box of triangles and large squares. I haven't finished anything, but I've sewn together five tops in the last few weeks. These are the last three. Previously I made this top out of all of the pinwheels in the box, and then this smaller one out of the medium triangles.
I really love this one. I took all of my six-inch squares and paired them up. Then sewed them around the edges, face to face, and cut them through the diagonal into four half-square triangles. Then made the four squares into pinwheels. Of course when you do this the edges are on the bias. So I thought, why not do an on-point setting? I've done this before. I had exactly enough squares to make 51 pinwheels. The one I left out was dark blue and light purple solid. Maybe I should have left out the pastel solid one that stands out like a sore thumb, but it has a friend in the top row. The edges were constructed from scratch. Here is another one that I made this way.
I was going to make all of my four-inch squares into half-square triangles, the usual way. However this would have been foolish. I like this layout. It's not a full-sized quilt top, but I could add a border. At any rate it is going to live in the UFO bin for a while.
Finally here is what I did with the half-square triangles already made, plus a few more that I made out of 3 1/2 inch squares and a few 4 inch squares that I didn't use in the previous quilt top. I think it's really ugly but the goal was to take 121 half-square triangles regardless of whether they match or not and squeeze them into an 11 x 11 quilt. It's small, will fit on a wall somewhere if I ever finish it, and if anyone can stand to look at it. The goal of a work of art is to draw the viewer in and capture their eyes (and imagination). You don't want the eye to lock in on any one part of the work. But in this case the eye wanders around looking for something that doesn't make you want to run away.
I really love this one. I took all of my six-inch squares and paired them up. Then sewed them around the edges, face to face, and cut them through the diagonal into four half-square triangles. Then made the four squares into pinwheels. Of course when you do this the edges are on the bias. So I thought, why not do an on-point setting? I've done this before. I had exactly enough squares to make 51 pinwheels. The one I left out was dark blue and light purple solid. Maybe I should have left out the pastel solid one that stands out like a sore thumb, but it has a friend in the top row. The edges were constructed from scratch. Here is another one that I made this way.
I was going to make all of my four-inch squares into half-square triangles, the usual way. However this would have been foolish. I like this layout. It's not a full-sized quilt top, but I could add a border. At any rate it is going to live in the UFO bin for a while.
Finally here is what I did with the half-square triangles already made, plus a few more that I made out of 3 1/2 inch squares and a few 4 inch squares that I didn't use in the previous quilt top. I think it's really ugly but the goal was to take 121 half-square triangles regardless of whether they match or not and squeeze them into an 11 x 11 quilt. It's small, will fit on a wall somewhere if I ever finish it, and if anyone can stand to look at it. The goal of a work of art is to draw the viewer in and capture their eyes (and imagination). You don't want the eye to lock in on any one part of the work. But in this case the eye wanders around looking for something that doesn't make you want to run away.
Sunday, February 15, 2015
Using up the small triangles
I made this out of pretty much all of the 2 1/2 inch half-square triangles that I had in the triangle box. The goal is to get rid of the triangle box and beyond that to stop saving small bits of fabric. The pattern is called broken dishes.
I made eccentric star blocks out of the 2 inch triangles. I like the creative use of odd scraps, but it feels a little crazy. So this is part of a campaign to rid myself of the scrap collection. I have enough to last a while longer anyway.
I made eccentric star blocks out of the 2 inch triangles. I like the creative use of odd scraps, but it feels a little crazy. So this is part of a campaign to rid myself of the scrap collection. I have enough to last a while longer anyway.
Saturday, February 14, 2015
Snow days project
There have been quite a few snow days in Massachusetts this month. We got about five feet of snow - as I write there is more to come. So I took a few piles of kid prints that I acquired by buying a grab bag (never again). I had grouped the prints into "compatible" colorways (some may disagree), and I cut them out and added a few of my own fabrics to complete them. There are two additional tops that still need a border. Of course they are only tops. They are now UFOs that I can add to my growing collection of quilt tops that need to be quilted.
I used up the wild animal prints for this top. I added the other fabrics from my stash. All of these tops are about 39" square.
Here I combined some quasi-pastel cat prints and an assortment of sea animals and halloween frogs. I only added the floral fabric adjacent to the whales and the faux batik magenta print in the corners.
This one was the hardest - the only fabric I had in this pile was some red and blue prints with numbers, cats on numbers and a large piece of a teddy bear print with quite a few teddy bears already removed by someone else. I had chosen the pencil pattern border print to go with it. It took me a while to figure out that I should cut 3 inch squares and add a border. Once I did that, I had to use five of my own red and blue prints to fill in the gaps. I considered just throwing out the kid print fabric, because there was so little of it, but in the end I think I did the right thing.
I used up the wild animal prints for this top. I added the other fabrics from my stash. All of these tops are about 39" square.
Here I combined some quasi-pastel cat prints and an assortment of sea animals and halloween frogs. I only added the floral fabric adjacent to the whales and the faux batik magenta print in the corners.
This one was the hardest - the only fabric I had in this pile was some red and blue prints with numbers, cats on numbers and a large piece of a teddy bear print with quite a few teddy bears already removed by someone else. I had chosen the pencil pattern border print to go with it. It took me a while to figure out that I should cut 3 inch squares and add a border. Once I did that, I had to use five of my own red and blue prints to fill in the gaps. I considered just throwing out the kid print fabric, because there was so little of it, but in the end I think I did the right thing.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)