Saturday, April 27, 2013

Strip Twist


I made this top in two days - it's from 2 1/2" strips. I donated it to our guild's community service program, and Barbara K took it home to make it into a quilt. 


This is a Bonnie Hunter pattern, free from her website. Go here to get it for yourself.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Up, Up and Away - Sunday Morning Quilts

Last month when Don and I were in Bishop, I picked up a copy of Sunday Morning Quilts at Sierra Cottons and Wools. I knew that since there was a box of triangles needing to be used, the first quilt I'd make would be this one.

There are 587 triangles in this quilt.  It was quilted by Alex Shaffer.


Discontinuity - an Emily Cier pattern






I started this quilt in Emily Cier's class at Road to California in January. I finished the top in February, and finally took it to Alex to get it quilted last week.  I sewed the binding on a couple of nights ago. The quilting pattern is a unique angular one called Modern Mayhem. 

Blocks, blocks, blocks

Sisters' Ten Modern BOM - April Block - Lady of the Lake

Sisters' Ten Modern BOM - April Block - Lady of the Lake

Wonky Quarter Circle - Sew Bee Wonky April block for Manda

Wonky Quarter Circle - Sew Bee Wonky  April block for Manda

Lucky Stars BOM - April 12" block - Black Hole Star

Block Swap Adventure April Block - Ohio Star for Debra

Sugar Block Club BOM April Block - Sunny Days

Lucky Stars BOM - April 6" block - Black Hole Star

Stash Bee April Block - Christmas X for Carol S.

Emma's Rails

When my friend Janice asked me last week if I wanted her mother's quilting stuff - fabric and books - I immediately said yes.  I never met Emma, but she was a member of both of the guilds that I belong to.  As I was sorting through all of the fabric, I felt like I'd hit a Civil War goldmine. About 70% of the fabric was Civil War colors - muted burgundy, navy, brown, green, and neutrals.  There was also a bunch of flannels, a few yards of homespuns and ginghams, and the rest was scraps.  I spent the first couple of days cutting up the Civil War fabric into pieces for Home of the Brave quilts.  I'm about 2/3 of the way through that fabric, and so far have enough blocks for 2 complete quilts and 3 more quilts that need sashing. I'll be giving those to Cathy, the national Home of the Brave coordinator, at the next guild meeting so that someone else can piece the tops while I'm in Yellowstone. 

The flannels and homespuns will go to our guild's Sew What room, where they'll be sold to someone in the guild who will put them to good use.

As I was going through the scraps, I found the makings of an uneven rails top. Apparently Emma was in the process of piecing the blocks - there were about 20 completed but untrimmed tops, and enough fabric for more.
 I'm not sure about this fabric - it's not Civil War, it's not 30's reproduction - but it's clearly from an era of a long time ago. 1920s? 


This was my favorite - crickets shooting pool. 

First, I trimmed the blocks she'd made, and discovered that about half of them were trimmable to 6 1/2", but the rest could only go to 6 1/4".  So I trimmed them all to 6 1/4".  Next, I calculated that there was enough fabric for another 22 blocks, so I made them yesterday.  There are three 1 1/2" strips and 2 2" strips in each block. This left me with 42 blocks, so I sewed them into a 7x6 setting. Emma had also left a big piece of some navy fabric that went well with the blocks - I'm going to assume she intended it for the border as there was almost exactly the correct amount to make 5" borders. 

So here's the completed top: 


Janice, since I made you read this, this question is for you:  Do you want this?  You can get it sandwiched and quilted at Cherry Berry Quilts in Calimesa, and you'd have to spend a bit for some backing fabric (less than 2 yards) and some batting.  I can put on some binding for you.  You know how to get in touch with me. I think it would be a nice remembrance of your mother.