Valentine Workshop

January 19th, 2008

The Fiber Arts Guild’s February meeting will be a valentine workshop. The idea is bring it, share it, make it, take it. Everyone will bring something from her stash, and we will have a creative free-for-all. I had to make a sample for the press release and the newsletter photo. This is it:

valentine

Since the weather is too nasty to go out, my sample was made with fabrics, paint, ribbon and beads from the stash. I didn’t have a card decorate, so the valentine itself is just a piece of poster board. No room for wishes…

It was fun to root around in the stash for forgotten but valuable items. One thing I used was the heart stencil from Nicholas’s birthday banner. That brought back some great memories.

In the resulting mess, however, my only functional glue stick has escaped. And I never did find the craft knife.

Beaded Gift

January 19th, 2008

I finished the beaded gift for my friend’s daughter-in-law. The “Rock of Hope” was given to all survivors at the Relay for Life, with the suggestion to pass it on to someone else at an appropriate time. I made a gift bag and a tag for it.

This is the embellished rock. I mounted it on ultrasuede and added the fringe.

cab 2

I think of this project as a prayer shawl except with beads. So as you you look at it, send good thoughts along to the recipient.

My Brush With Fame!

January 17th, 2008

Barbara from Joggles called me!!!!! This was unbelievably more exciting than all those robo-calls from John McCain and Joe Lieberman last week.

So I hear a few of you saying, “Huh?” The following are excused for not knowing who Barbara is and where Joggles is: Those whose current textile interest is in diaper wipes. Those who have Fallen into the Deep Pit of Yarn Lust. Those who have just finished Big Boy Quilts. Those who went to a new quilt store in biking distance of the Cute Little House, even if she didn’t bike.

Joggles.com is a really cool website that has just about everything a crafter, mixed media artist, or dollmaker could want. I found this website several months ago, and I signed up for the weekly newsletter. The newsletter describes all the new and back-in-stock products for the week, with links to each one. It’s a trip to go through the list each Sunday evening. I drool. And Barbara is the one who writes the newsletter and generally runs Joggles.

Of course, I would like to try almost everything they have. This may be a result of seeing all the different things members of the Fiber Arts Guild are doing. (Get a grip, Lady!) Since I have been floundering around artistically (or what passes for artistic around here…) after the Incredible Gift Bag Episode, I decided to expand my horizons and sign up for an online class. I chose Mixed Media Surfaces http://www.joggles.com/store/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=75_524&products_id=12352

I’ll get to try all sorts of things I’ve only read about. It should be fun, fun, fun–and possibly messy, messy, messy! And very crackpotty!

Yesterday I took advantage of the clear weather to search for the supplies at Hobby Lobby, JoAnn’s and Michael’s. I couldn’t find everything. Paverpol and Mulberry Bark are not all that easy to find. So this afternoon I placed my order for the remaining supplies with Joggles. I also sent along an inquiry about whether the Paverpol would freeze.

I had barely logged off when Barbara–the Barbara–called with an answer about the Paverpol. Wow! What fast service! And the order will be shipped tomorrow!

I am totally pumped about this class!!! It starts a week from today, so look for a progress report in about ten days.

The Renegade Militant Seamstresses met today. We learned several nifty clothing construction techniques. It started to snow in the early afternoon so I came home without even going to the bead store. But the result of the day is that I have another beaded button gig. This will be for the sewing guild of the large city to our east. It will be at their August picnic. I’m excited. Last year they had about 40 people at the picnic so it will be a big group. Just more fun!

Finished!

January 11th, 2008

Andrew finished

Here it is – all done and on Andrew’s bed! Yay!

Beaded Button Workshop, #2

January 11th, 2008

Wednesday was the Beaded Button Workshop for the Fiber Arts Guild. We had 22 enthusiastic beaders, several of whom admitted to having a stash of beads just waiting for the right project.

Here are the sample buttons I brought to the workshop:

button samples

I also brought along a few other beaded objects:

other beaded objects

The two on the left are beaded pins. On the upper right is a Christmas ornament. Look carefully at the lower right. Perhaps you can see the word HOPE on the stone. The stone is one given to survivors at the Relay for Life. Survivors are encouraged to pass the stone–and the hope–along to another person affected by cancer. I added the edging and mounted the stone on an ultrasuede backing. I’m going to add some fringe and then give it to a friend for her daughter-in-law.

Jennifer brought along some of her experiments:

jennifer

We got down to work right away:

beginning beading

Progress was rapid:

in progress 3

After less than two hours, beaders were getting finished:

almost done

Some added some dangles to the buttons:

green button

We finished before the library closed at 9:00 p.m.

And how about this for a cool button?

red button

If anyone has additional photos to add, please email them to me. You know where I am–or check the newspaper article for the email address.

Bamboo Batting

January 5th, 2008

While wandering around JoAnn’s yesterday, I noticed a new product: Bamboo quilt batting. Actually it is 50% bamboo and 50% organic cotton. It was more expensive than some–$13.99 for a 60″ by 60″ crib quilt/art quilt size.

I found some more info on the Fairfield website (http://www.poly-fil.com/batting.asp). The quilting distance is listed at 8″ and the shrinkage is 2-3%. There are instructions about pre-shrinking the batting. The major drawback is that the pre-shrinking does not include the washing machine or the dryer.

