Like how? Huh? I know. I first learned of this technique from Joanne at Canuck Quilter Designs. It has made me quite like paper-piecing ever since! **Note! This tutorial will be needed for my upcoming Freefall QAL which begins on the Spring Equinox. When is that? Monday, March 20 at 6:28 am EST.
If you want to try this method with minimal fabric to make the leaf
point or just to make some cool triangles in a square blocks, here is
what you do to get a 3" finished block as shown.
The worst parts of pp, for me have always been cutting the pieces of fabric big enough to cover the section I'm working on, (read waste), and then not so much though, the tearing off of the paper, because that is kind of satisfying in a way, much like popping the bubbles on bubblewrap! However, picking out all the little bits trapped in the stitches? Not a fan.😣
This method gets rids of both of those issues, and allows you to reuse multiple times the paper template. You can use freezer paper if you like, as Joanne does, because a touch of the iron will adhere it to your fabric. Alternately, you can use graph paper as I did, and use a dab of a gluestick to hold the first piece of fabric to the back of the graph paper. I've done both; the only difference is that with graph paper/gluestick, there is a wee bit of gluestick residue on your fabric, but less is more remember, and a spritz of water will remove anything if you ensure you use washable glue.
Tuesday, February 28, 2017
Sunday, February 26, 2017
Sunday Stretch For Sewists #17 - Dragonfly
Yin Yoga names the poses with a lot of animal and insect names, this one no exception. It is also known as Straddle and as Upavistha Konasana which means wide-leg forward bend. Begin by sitting on the floor. This pose can aggravate sciatica, so be sure to elevate your hips by sitting on a folded up quilt or even a cushion. This helps tilt your pelvis forward, so if you have tight hamstrings, you may find raising your hips in this way helps. Open your legs as far apart as you can, optimally until the point where you feel that tugging sensation we always look for in Yin. Lean forward, feeling your pelvis lean towards the floor, and letting your back round, if that is okay for your back.
Wait a second.... That is not a yoga pose! Ooh, but it is sure some pretty eye candy, right?! I was so happy to get my second installment of my Christmas gift from MacGyver, a fat eighth club of Art Gallery Fabrics from Pink Castle Fabrics. We are supposed to get 20, but I guess because there was only 19, I got extra (like half a yard!) of the one. I'm thinking I may have to order some more of a couple of these, the one floral in the bottom row, third from the left, in particular.
Okay Dragonfly. You know, just being able to get down and back up off the floor is something. Do not think, 'forget it, ain't happenin'; take your time and you can do this! I've said it before here and I say it pretty much every class I teach: you will be amazed at how this simple act of getting down onto and back up off of the floor can help increase your mobility. My friend Pat sent me the July issue of Prevention, with a cute bookmark marking the article she knew I'd be interested in. You will be hearing more in my Sunday Stretch posts about personal trainer Katy's theories of maximizing movement, one of her main ones being live on the floor. In other words, get off the chair as often as you can, and onto the floor, put your computer or iPad on a stool and use a nice big pillow to sit on or lean against while you read or work, put your coffee cups in the cupboard above your head so you have to reach up on tiptoes to get one every morning, and so on.
I have a yoga student who is in her late 60s, doing her best to avoid knee surgery, overweight, and who wouldn't come to yoga for several months because of embarrassment at how awkward she may have looked while trying to do this very thing. I encouraged her not to stay away, telling her Yin is in a low light room, go in the back row, no one cares because our eyes are closed or heads are down the majority of the time. So she tried again, and now has been coming regularly, and is so amazed and happy at her improvement! We modify stuff where her knees can't handle it, and she is able to go through the class just fine!
This pose will work your hips, low back and those knees. Before we go any further, I must also interject a quick thank you to Yvonne at Quilting Jet Girl, for doing a feature on my Yoga Poses monthly post on her Tuesday Tips and Tutorials. Gee whiz! I was tickled that she'd do that. 🙏
If you have low back issues where you should not round, then keep your tummy pulled in to protect your low back and lean from the hips.
What if this pulls too intensely on the backs of your legs (hamstrings) or you have an aching, healing knee? No problem! Use a cushion to support that healing knee:
This will take the pressure right off it! If this still pulls too intensely, then either engage your quads which will, in turn, lift or engage your kneecaps to protect the joint, or plant your foot soles on the yoga mat. Yin is quite different than the Yang, active, warm, use-your-muscles style of yoga. I have a group of marathon runners who come regularly, and several of them do this pose in the following fashion:
Even if you are flexible and not bothered in the hamstrings, you might like to try this. You will see how it still gets right into the groin and inner thigh area. Notice I am doing it with my back flat but that is just to show you that you do not have to round. Perhaps you slowly start to let your legs straighten, either over the
3-5 minutes hold, or over several weeks of doing this pose
Hold here for 3 minutes. Use a timer; close your eyes and go within. Notice where you may be holding onto something: is it your shoulders? your jaw? your tummy? Let go... feet are floppy...
If you have a yoga block, you may find you can set it on its end and your forehead may come to rest on it, or maybe you rest your forearms on it as I am on the cushion here. If you don't have a yoga block, use a cushion as I am. DO NOT PULL. Relax. Have patience here; you can hurt yourself seriously if you pull. Let gravity do the work; your work is to breathe, to relax and to surrender. Listen to your heart beat. Listen to your breath.
To come out, rise back up slowly on an inhale, letting your head come up last if it was dangling. Take in a couple more breaths and then lean back on your hands without moving your legs. Take a couple more breaths. Fold in your legs, one at a time to a loose cross-legged seat, and arch your back, looking up, for another couple of breaths. Ahh! Enjoy the release as the blood rushes through the constricted areas. This works much like massage therapy to remove blockages, release toxins, and give you more space, more ease of movement. Be sure to have a drink of water once you head back to your sewing machine.
