Showing posts with label scrap quilt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scrap quilt. Show all posts

Thursday, July 23, 2015

Crazy Heart Cushion



Don't know if you remember the Quilted Heart Rug? Well here's its companion piece, the Crazy Heart Cushion.


Forgive me, but I couldn't resist making another heart-themed quilted thingie... Looks quite fetching resting in the great outdoors on my wooden bench, doesn't it?

♥M

Monday, January 27, 2014

Love Project

Whispers of a small love project... The heart is paper-pieced and modified from one I found over here at Piecemeal Quilts - thank you Sandi!

A little way to go still...

♥M



Monday, March 18, 2013

Dear Future-Michele...


While the experience is still fresh and crispy in this wee mind of mine, I wanted to write my future-self a letter to remind her of all the good things I learned from making this "Hexistential" hexagon quilt. 


***




Dear Future-Michele,

How are you? Well, I hope.

You remember that hexie quilt you made in 2012 and 2013? Remember, before you ever made it, how much you had wanted a hexagon quilt? Remember how you'd thought it was an unrealistic far-flung dream? And then remember how you worked to make it just the same, and how nice it eventually turned out?

Okay good.

Here are some of the secrets to that success. Or 10 things you learned from your hexagon quilt, if you will. Take this letter out whenever you doubt yourself or whenever you think one of your ideas is just too big to handle. Hopefully it knocks some sense into you.

1. Planning is worth every minute.  Know what you intend to do before you begin. Draw out a design for the project, and also, draft a plan of daily tasks for yourself. This was probably the biggest lesson to you. You are notoriously spontaneous. But spontaneity can quickly disintegrate into scattered and distracted. With a plan comes direction and clarity - even serenity - things you definitely could use more of.

2. A little goes a long way.  Work at your large project bit by bit. Give yourself a task to complete every day and then do it but no more. This will keep boredom and overwork at bay. Remember how you actually looked forward to the little bit you planned to get done every day, and your consistent efforts were rewarded with steady progress? That's because you set aside about an hour every day to work on the hexie quilt. Every day you made 15 hexagons. But you also did some other small additional task. For example, you cut out several hexie papers, or joined a bunch of hexies, or removed hex papers from the completed sections of the top, or you cut out a bunch of scraps into hexies. This little bit every day kept the project rolling yet utterly doable as well.


3. Challenge yourself.  Challenging yourself involves going beyond what you already know even - and especially - in the face of self-doubt. You had never made a hexagon quilt. You had only admired them from afar always feeling that the hand-work would be overwhelming, that the required effort and persistence were not part of who you are. You always thought: "There is no way I could ever make one of those!" But look, you were wrong and now you have proof. In fact, there IS a way. You can do it!... YOU CAN DO IT! Just because you have doubts, doesn't mean you have to give in to them, and it certainly doesn't mean you won't be capable. If you never try, you'll never find out what your true limits are. Remember this, Future-Michele: fear is not a measure of ability.

4. You CAN take it with you.  Make up a travel kit. And take it with you on long car rides, on the bus, or whenever you go anywhere where you'll be waiting. You lugged your re-vamped ice cream bucket travel kit everywhere: camping, out to dinner, to The Boy's lessons, to the optometrist's office, on summer holidays, across borders etc. In a half-hour you easily got through your daily quota, no problemo.

5. Switch it up. Yeah yeah, switch it up. There are so many tasks involved in making anything. When you get bored with one task, do another. If you think basting one more hexagon will make your head explode, then (very carefully) set that task aside, even for a few days, and sew instead, or cut stuff out. Change it up and keep going darn it!


6. Stop in the name of love.  Well actually... sometimes you DO need to take a break. So when you're tired, take a day off. Once you're rested, resume the work. The world will not end if you have to push back the completion date of a project. Remember you brought the whole kit with you on holidays? And remember you didn't crack it open for days because you really needed a rest? That didn't spell the end of you or your quilt, did it? No Future-Michele, you just started up again when you got back home.

