Saturday, January 28, 2012

Post Vacation Update

I started writing a blog post last weekend.  I got about 4 pages done and I was just way too tired to continue.  I left it up on the screen and went to bed.  Unfortunately, I’m having issues with this computer and it rebooted itself without saving.  I am the biggest proponent of backups and frequent saving, so I am kicking myself for not following my own advice!!

So, here I am, basically starting over. L

Project updates


I’m back from vacation and I was very good about what I brought to do.  I got everything done that I had planned on my list except for one thing – the cutting for the contest entry.  I simply didn’t have the right balance of fabrics (there’s a color progression in there).  The list was:

·         Mariner’s Compass quilt - Cut out/prep all pieces for blocks
·         Curved Piece quilt (Circle Dance) - Layout quilt/arrange blocks
·         Scrap Tamers - Month 3 – Seven sisters block - Determine layout AND Cut out any additional blocks needed
·         Contest entry - Organize fabrics AND Cut fabrics

Additionally, the first Saturday that I was back home – just shy a week ago – was a “Sewing Saturday” for my quilt group at a local church.  I got more work done there.

Circle Dance Quilt

I’ll start there with my updates and work a little backwards (time frame).  I must put in a call out to Emmaus Lutheran Church in Saint Paul.  My quilt group has a wonderful relationship with them and I hope it continues.  The church is fairly small, but has an open, carpeted, basement that is perfect for us to use.  They have about a dozen 8 foot resin folding tables and many chairs.  The fact that the space is carpeted is a bonus and gives us a space for lying out and pinning quilts.  I certainly take advantage of it!

The church has a group of older women who also “quilt”.  Let me explain why I put that in quotes.  This group donates many quilts each year to overseas charities.  Those programs want simple quilts – not too nice or they are stolen and sold.  The group at the church is older, and they enjoy getting together and doing projects.  Piecing a quilt top is a fairly solitary activity so they don’t want to do that.  They prefer to have finished quilt tops, which they tie together with yarn and then hand stitch the binding.  My quilt group has worked out a deal where we cut the fabrics and make the quilt tops in exchange for the use of the facilities.  It’s a win/win deal!

So, a week ago – on a Friday night – we had one of our regular (about 3-4 times a year) “cutting nights”.  Nancy who is a church member and a member of our group collects fabric from a variety of sources.  I recently culled and organized a section of my stash (yes, a section – it’s huge!) and donated quite a bit myself.  We get together and divide into functions.  Some people iron the fabrics, others cut, and some organize the cut pieces into kits.  Each kit makes a 60 by 80 quilt top.  The “pattern” is 6 – 10½” blocks by 8 – 10½” blocks.  Each block can be a 10½” square, two 10½” rectangles or four 5 ½” blocks – all depended upon how big we can cut pieces from the fabric we have.  Each quilt group member is expected to complete one top per year so that we can provide the church quilt group with enough tops for their projects.

We generally cut starting at 6 PM on the Friday night and run until 10ish.  Some people stay 1 hour, some longer.  I’ll confess that I usually only put in an hour.  We always go to dinner on Friday nights and the socialization of that is important to me to.  I try to make up for this by cutting at other times.  For example, about six months ago I cut a bunch of fabric in my stash into about a 6 inch tall stack of pieces rather than just donating the fabric uncut.

Then, we return to the church in the morning and have a free time sewing day.  I generally like to take advantage of the space there versus my house having insufficient floor space for a full sized quilt and layout projects there.  I had also laid out the Circle Dance quilt on vacation and had labeled the rows.  This is my initial plan:

I drew that out in Visio (Flow Chart program – I’m a computer geek too!), because I wanted a visual of which direction the pieces went.  Unlike many quilts – the blocks are not symmetrical; layout direction mattered.


True to form, once I had it laid out on the floor, people started looking at it and rearranging pieces!  I love that about my group!  I got the top sewn together and then decided that it really needed some borders.  I’m really trying hard to use stash, but I knew that I had nothing truly appropriate for borders for this quilt.  All of the fabric in it is from the “Stonehenge” line.  I picked out 24 fat quarters – with a nebulous color scheme in mind – and that’s the only fabric in there.  I felt that I needed to stick with same or similar pattern style.