It took me years to get to this point, and I've put it here to show you there is always somewhere to go, and there is hope for everyone to see change, for the better. I think I was about 50, maybe a bit more, when I got my chest to the floor. Although I'd been practising Ashtanga Yoga for years, I thank the long holds of Yin that allowed my connective tissues, the ligaments, tendons, etc., to slowly give, and allow me to do this with no pulling. Every time I start to think, meh, I'm (choke) getting too old to ever be able to do that, something happens and I see the possibility. Be open, I guess, and I admit I am not always, to that growth, that change...those possibilities!
With that in mind then, this pose affects the Liver Meridian as it flows up the inner legs and into the groin. You may feel some frustration or even anger surface while holding this pose; just try to breathe through it, knowing that something is being released. Issues in our tissues, remember? It also affects the Urinary Bladder Meridian as it flows down either side of the spine, and down the backs of the legs. Maybe fears arise... The Kidney Meridian is affected also along the inner legs and groin, and the Spleen Meridian if you feel tugging on the insides of your knees. All this means is that you are stimulating these organs and energy highways and quite possibly removing blockages, if there are any, so energy will flow better. You, in turn, will feel better, by having better energy flow and better range of movement!
Next month we'll take a look at a couple Dragonfly variations you can do that will help release tension in your back, and in your shoulders while still working the legs
I hope you'll take a moment to visit Melody's shop and give her some support. She has some lovely fabrics, at reasonable prices, and has been so very generous in supporting the design challenge. The final draw is on March 15, a gift certificate for $50! Here is Abigail's design. Along with shadow quilts that I've been playing a lot with since Windfall, I love transparency quilts.
Isn't that cool?!
Now.
If you suddenly find yourself dropping the projects, the commitments, ignoring the emails mounting, refusing to cook - 'you're on your own!' words coming out of your mouth to your family, because you just have to make Abigail's design (with credit to her of course, right, and not selling it, right) then you've been hit by a DrEAMi! February's link-up was yesterday, but it runs through the end of the month, so, until Wednesday morning. 😉 If you already had a DrEAMi! moment or episode, then you can link it up there!
I'm off to sit on a floor and lean forward for a bit here; although I wrote some of this while sitting on the floor, I still spent too much time sitting in a chair writing this post! You can join me if you've been reading blogs for too long! Don't forget to check out Craftsy (affiliate link) sometime today though: along with another great supplies and kits sale, they also have a ton of free stuff, classes and patterns, yep, free!
![]() |
These are Capsules, Letters and Low Volume |
Okay Dragonfly. You know, just being able to get down and back up off the floor is something. Do not think, 'forget it, ain't happenin'; take your time and you can do this! I've said it before here and I say it pretty much every class I teach: you will be amazed at how this simple act of getting down onto and back up off of the floor can help increase your mobility. My friend Pat sent me the July issue of Prevention, with a cute bookmark marking the article she knew I'd be interested in. You will be hearing more in my Sunday Stretch posts about personal trainer Katy's theories of maximizing movement, one of her main ones being live on the floor. In other words, get off the chair as often as you can, and onto the floor, put your computer or iPad on a stool and use a nice big pillow to sit on or lean against while you read or work, put your coffee cups in the cupboard above your head so you have to reach up on tiptoes to get one every morning, and so on.
I have a yoga student who is in her late 60s, doing her best to avoid knee surgery, overweight, and who wouldn't come to yoga for several months because of embarrassment at how awkward she may have looked while trying to do this very thing. I encouraged her not to stay away, telling her Yin is in a low light room, go in the back row, no one cares because our eyes are closed or heads are down the majority of the time. So she tried again, and now has been coming regularly, and is so amazed and happy at her improvement! We modify stuff where her knees can't handle it, and she is able to go through the class just fine!
This pose will work your hips, low back and those knees. Before we go any further, I must also interject a quick thank you to Yvonne at Quilting Jet Girl, for doing a feature on my Yoga Poses monthly post on her Tuesday Tips and Tutorials. Gee whiz! I was tickled that she'd do that. 🙏
If you have low back issues where you should not round, then keep your tummy pulled in to protect your low back and lean from the hips.
What if this pulls too intensely on the backs of your legs (hamstrings) or you have an aching, healing knee? No problem! Use a cushion to support that healing knee:
This will take the pressure right off it! If this still pulls too intensely, then either engage your quads which will, in turn, lift or engage your kneecaps to protect the joint, or plant your foot soles on the yoga mat. Yin is quite different than the Yang, active, warm, use-your-muscles style of yoga. I have a group of marathon runners who come regularly, and several of them do this pose in the following fashion:
![]() |
Say what? Legs bent up that much? You bet! |
Relax!
The key to Yin is to relax your muscles. We get into the connective tissues, that white stringy stuff, aka gristle, you see in a package of meat. If you are a meat-eater, it's a pain to cut through, right? That, my friends, is the connective tissue of the animal, and we have that webbing throughout our entire bodies, into the very cells themselves. This webbing tightens up with stress, with repetitive stress (think sewing many hours at a time), with aging, with injury, and with surgery. Scar tissue? That's connective tissues, which are mostly elongated fibres, a few criss-crossing, but in injuries or surgeries, they criss-cross big-time and mass around the injured area, protecting it, immobilizing it. This is scar tissue. It's great while we are healing, not so great when it's time to mobilize. Yin can help to break that down and give you more mobility!Breathe!