7. Make your own rules.  Make this project yours. Experiment. When you're creating something that will require this much effort, a little forethought and playful experimentation could catapult your project from mundane to beautifully unique. Here are a few gorgeous examples of hexagon quilts, scrappy and otherwise, from around the web that kept you inspired to go beyond...
8. There's gold in that there scrap bin.  If you have fabric scraps, then you potentially have a quilt. If you divide your scraps by colour and value, you have a better idea where to begin, what to create. If you lack certain colours, ask friends and fellow crafters for scrappy donations. Do you remember that weekend, when you set aside your natural shyness, and visited a local quilt show? There, you asked around and found an older lady who was getting rid of scraps for free. Needless to say, you were very thankful, weren't you?



9. Keep track of your progress.  Write down your progress to see how much you've done. For some reason, it helped you to know that you'd made 45 hexies or 932. It was motivating, you could see movement, and it boosted your self-confidence. It helped you visualize how much you had accomplished, and was concrete proof that you could do it. Remember that, Future-Michele.

10. Share and share alike.  It is very motivating to share the journey, the progress, and the setbacks of your project with others. Sharing the making of this hexagon quilt with your reader was so motivating. She encouraged you and was curious to see what you had accomplished. Your reader kept you engaged by expressing a desire to see more. This made you want to give more! You should be extremely thankful to your reader because she helped you, in a very real way, to complete your beloved hexagon quilt!

I hope you'll remember these things when you're thinking about what comes next, Future-Michele. Life is full of hope and opportunity. Don't let fear stop you from reaching beyond what you thought was possible. Not ever.

Yours always,

Michele

♥M

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Work-In-Progress: Baby Boy Quilt



What have I've been up to the last few days?... Designing, choosing fabrics, cutting, marking, pinning, and sewing together a quilt for a boy babe.

It's coming along... slow and steady. I'm enjoying the quiet process.

♥M

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Quilt Finish: City Streets



One of my goals for this month was to put to rest this sweet 'n scrappy quilt project, one which I started back in... oh dear... July 2011? Wow. I really really gotta work on turn-around times. I think what held me back on this one was the idea that I HAD to, and could not NOT, hand-quilt it.


I think hand-quilted quilts are the ultimate. I've only ever hand-quilted. There's something about the feel and look of them that is so warm and old-timey. I just love them, needless to say. However, if I was ever going to finish this project, compromises were going to have to be made by me. Over the Christmas holidays, I re-considered machine-quilting as an option, and I have to say, it was such a relief to make that decision. There's no question: I can be extremely stubborn. But it's nice to know that when push comes to shove, I can still be flexible.

Now, I recently inherited a lovely 1973 Elna SU sewing machine (to replace Betty, my even-older White sewing machine) from my mother-in-law. It's in ship shape. It's like new in fact. She took tremendous care of it over the years. So last weekend, my husband kindly took me around to all the little sewing/quilt shops in town (he was so encouraging) and I was pleased as punch to find a walking foot for it. The walking foot (similar to this one) turns my regular sewing machine into a quilting beast. It's darn great!


So, as you might have guessed, the quilt is quilted and bound and done and totally finished. Amazing! And as for my first walking-foot experience, I'm a satisfied girl. I've still got stuff to learn but I'm pleased with this first effort. I've dubbed the quilt "City Streets". Here it is!

You have a lovely day now. I'll be back soon!

♥M

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Fabric Scraps Reinvented


I'm off on holidays and away from my computer until Monday the 8th of August so I prepped a few tidbits before I left. Enjoy enjoy! ♥ M
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Soooo, I've been busily making the blocks...


... for my scrap quilt. Here's my progress so far.


But as it turns out, making a scrap quilt just leaves you with lots more scraps. Lots more teeny tiny scraps.

Whatever to do?


Sew them together maybe?



To make yarn?... Perhaps?


Colourful nubbly bubbly yarn?

Below are the actual teeny tiny eensy weensy leftovers after sewing a batch of 20 squares. Not bad at all.


Now. To figure out what to do with the very colourful, nubbly bubbly yarn...


Hrm.

Have a great day now, I'll see you soon!

Monday, July 25, 2011

Silly Scrappy Thoughts



❥ Scraps are ideas you're about to have.

❥ Love your scraps and they'll love you back.

❥ Scraps are fabric too.

❥ Scraps = Small Cut Rags Attaining Proud Simplicity

❥ If scraps weren't useful, they'd have removed the esses.