I expect we will find some information about this at the Chicago Quilt Festival. In the meantime, the few reviews I found through Google were positive.

Not-Circus-Fabric Quilt Preview

January 2nd, 2008

I have begun working on the quilt for Kyle and Jill’s baby, gender unknown, due March 20. I have decided to use the collection of 5 coordinating flannels that Marty gave me some time ago. As you can see, they are not circus fabrics, as I thought when I tried to describe them to Marty. Which may explain why Marty had trouble remembering them.

fabric

I have decided on a simple 4-patch design, using both versions of the focus fabric, using two of the coordinating fabrics for 4-patch blocks, and using the stripe fabric as a border.

preview

I don’t think it will be the cutest baby quilt I have ever made, but I think it works. And it is certainly bright. When I started to lay this out, it quickly became apparent that a solid color inner border will be needed between the quilt itself and the stripe fabric. In fact, I may go with two solid borders, one blue and one yellow, in addition to the stripe. Or possibly just two solid borders. In proper Crackpot fashion, I’ll cross that bridge when I come to it – and hope I can find the right colors in flannels.

Gift Bag Instructions

January 1st, 2008

Gift Bag Secrets Revealed!

Instructions for the confused, bewildered, and flummoxed. You know who you are…

1.Select two coordinating fabrics, one for the bag and one for the lining. The floral is my bag fabric and the floral stripe is my lining fabric.

bag fabric

2.Cut two rectangles from the bag fabric and two rectangles from the lining fabric. These should all be the same size. The size of each rectangle will be ½ inch longer and ½ inch wider than the finished bag. (Note: If you square off the bottom of the bag, as in steps 6, 7, and 8, the bag will seem narrower than your measurements. Make adjustments accordingly.) You can vary the size to fit the gift you want to bag. I am working with a rectangle about 14 inches high and 12 inches wide.

3.Right sides together, stitch the two bag fabric rectangles together along the sides and the bottom. You can stitch in a squared off U shape. A ¼ inch seam is sufficient for quilting weight cottons.

4.Place the bag lining fabric rectangles right sides together. Stitch one side and the bottom. On the second side, you will leave part of the seam open for turning. Stitch up from the bottom a few inches and backstitch. Leave an opening of 2-3 inches. Then backstitch again and stitch up to the top edge.

turning hole

5.Press seams open.

6.With the bag and the lining still inside out, fold the bag so that one side seam is up against the bottom seam and you have a point where the seams meet.

bottom

7.Stitch across the point to form the flat bottom of the bag. The size of the flat bottom will be determined by how far from the point you stitch. See your local paper grocery bag for more information. Do this for both corners on the bag and both corners on the lining, keeping the distance from the point the same on each corner.

8.Trim the points off, leaving a ¼ inch seam.

9.Turn the bag right side out, but leave the lining inside out.

10.Put the right side out bag into the inside out lining, having tops together and matching side seams. Pin. Stitch the tops together all the way around with a ¼ inch seam.

bag top

11.This is the confusing, bewildering, and flummoxing part: Reach in through the turning hole in the side seam of the lining and pull the bag through.

right side turn

right side out

12.This is the secret part: Slipstitch the opening closed. (Look for it on your bag.) Or hire aliens to do it. Or if you are making 24 very small bags for baby shower favors, pin the seam closed, raw edges inside, and topstitch the opening closed just on the lining side of the seam allowance. This will be visible on the inside.

13.Push the lining back into the bag and press the top edge.

14.Add a tie by stitching a ribbon through all layers along one seamline. For a reversible bag, put a tie on the inside, too.

done

15.Fill with fabric, chocolate or a combination of both and celebrate!

First FO of 2008!

January 1st, 2008

I’m pleased to present my first finished object of 2008, my Hillswick Lumber Fair Isle sweater. I won’t even pretend that this sweater was started in 2008, since the first post about it is from May, 2007. All I did today was attach the buttons, which I purchased yesterday.

Sweater in use:
Hillswick Lumber being worn
Please excuse my “it’s a holiday and I’m not going anywhere so I haven’t showered yet” hairdo and the awful bathroom lighting. The main things to notice in this photo are:

* The sweater fits!
* The stripes on the body and sleeves align nicely when I’m wearing the sweater.

Some detail shots:
Hillswick Lumber Torso2

Hillswick Lumber Inside

I knit the size Small as it appears in the pattern, with one alteration – I lengthened the sleeves. I’m really glad I did – you can see in the in-use picture that they’re the perfect length. My theory is that because these sweaters are often worn with a lot of ease (far more than I wanted – some patterns I’ve seen have 10″ of ease over the bust measurement!), the extra body width essentially becomes sleeve length. Because I chose a size with less ease than perhaps was intended in the pattern (about 4″), I needed to lengthen the sleeves to accommodate this. That, or I’ve got monkey arms.

Quilt Top in Just Over a Day!

December 30th, 2007

Amelia\'s butterflies top

This is the closest I’ve ever gotten to a quilt in a day! As you can see, it’s a baby quilt and the pattern is very simple, but I’m still impressed that I did almost all of the cutting and all of the piecing except the outer border yesterday. I did the outer border today, and I’m very happy with how it looks. This will be for friends of ours, who had a baby girl about a month ago. Once this is done, I will move on to quilts for a baby girl due in early January and a baby boy due at the end of January.