In any style of yoga, the breath is paramount. So it is with Yin. Breathe in and out slowly and steadily to a count of maybe 3 or 4, even 6 or 8, as long as it is not forced. Kino MacGregor, Ashtangi extraordinaire, says something so beautiful at the closing of the Ashtanga Primary Series, on Cody, something to the effect of "Let every inhale carry with it the memory of the exhale, and let every exhale carry with it the memory of the inhale." So beautiful, and so flowing and so in the moment.Hold here for 3 minutes. Use a timer; close your eyes and go within. Notice where you may be holding onto something: is it your shoulders? your jaw? your tummy? Let go... feet are floppy...
If you have a yoga block, you may find you can set it on its end and your forehead may come to rest on it, or maybe you rest your forearms on it as I am on the cushion here. If you don't have a yoga block, use a cushion as I am. DO NOT PULL. Relax. Have patience here; you can hurt yourself seriously if you pull. Let gravity do the work; your work is to breathe, to relax and to surrender. Listen to your heart beat. Listen to your breath.
To come out, rise back up slowly on an inhale, letting your head come up last if it was dangling. Take in a couple more breaths and then lean back on your hands without moving your legs. Take a couple more breaths. Fold in your legs, one at a time to a loose cross-legged seat, and arch your back, looking up, for another couple of breaths. Ahh! Enjoy the release as the blood rushes through the constricted areas. This works much like massage therapy to remove blockages, release toxins, and give you more space, more ease of movement. Be sure to have a drink of water once you head back to your sewing machine.
Possibilities
Yoga is for everyone. Truly. All body types, all ages. It can do amazing things, on a physical level, yes, but on a mental and spiritual level as you quieten your mind and go within. If your head and/or chest comes to your mat, you may like to turn it to one side (be sure to do both sides), spread your arms apart so your hands come by your feet. This feels incredibly good in the shoulders.![]() |
Remember to take your glasses off... |
It took me years to get to this point, and I've put it here to show you there is always somewhere to go, and there is hope for everyone to see change, for the better. I think I was about 50, maybe a bit more, when I got my chest to the floor. Although I'd been practising Ashtanga Yoga for years, I thank the long holds of Yin that allowed my connective tissues, the ligaments, tendons, etc., to slowly give, and allow me to do this with no pulling. Every time I start to think, meh, I'm (choke) getting too old to ever be able to do that, something happens and I see the possibility. Be open, I guess, and I admit I am not always, to that growth, that change...those possibilities!
Acupressure
Yin combines Chinese theories of acupressure and acupuncture with the East Indian yoga theories. We tug on areas and therefore stimulate acupressure points. The Chinese, like the East Indians, treat the body as a whole. I tell my students to think in this way: every cell has a Liver component (detoxification), or a Urinary Bladder (elimination) component to it. This helps us Westerners to understand.With that in mind then, this pose affects the Liver Meridian as it flows up the inner legs and into the groin. You may feel some frustration or even anger surface while holding this pose; just try to breathe through it, knowing that something is being released. Issues in our tissues, remember? It also affects the Urinary Bladder Meridian as it flows down either side of the spine, and down the backs of the legs. Maybe fears arise... The Kidney Meridian is affected also along the inner legs and groin, and the Spleen Meridian if you feel tugging on the insides of your knees. All this means is that you are stimulating these organs and energy highways and quite possibly removing blockages, if there are any, so energy will flow better. You, in turn, will feel better, by having better energy flow and better range of movement!
Next month we'll take a look at a couple Dragonfly variations you can do that will help release tension in your back, and in your shoulders while still working the legs
Design Challenge News
The third bi-weekly draw for the #30quiltdesignschallenge2017 happened Friday night, (144 designs in the hashtag pool!!) and Abigail at Cut and Alter was the winner! She won a gift certificate to The Red Hen Shop.I hope you'll take a moment to visit Melody's shop and give her some support. She has some lovely fabrics, at reasonable prices, and has been so very generous in supporting the design challenge. The final draw is on March 15, a gift certificate for $50! Here is Abigail's design. Along with shadow quilts that I've been playing a lot with since Windfall, I love transparency quilts.
Isn't that cool?!
Now.
If you suddenly find yourself dropping the projects, the commitments, ignoring the emails mounting, refusing to cook - 'you're on your own!' words coming out of your mouth to your family, because you just have to make Abigail's design (with credit to her of course, right, and not selling it, right) then you've been hit by a DrEAMi! February's link-up was yesterday, but it runs through the end of the month, so, until Wednesday morning. 😉 If you already had a DrEAMi! moment or episode, then you can link it up there!
I'm off to sit on a floor and lean forward for a bit here; although I wrote some of this while sitting on the floor, I still spent too much time sitting in a chair writing this post! You can join me if you've been reading blogs for too long! Don't forget to check out Craftsy (affiliate link) sometime today though: along with another great supplies and kits sale, they also have a ton of free stuff, classes and patterns, yep, free!
Saturday, February 25, 2017
DrEAMi! Linky #2
Welcome to the second linky party for those quilt projects that just reach out and GRAB you, and what do you do? You go on and let 'em because oh! it's SUCH a knock-your-socks-off design, or oh-so-pretty, or you know just the person for whom this quilty project could be, and you have to make it for that person right now.
I have had not one, but two DrEAMi! episodes this month. 😬 The first I wrote about was my mug rug I made from the HSTs cut when I joined various strips of rainbow-coloured fabric for the binding for Whirling Stars.
I have had not one, but two DrEAMi! episodes this month. 😬 The first I wrote about was my mug rug I made from the HSTs cut when I joined various strips of rainbow-coloured fabric for the binding for Whirling Stars.