❥ Scraps are like common folk. When banded together they can do great things.

❥ Scraps are tiny chunks of rainbow.

❥ Scraps are ordinary until you make them special.

❥ Scraps. Yes we can!

❥ Scraps are like sparks. Only backwards. And misspelled.

Note: The above blocks are the beginnings of my latest quilt project in which I am using only scraps. 72 blocks down, 166 to go!

Have a lovely Monday, and I'll see you soon!

Monday, January 10, 2011

Lost: A Cautionary Tale





My tale begins one sunny summer afternoon about 6 months ago, roughly 3 months into the creation of this blog. I had just completed a post. I don't recall which one exactly, but it may well have been a Feast post because that series was in full swing at the time. I was sitting at my dining room table. I had just pressed the "Publish" button. Now I don't know about you, but I always get butterflies just before I press that button. I don't know why. You'd think that after 9 months of blogging the mixed feeling of nausea, nerves and utter excitement, that "high" that occurs at publication time, would have waned a little. But it hasn't. It's still there, strong as ever. And it was there that day too.

And as always, the first thing I do once I've published, is to check that everything is good with the post. It never is. There is always some glaring error to be found when I do my check after publication. Always always.


So on that day, 6 months ago, when I went to check my post, I was a little irked when up popped a message from Blogger that said something like: "You have incorrectly entered the blog url. That blog does not exist."

Funny, I thought to myself, I didn't even "enter" my blog url, I just pressed the link that Blogger provides on the "Your-post-has-published-successfully" page. What's going on?

So I tried entering my blog url. Same message.


What followed is something that I do not wish on my worst blogging enemy. It went something like this.
  1. An attempt to remain calm.
  2. A stoic search for Michele Made Me in every possible way my non-technical brain knows how to search the web.
  3. The realization that I had never backed up my blog.
  4. A groundswell of tears.
  5. A desperate search for others on the web who'd undergone this same thing. This was horrifying, as it is - from what I learned that day - relatively common for blogs to disappear into the ether never to be seen again.
  6. An unstoppable flow of tears.
  7. The realization that ALL that work was gone.
  8. Inconsolable sobbing on the kitchen floor.
  9. Desperate emails to Blogger Help to see if they could do ANYTHING followed by zero helpful replies.
  10. A growing hillock of soggy tissues on the kitchen floor.
  11. The realization that the universe was trying to tell me that blogging was NOT to be.
  12. The realization that I wasn't good enough or smart enough to be a blogger.
  13. The realization that I didn't DESERVE the happiness that blogging was bringing me.
(#11-13 are bollocks by the way. But I was in full-on self-pity mode at the time, and that is what arose in my crazed head. I was subsequently given a stern talking-to by Lo to NEVER think these things about myself. EVER! He's my man.)


And then Lo came home. I hadn't told him. He took one look at me, and instantly asked in his quiet and concerned way: "What's wrong Mich?"And I couldn't reply... I was beside myself. I just collapsed in his arms and eventually whispered: "I lost my blog".

Followed by a flood of tears. Again.

And then Lo put on his all-business technical hat and started playing around on the computer. He sat there working for quite some time. He found all the same stuff I'd found. The Blogger Help forums with stories of lost blogs. "This blog does not exist". No Michele Made Me. Nothing. I was defeated.

And then about 6 hours after it disappeared... It came back... Just like that... As if by magic... No explanations. No reasons. But there it was.

That was 6 months ago. But it is a moment that is etched in my brain forever, and leads to this little tidbit of advice from me to you:

BACKUP YOUR BLOG.


The alternative is pure, unadulterated blogger hell. And my blog was only lost for 6 hours. Imagine losing EVERYTHING FOREVER? Well... That ain't happening! I've learned my lesson. I back it up regularly.

Just google "How to back up your blog" and you're sure to find the right information for your blog!

Edited to Add:

Read the comments. You will find one by Rebecca, a blogger who recently lost her blog. And then take a few minutes to backup your blog, please.


Now go have yourself a great day!


[Featuring Scott, my In-Laws' dependable concrete pooch, and "Kept in Stitches", the scrappy kaleidoscope quilt I made 2 yrs ago for my In-Laws' 40th Wedding anniversary, machine-pieced and hand-quilted by me.]