Friday, February 24, 2017
Quilt Kisses
Yesterday I mentioned all the secret sewing that has been going on over here, and today I can show you one of the projects because it arrived at its new owner's house! It is one of two DrEAMi! projects that took my focus away from what I should have been doing this month.
This is Quilt Kisses. You might think, hey, wait a minute, isn't there a blog in QBL by that name? Yup. And that is exactly where this mug rug went, to Jasmine, of Quilt Kisses.
This is Quilt Kisses. You might think, hey, wait a minute, isn't there a blog in QBL by that name? Yup. And that is exactly where this mug rug went, to Jasmine, of Quilt Kisses.
Thursday, February 23, 2017
Caw-mon Ground and Musings
Got up just ahead of the sun this morning despite some odd sleeping patterns yet again (enter menopause fun and games once more--it's bad enough that oddball things plague me during the day, well not plague maybe, but bug from time to time, but now nighttime is messed up too? Like what's with this...) where was I, oh yeah, got up, and felt compelled to do my meditation (wish I did this every morning, as it is truly a magnificent in a profoundly quiet way, to start my day) and after meditating, felt strongly compelled to draw/design. This happened:
As I said on Instagram, maybe it was my love of the number 3, triangles, pyramids, birds, meditation, sitting cross-legged, a dream last night of a Canada goose in the corner of our yard here in Florida, wow, I could see it, a still sentinel in black, grey and white, the feeling of a benevolent higher power, and of spring in the air, thoughts of heading north, seeing Abigail's rainbow stars, having done and so enjoyed Ruth's Rainbow Rose QAL, playing weekly with rainbow colours, in particular the migrating geese project #2, but I felt/saw so strongly a triangle image and a need to somehow translate this triangle image into a quilt. After I posted the image to Instagram, I realized the (duh) significance of designing in rainbow colours today, one day after Pink Shirt Day. Thank you to my sister Linda for reminding me; now that I am out of teaching, some of these significant days we always celebrated. escape me. It originated in Canada, where a young teen was bullied because he wore a pink shirt to school. I am so glad that a group of this young gay man's friends not only stood up for him, and against homophobic bullying, but did it LOUD. And LOOK where a small group's actions can go! How I wish we could show FREELY show, our tolerance of all peoples, (and all pibbles).
Windfall, and I have lined up some pretty terrific prizes for those who wish to join me and finish their wallhanging. More details to come, but I am excited! For now Bella is reposing on the stack of lush fabrics from Paintbrush Studio that I am using. They are my main sponsor. 😀
There has been a LOT of sewing going on this month, some of which you see here, a total of four, no five projects, some big, some medium, some small, that I can't talk about. Yet. Some has involved February's colour, sea green, teal, aqua, aquamarine, known by many names and hues:
I've committed to another leader/ender project since the migrating geese strip for February is complete, and my Scrap Vortex is uh, in a vortex still...
This quilt, "'X' Marks the Block" (I love witty quilt names) was designed by Teresa at Fabric Therapy. I saw it on Pinterest, and tracked it down to the original designer. Originally I was going to do it totally scrappy, as she does, but after my like/love/hate/dislike/meh feelings on my Scrap Vortex, I realize that I like and need more order with my scrap quilting. Could I do the opposing corners in one colour family? I could!
And thus RSC2017 Project #3 is born. I am leaving a few blocks each month with a blank corner section, ready for the next month's colour strips to be added. Not sure how this will all play out, but that is the fun and the liberation of working with one's scraps! Patience, a bit of a 'what if' attitude of experimentation, and beautiful things happen.
Much more of those three qualities are apparent in this week's amazing, not taking no for an answer, 150 Canadian Women project. Pat Sloan interviewed Kat on her podcast on Monday! Here is the link in case you missed it. Here are this week's blocks:
Oops. Ha, not really. Here is the result of some more patience and hard work done by my intrepid MacGyver who has really beautified our house front this year. One of his Bird of Paradise plants bloomed yesterday! It is unbelievable. I've seen several over the years of coming to Florida, but to have one right here and gaze at its wondrous intense colours, is so surreal for me. As is having my very own jasmine plants whose scent floats in in the early mornings. Okay closer look at those three blocks:
All right off to work. Yep, on the Free Fall Quilt Along.
Linking up with
Sew Fresh Quilts
My Quilt Infatuation
Oh! Remember my own linky is this Saturday, for any DrEAMi! projects you may have made during February. If you missed the last one in January, here is the link. Have you ever been a victim of one of those Drop Everything And Make it 'gotta-make-it-and-right-now' experiences? This is the party for you!
![]() |
"Caw-mon" Ground for #30quiltdesignschallenge2017 |
Windfall, and I have lined up some pretty terrific prizes for those who wish to join me and finish their wallhanging. More details to come, but I am excited! For now Bella is reposing on the stack of lush fabrics from Paintbrush Studio that I am using. They are my main sponsor. 😀
There has been a LOT of sewing going on this month, some of which you see here, a total of four, no five projects, some big, some medium, some small, that I can't talk about. Yet. Some has involved February's colour, sea green, teal, aqua, aquamarine, known by many names and hues:
![]() |
Ah aquamarine! And Kaffe Fassett... |
![]() |
Aqua corner triangles in... |
![]() |
or purple corner triangles in.... |
And thus RSC2017 Project #3 is born. I am leaving a few blocks each month with a blank corner section, ready for the next month's colour strips to be added. Not sure how this will all play out, but that is the fun and the liberation of working with one's scraps! Patience, a bit of a 'what if' attitude of experimentation, and beautiful things happen.
![]() |
Patience, focus, intensity, Naala has it all. Yet happily all the geckos are still alive and well despite her attempts to catch one! |
Oops. Ha, not really. Here is the result of some more patience and hard work done by my intrepid MacGyver who has really beautified our house front this year. One of his Bird of Paradise plants bloomed yesterday! It is unbelievable. I've seen several over the years of coming to Florida, but to have one right here and gaze at its wondrous intense colours, is so surreal for me. As is having my very own jasmine plants whose scent floats in in the early mornings. Okay closer look at those three blocks:
All right off to work. Yep, on the Free Fall Quilt Along.
Linking up with
Sew Fresh Quilts
My Quilt Infatuation
Oh! Remember my own linky is this Saturday, for any DrEAMi! projects you may have made during February. If you missed the last one in January, here is the link. Have you ever been a victim of one of those Drop Everything And Make it 'gotta-make-it-and-right-now' experiences? This is the party for you!
Saturday, February 18, 2017
Migrating Geese in Aqua
Pieced mainly as a leader/ender project, here is row 2 for the RSC2017 Migrating Geese quilt, my project #2.
Scraps of the size required, 5 7/8" squares, are not easy to come by when you do not have a lot of aqua scraps, period. Therefore, three of the triangles were cut as half triangles of that size square. There's a bit of the Meadow Mystery in this strip, a bit of a fabric my sister Wendy gave me from her first cruise to the Caribbean, a bit of Tula, a bit of the quilt that occupied the first 12 days of February, about which I have only hinted, and a very old marbled piece from a Magic Tiles quilt, etc...
I am going to have to organize these strips a bit because I was thinking it would be fun to have one row of geese migrating north and the other south because, well, obviously, that is what geese do. However, I do not want the triangles lining up, so I have to make sure to start adjacent rows with a triangle on the opposing side. One row will begin with a triangle on the right, the other row with a triangle on the left. Confused? I know what I mean and that is all that counts, right?!
A little aqua crept in to my Honey Pot Bee blocks for the month of February. Here we have Star Kisses and Quilter's Pantry Block.
And here are all the blocks so far. Not really a fan yet, to be honest, but time will tell. I keep wanting to add a print, but the challenge (to myself) is to do this entirely of solids.
We are beginning week 8 of the #30quiltdesignschallenge. As of the writing of this post, there are 122 designs in the hashtag pool! This challenge, to create 30 quilt designs, ends on March 15, so we still have nearly another month. Here are my latest two, which, I realize, incorporate their fair share of aqua!
Trunk Road was sketched on the way to yoga (don't worry; I wasn't driving), just an image I had in my head of the Canadian Rockies. I'd finished Merle's Door the previous day, and because so much of the book takes place in Wyoming and the US Rockies, and I was still living in the book in my head, specifically in the Rockies. I wondered vaguely if I could create a landscape scene using only squares and HSTs...not bad! This comes from travelling the Forestry Trunk Road in Alberta, basically from the Alberta/Montana border to just north of Hinton, Alberta. We spent many a happy camping trip over many years of trips here. This scene is from my mental image of a spot in the southern Alberta end of the Trunk Road, wheatfield or perhaps hay stubble in the foreground, foothills rising beyond and the Rockies towering beneath a blue Alberta sky, Ian Tyson's "This Is My Sky" playing in my head.
Two Point Five, a reference to the 2.5" strips I would use to make this block, is playing around with the Quilter's Pantry block I created for my jar. Note that I put the lime green strips I thought to make version B easier to piece, on the wrong sides of the block! I've been intrigued with playing with plaid, so I think the woven look to this stems from that. So far both attempts to create an overall plaid design quilt have been epic fails, ha!
Linking up with
soscrappy
Scraps of the size required, 5 7/8" squares, are not easy to come by when you do not have a lot of aqua scraps, period. Therefore, three of the triangles were cut as half triangles of that size square. There's a bit of the Meadow Mystery in this strip, a bit of a fabric my sister Wendy gave me from her first cruise to the Caribbean, a bit of Tula, a bit of the quilt that occupied the first 12 days of February, about which I have only hinted, and a very old marbled piece from a Magic Tiles quilt, etc...
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Honestly, she has new quilt on the floor radar! |
Feeling pretty blue...
I listened, twice, to "Canada's Storyteller: A Tribute to Stuart McLean" on my CBC app while I pieced this row amongst my other projects over the past couple of days. I am still choked up about Suart's death; how could he go in two months after announcing he was taking a little break to pursue a second, different treatment for his melanoma after the first one wasn't successful? And only 68. I used his stories with my grade 7 English Language Arts (ELA--English teachers, like quilters, love their acronyms) and my grade 9 Honours ELA classes. The listening tests I made up for "Toilet Training the Cat" and "Christmas Presents" are still used at the junior high where I taught. It was a wonderful connection with students who were familiar with the Dave and Morley stories and whose families listened regularly to "The Vinyl Cafe" on CBC Radio 2 at 9 am on Saturdays, repeated on Sundays at noon on CBC Radio 1. I enjoyed the musician guests, many up and coming ones that Stuart would highlight; I loved the Arthur Awards, and lamented with my mum that there will be no more, and my eyes brim with tears as I type this. For those who don't know, the Arthur Awards were given to people who did random acts of kindness, nominated by a recipient or observer of that kindness. Those shows, usually featuring 3 recipients, made my rose-coloured glasses view of the world glow hot flamingo-pinky-orange. Such wonderful persons from coast to coast in Canada. Stuart LOVED his country and illuminated, but in a quiet non-boastful way, through humour and poignancy, what it means to be Canadian. I am saddened that within a little over three months we have lost two icons of Canadian culture, Leonard Cohen and Stuart McLean. Yet I am grateful, so grateful, for such a wealth of a legacy that they leave behind, and so very very thankful that I was able to see both of these talented creative souls in concert.A little aqua crept in to my Honey Pot Bee blocks for the month of February. Here we have Star Kisses and Quilter's Pantry Block.