Monday, October 25, 2010

Tutorial - Kid and Grown-up Placemat Fun





Yesterday the boys and I had planned to do yard work all day but as it happened, not only did Mother Nature have other plans (it was cold and rainy out), but Lo was feeling somewhat under-the-weather. So we all decided to stay ensconced in the warmth of our house. Of course that meant coming up with something to keep the Boy occupied. Now, I usually have some kind of crafty back-up plan up my sleeve for such an occasion. Yesterday, Plan B involved making one-of-a-kind placemats.

Now the Boy loves to craft. It's in his blood. But Lo. When I asked him if he wanted to make a placemat I wasn't actually expecting him to say "Sure." But he did! AMAZING. CRAZY. ( I thought it must be the virus talking or something...) But he actually sat down with us for probably about 2 hours helping the Boy, creating his own design, cutting the pieces. And the Boy! He had so much fun, he made two different placemats! It really was a great family rainy day activity!

Here's what we did...


Tutorial: Kid and Grown-up Placemat Fun

You will need:
  • Fabric scraps
  • Fabric pieces (roughly 12"x 18"), 2 per placemat (1 for front, 1 for back)
  • Batting pieces ((roughly 12"x 18"), 1 per placemat
  • Fabric binding
  • Fusible web
  • Pins
  • Pair of scissors
  • Iron and ironing board
  • Sewing machine with darning foot
  • Needle and thread
Note: Nothing was bought specifically for this project. I found everything in my stash! Bo-nus!

1. Take one of the 12" x 18" fabric pieces. This is your base fabric.


2. Using the fabric scraps and a pair of scissors, create a design by placing various scraps on your base fabric. You can reshape the scraps or leave them "as is" and just place as you like on your base fabric. The point: Be creative, do what YOU like, this is YOUR placemat.


This is the first of the Boy's designs.


Here's what our dining room table looked like. The floor was a mess but that's to be expected.



3. Note: The kid friendly part of this activity is over. The rest should be done by you. Following the directions on your fusible web, use it to adhere the fabric scraps to your base fabric. If you're still not sure about using fusible web, here is a good fusible web tutorial link.

Here's what our placemats looked like once they were fused. Notice that some of the larger pieces were pinned in place. That was just my preference, feel free to fuse all pieces.


4. Now you will make a quilt sandwich. Place a piece of batting between your designed top piece and your back piece. Pin the sandwich together. Do this for all your placemats.

5. Free-motion quilt all your placemats. I'm still learning how to do this so my work is FAR from perfect. But I can tell you that if you have a regular old sewing machine like I do, you will need a darning foot to do this step. You also need to put your feed-dogs down (those are the little toothed pieces under your sewing-machine needle that feed the fabric along as you sew).

Note: The finished design has raw edges. The edges will likely soften and lose threads over time with washing. Once they completely fall apart, we will make more.

Here are a few details of the free-motion quilting...



6. Bind your placemats. Here is a very good tutorial at Sew Inspired that shows you how to do that.

And here are the finished placemats! Here is Lo's which I just love! I'm super-fond of circles.


Here's the Boy's first design...


Here's the Boy's second design. I love this one too. I like the way Saturn is about to collide into our house. So great. The stars are very cute too.



And here's my design!


We had a great time doing this together as a family. Perhaps you will too...

Have a wonderful day!

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Quilt Finish: So Early in the Morning

The big reveal... This baby sat unfinished in the closet for many moons before I got around to quilting the poor thing... Finally, I found the motivation to bring it out and started working on it for real about a month ago. I call this one "So Early in the Morning" in celebration of all the stitching that was done in those wee hours...

Here's a long shot:

It is machine-pieced and hand-quilted by yours-truly and is, in all likelihood, the girliest quilt I have ever made (I'm making a concerted effort to embrace my pastel pink and yellow side). As you can see, it is a scrappy quilt.

Here's a close-up:


A shot of the hand-quilting and girly-pink binding:

And finally, the flannel backing:

And it is going on Lo's and my bed because we really need a summer weight blanket and this will do the trick!

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

A Quilty Sneak Peek



Here's a peek at what I'm busy at today... some handquilting... a little everyday... and eventually it will get done... patience patience... okay, back to work...

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