And here are all the blocks so far. Not really a fan yet, to be honest, but time will tell. I keep wanting to add a print, but the challenge (to myself) is to do this entirely of solids.
We are beginning week 8 of the #30quiltdesignschallenge. As of the writing of this post, there are 122 designs in the hashtag pool! This challenge, to create 30 quilt designs, ends on March 15, so we still have nearly another month. Here are my latest two, which, I realize, incorporate their fair share of aqua!
Trunk Road was sketched on the way to yoga (don't worry; I wasn't driving), just an image I had in my head of the Canadian Rockies. I'd finished Merle's Door the previous day, and because so much of the book takes place in Wyoming and the US Rockies, and I was still living in the book in my head, specifically in the Rockies. I wondered vaguely if I could create a landscape scene using only squares and HSTs...not bad! This comes from travelling the Forestry Trunk Road in Alberta, basically from the Alberta/Montana border to just north of Hinton, Alberta. We spent many a happy camping trip over many years of trips here. This scene is from my mental image of a spot in the southern Alberta end of the Trunk Road, wheatfield or perhaps hay stubble in the foreground, foothills rising beyond and the Rockies towering beneath a blue Alberta sky, Ian Tyson's "This Is My Sky" playing in my head.
Two Point Five, a reference to the 2.5" strips I would use to make this block, is playing around with the Quilter's Pantry block I created for my jar. Note that I put the lime green strips I thought to make version B easier to piece, on the wrong sides of the block! I've been intrigued with playing with plaid, so I think the woven look to this stems from that. So far both attempts to create an overall plaid design quilt have been epic fails, ha!
Linking up with
soscrappy
Friday, February 17, 2017
Mug Rug
My love-affair with scraps is well-known. I showed you the flimsy of the 6" square I made with scraps from the rainbow scrappy binding for Whirling Stars. Here is the mug rug I just had to finish up this past week.
I honestly do not believe I have ever bound a quilt with a yellow binding, especially one this vibrant. It's another sneak peek at one of the fabrics responsible for my 10-day posting hiatus. I did an X through the two main diagonal lines of the mug rug and then...couldn't stop. 😬
Here is the back:
I still have a little bit of this beloved Laurel Burch rainbow angel kitties fabric called "Holiday Collection" which she designed for Clothworks, just perfect for the back of my mug rug! I remembered before stitching on the binding to apply my label from Ikaprint. 😉 On minis, I cut my binding at 1.25" and do a single-fold application, which I first stitch to the quilt back, and then topstitch the front down. It makes for a pretty neat finish.
Here it is in action the other morning.
I am a simple girl: give me a good book, one cup of coffee in the morning, a meaningful mug (this one a gift from my mum many years ago, Mozart, much-loved composer of ours), some graph paper and crayons and pretty fabric, and I'm a happy camper.
Quilt Stats:
Pattern: original design
Size: 5 3/4" square
Fabric: leftover binding HSTs
Batting: Pellon Nature's Touch 100% cotton scrap
Quilted: on my Bernina
Threads: pieced with Gütermann; quilted with Aurifil variegated 3817
I noted on Instagram that I had just finished a terrific book, one I think all doglovers must read, so I want to mention it here for those not on Instagram. It's called Merle's Door: Lessons From a Freethinking Dog by Ted Kerasote. Just excellent. He's got another one out, actually two, about Pukka (rhymes with hockey puck) and I got the mainly photos book about Pukka as a puppy and have ordered the novel, Pukka's Promise.
Did you know? That you can look at any public account on Instagram and see the person's photos? I am mmmquilts, so if you want to check up on me, I am there every day or two!
I got some very happy mail yesterday:
This is from my friend Pat, who is on Flickr here. She sent me a terrific article about the importance of moving and stretching mindfully, to keep your hips and knees and back in good health. It is written by a personal trainer with many years of experience, both hers and her clients'. It amazed Pat, and now me, with how similar her insights are to Yin poses and reasoning. I will be incorporating some of this knowledge into future Sunday Stretches! I just love the saying on the card she included and that BAG--! I've admired these, especially the ones Anja has made, for some time and have wanted to make one but still haven't. Love that fabric, right?
Linking up with
Confessions of a Fabric Addict
Crazy Mom Quilts
TGIFF at A Quarter Inch From the Edge
I honestly do not believe I have ever bound a quilt with a yellow binding, especially one this vibrant. It's another sneak peek at one of the fabrics responsible for my 10-day posting hiatus. I did an X through the two main diagonal lines of the mug rug and then...couldn't stop. 😬
Here is the back:
I still have a little bit of this beloved Laurel Burch rainbow angel kitties fabric called "Holiday Collection" which she designed for Clothworks, just perfect for the back of my mug rug! I remembered before stitching on the binding to apply my label from Ikaprint. 😉 On minis, I cut my binding at 1.25" and do a single-fold application, which I first stitch to the quilt back, and then topstitch the front down. It makes for a pretty neat finish.
Here it is in action the other morning.
I am a simple girl: give me a good book, one cup of coffee in the morning, a meaningful mug (this one a gift from my mum many years ago, Mozart, much-loved composer of ours), some graph paper and crayons and pretty fabric, and I'm a happy camper.
Quilt Stats:
Pattern: original design
Size: 5 3/4" square
Fabric: leftover binding HSTs
Batting: Pellon Nature's Touch 100% cotton scrap
Quilted: on my Bernina
Threads: pieced with Gütermann; quilted with Aurifil variegated 3817
I noted on Instagram that I had just finished a terrific book, one I think all doglovers must read, so I want to mention it here for those not on Instagram. It's called Merle's Door: Lessons From a Freethinking Dog by Ted Kerasote. Just excellent. He's got another one out, actually two, about Pukka (rhymes with hockey puck) and I got the mainly photos book about Pukka as a puppy and have ordered the novel, Pukka's Promise.
Did you know? That you can look at any public account on Instagram and see the person's photos? I am mmmquilts, so if you want to check up on me, I am there every day or two!
I got some very happy mail yesterday:
This is from my friend Pat, who is on Flickr here. She sent me a terrific article about the importance of moving and stretching mindfully, to keep your hips and knees and back in good health. It is written by a personal trainer with many years of experience, both hers and her clients'. It amazed Pat, and now me, with how similar her insights are to Yin poses and reasoning. I will be incorporating some of this knowledge into future Sunday Stretches! I just love the saying on the card she included and that BAG--! I've admired these, especially the ones Anja has made, for some time and have wanted to make one but still haven't. Love that fabric, right?
Linking up with
Confessions of a Fabric Addict
Crazy Mom Quilts
TGIFF at A Quarter Inch From the Edge
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
Ten Days
Interesting title, no? This is thanks to a friend, who inquired as to my well-being (so did Pat), and I thank you sweet friends who notice a gap in posting from time to time. This one was 10 days, as she let me know. A lot can happen in 10 days. To be honest, and not totally transparent (yet) a lot happened in the first 12 days of February.
On the left you see 2" finished 4-patches destined for two projects and on the right trimmings from a big project that I can't talk about just yet.
On the left you see 2" finished 4-patches destined for two projects and on the right trimmings from a big project that I can't talk about just yet.
Saturday, February 4, 2017
Purple Project #2
Not only is it a "Wow, how did that happen?" feeling because we are done one entire month of 2017, but it is also a "Wow, how did that happen?" moment for me again because I
seem to have got a second RSC2017 project going again this year! I do know the new colour for February has been announced, Aquamarine, but this happened this past week:
I really needed to make these in orange...
However, before I cut into my remnants of orange and white Grunge from the Radiance quilt, I had to do a test for size. You see, you can make these in any size you want... Here are small ones I did on the Mariner's Compass flag I did as part of the Henry Glass Desire to Inspire Challenge:
So I dug in my limited purple scraps, pulled out some white and off-white ones and started cutting and sewing, and creatively cutting, I might add...
and before too long, I had that. These are called Migrating Geese and the tutorial I followed is here.
Problem: for the oranges I only have three shades. I could arrange them in two different ways:
I went with alternating. So yes, the scale and size was perfect; it would
add another 15.5" to the length of the quilt. So I started on the
oranges, but I needed a leader/ender project because, well, I just don't
like waste. I had a ton of rainbow triangles left from making the
rainbow binding for Whirling Stars, so I started sewing those together pretty much in the exact pairs as they were in the binding. Before too long, not only was the orange migrating geese strip happening; so were the HSTs and I suddenly had this!
However, I was still sewing the orange migrating geese strip, so...yup, I pulled back out the purples and used them as leader/enders. Because I'd started them before the oranges, it wasn't long before I had them all sewn together.
By the way, I still haven't made a decision, although I have a pretty cool idea, as to how to solve the vomit vs vortex problem on my Scrap Vortex.
I do love this purple row for my RSC2017 project!
Linking up
soscrappy for Scrap Happy Saturday
I really needed to make these in orange...
However, before I cut into my remnants of orange and white Grunge from the Radiance quilt, I had to do a test for size. You see, you can make these in any size you want... Here are small ones I did on the Mariner's Compass flag I did as part of the Henry Glass Desire to Inspire Challenge:
So I dug in my limited purple scraps, pulled out some white and off-white ones and started cutting and sewing, and creatively cutting, I might add...
and before too long, I had that. These are called Migrating Geese and the tutorial I followed is here.
Problem: for the oranges I only have three shades. I could arrange them in two different ways:
![]() |
On the left the oranges are in pairs, while on the right they are alternating light, medium, dark. |
However, I was still sewing the orange migrating geese strip, so...yup, I pulled back out the purples and used them as leader/enders. Because I'd started them before the oranges, it wasn't long before I had them all sewn together.
![]() |
Purple migrating geese strip is done! About 66" in length. I was still sewing the orange. |
I do love this purple row for my RSC2017 project!
![]() |
Doubled back on each other |
soscrappy for Scrap Happy Saturday
Friday, February 3, 2017
Never Assume
At my age, I should know better, right? I am a read the instructions kind of person, even though I may regularly find my own way to do/sew/make whatever the item is. However, with the Block #34 of the 150 CA Women project, from Next Step Quilt Designs, I assumed (wrongly) that the bars in the rail fence sections were all equal in width. Nope. So I now have some 2.5" already sewn strip sets that will maybe work their way into one of the remaining 114 blocks, or maybe into the backing, or none of the above.
All three of these blocks have two different cream or white backgrounds. The scrappier, the better IMHO. I put that cream with dashed lines in the middle of Helen's block because it reminds me of runways; I put the old-fashioned roses and leaves ivory/taupe background and soft cream floral prints in Lucy Maud's because it is romantic. How very glad I am that I brought my scrap box!
I keep thinking, enough with the caption about each woman, yet I continue to be amazed, truly amazed at these brave soul's accomplishments and take no sh*t attitude. Never assume that because I am female I am a lesser human. Never assume that a person's sex dictates her abilities. Right?! For a terrific post from a quilter who rode 6 hours on a bus to get to that Women's March in DC, click here. She made a quilt as her sign too!💓
In a time when diversity and tolerance are forefront in the world news, you may also want to check out this post by a vet/avid reader/quilter I follow, Based On A True Story. I can relate to her post because both of my daughters loved The Babysitter's Club books, and I remember all too well the one that was set in our home town, Edmonton, Alberta, so exciting, where the protagonist could look out and see the beautiful Rockies from her porch, a 3-hour drive away! Last time I checked, a human being could not see a nearly 300 km distance! I remember how annoyed and insulted the girls and I felt, that an author could not even take the time to investigate for accuracy. Only 4 short years ago when I was teaching, my favourite grade and subject to teach was always grade 7 English, with grade 7 French a close second. The novels and several of the short stories I taught dealt with the themes of prejudice and intolerance. Wow, did we have some wonderful, incredible discussions! I think today's young adults are much more open to the global culture of our beautiful planet, the richness various cultures and religions bring when viewed and accepted with open minds. There isn't just one way to anything: whether constructing or binding a quilt, making cookies, finding nirvana or heaven or ultimate supreme love, solving math problems, building a home, etc. etc., there are many ways, all good.
I am a bit closer to finishing another one of my Q1 goals, Radiance, Aidan's quilt for his new home.
I got the migrating geese done! They are 8" unfinished in width, so will add 15" to the length of the quilt, perfect for a tall young nephew! I brought backing here with me, but forgot the beautiful orange threads I'd picked up from Connecting Threads on sale, drat. Ah well, I might go pick up some orange variegated, as Tish suggested. Here is a lengthwise shot so you get the idea of it now being a rectangle. This is Triangle Transparency by Quilting Jetgirl, to which I added the migrating geese.
Never assume that your pattern will be recreated exactly like you designed it! And that, in my opinion is what I love about the artistry in quilting. Take someone's idea and build upon or run with it.
Finally, for those of you that are not on Instagram, here are my two most recent designs. There is still plenty of time to join us! The challenge runs until March 15, and there are two more bi-weekly draws for gift cards to Melody's shop, The Red Hen Shop, as well as the grand prizes.
Driving up to yoga takes nearly an hour each way, so I've been making good use of the time playing with the Quiltography app for iPad. Very worthy and user-friendly little app for a very reasonable price. Remember you don't have to have an Instagram account just to look! Click here if you'd like to see the (currently) 94 designs! You will notice you do not have to submit digital ones either. Hand drawn are just fine. The more the merrier!
Linking up
Confessions of a Fabric Addict
Crazy Mom Quilts
All three of these blocks have two different cream or white backgrounds. The scrappier, the better IMHO. I put that cream with dashed lines in the middle of Helen's block because it reminds me of runways; I put the old-fashioned roses and leaves ivory/taupe background and soft cream floral prints in Lucy Maud's because it is romantic. How very glad I am that I brought my scrap box!
![]() |
So is Bella glad. This pink pile provides the best armrest! |
In a time when diversity and tolerance are forefront in the world news, you may also want to check out this post by a vet/avid reader/quilter I follow, Based On A True Story. I can relate to her post because both of my daughters loved The Babysitter's Club books, and I remember all too well the one that was set in our home town, Edmonton, Alberta, so exciting, where the protagonist could look out and see the beautiful Rockies from her porch, a 3-hour drive away! Last time I checked, a human being could not see a nearly 300 km distance! I remember how annoyed and insulted the girls and I felt, that an author could not even take the time to investigate for accuracy. Only 4 short years ago when I was teaching, my favourite grade and subject to teach was always grade 7 English, with grade 7 French a close second. The novels and several of the short stories I taught dealt with the themes of prejudice and intolerance. Wow, did we have some wonderful, incredible discussions! I think today's young adults are much more open to the global culture of our beautiful planet, the richness various cultures and religions bring when viewed and accepted with open minds. There isn't just one way to anything: whether constructing or binding a quilt, making cookies, finding nirvana or heaven or ultimate supreme love, solving math problems, building a home, etc. etc., there are many ways, all good.
I am a bit closer to finishing another one of my Q1 goals, Radiance, Aidan's quilt for his new home.
![]() |
A finally finished flimsy! |
I got the migrating geese done! They are 8" unfinished in width, so will add 15" to the length of the quilt, perfect for a tall young nephew! I brought backing here with me, but forgot the beautiful orange threads I'd picked up from Connecting Threads on sale, drat. Ah well, I might go pick up some orange variegated, as Tish suggested. Here is a lengthwise shot so you get the idea of it now being a rectangle. This is Triangle Transparency by Quilting Jetgirl, to which I added the migrating geese.
Never assume that your pattern will be recreated exactly like you designed it! And that, in my opinion is what I love about the artistry in quilting. Take someone's idea and build upon or run with it.
Finally, for those of you that are not on Instagram, here are my two most recent designs. There is still plenty of time to join us! The challenge runs until March 15, and there are two more bi-weekly draws for gift cards to Melody's shop, The Red Hen Shop, as well as the grand prizes.
![]() |
'Scarlet Ice', a two blocks design, and 'Shades of Love', only one block, "Square Upon Squares" |
Driving up to yoga takes nearly an hour each way, so I've been making good use of the time playing with the Quiltography app for iPad. Very worthy and user-friendly little app for a very reasonable price. Remember you don't have to have an Instagram account just to look! Click here if you'd like to see the (currently) 94 designs! You will notice you do not have to submit digital ones either. Hand drawn are just fine. The more the merrier!
Linking up
Confessions of a Fabric Addict
Crazy Mom Quilts
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