Since Twin City Quilting was so close by, we ran up there to pick up some border fabric.  My daughter and a friend went with – Quilting is so social!  I had seen some fabrics there a week or so before that I thought would work.  I really thought that they were also the Stonehenge line, but, to my surprise, they were of a line called “Marble” or something like that!  Must be the trend of the season….

So, not only did I complete the arranging of the quilt on my vacation, I also finished the top – completing this project from my list.  Remember, sandwiching and quilting is not included on my short term to do list – that will come later.  Here’s the picture of the finished top.  I just love it.  This one is staying with me!


And a closeup of the borders.  Doesn't the fabric look like it's from the SAME line?



See here for a post about the piecing of these blocks.  (find the section on the Circle Dance Quilt)

Mariner’s Compass Quilt


The task for this was to cut out / prep the remaining blocks.  This task is ONLY for the circle parts of the blocks; the backgrounds to square up the blocks – as well as the few sashing pieces – will be another task.  Also, I don’t want to plan and / or cut out the big pieces with holes in them for the compasses until I’m done with the compasses – too much room for concerns there. 

This project grew after the class I took.  To prep for that class, I grabbed some fabrics from a pile I had.  I’ll term it the “want to do something with, but not sure what” and/or the “these fabrics go nicely together, what should I do with them” pile.  However, there were not very big pieces of the fabrics – not enough to piece a lot of paper pieced blocks (lots of waster there) AND have large squares for the backgrounds.  I managed to eke out the remaining few blocks from these pieces just barely! 

While visiting TCQ for my Circle Dance borders, I also picked up a yard of a bright green that I think will be good for the backgrounds.  Then, back at the church, my daughter was organizing her stash – most of which came out of MY stash – and gave me back a large piece (3+ yards of another green that will go perfectly with the blocks and the first green!  I think I’m set now.  

Scrap Tamers – Month 3 – Seven Sisters Block


As I’ve mentioned before, besides doing the mystery with my monthly group at Glad Creations Quilt shop – the Scrap Tamers group – I’m also doing other projects.  Each month, a set of Marti Mitchell templates is demoed and a pattern given.  I’m doing a project from each pattern – size to be determined with each – and using ONLY stash.  This includes backing, batting, thread – everything.  I cannot buy anything.  I also MUST make something from each pattern.

Month 3 is a new technique to do the Seven Sisters block.  Traditionally, the block was made using 6 diamonds cut out and with inset and Y seams.  Marti’s technique use only straight seams.  Here’s a picture from the internet showing this block. 


My task for vacation was to plan the project and to cut all the pieces for each block (sashing and borders to follow).  I decided to do a baby quilt in blues and yellows.  I do not have many yellows in my stash, but I did have several odd sized/shaped pieces of yellow in my 1/8 – ¾ yard section that I knew would be sitting there for a long time yet.  After looking at the cutting directions for the blocks, I figured that I could make the stars in the pattern scrappy and use up a lot of those pieces.  The back ground would be a single fabric, balanced out the quilt.  I settled on blue because a couple people in my quilt group have been doing blue and yellow lately and I thought I’d give that a try.  Here’s the pattern for the quilt:

 
In addition to my vacation task, I have now completed all the blocks and am determining sashing.  I am glad that I learned this technique; I am glad that I did this traditional (with new technique) block and I am glad to have used some smaller pieces of my stash.  However, this block does not inspire me, the color combination doesn’t excite me, and, frankly, I dislike the quilt so far.  I know that some people will love it – the fabrics are quality, the piecing is done well, and I’ll quilt it nicely.  It also grew to more of a lap sized quilt than a baby quilt.  It will go to a charity auction or something similar.  Here’s a picture of some of the blocks.

 

Contest entry - Organize fabrics AND Cut fabrics


The last thing on my vacation to do list was the Contest entry.  This quilt is going to be full sized (see here for the “test” that I did.  The contest entry must be only black, white, black and white and green (focus color) fabrics.  I didn’t quite finish here.  I determined that I need two more fabrics than I had brought.  Part 1 was to organize fabrics.  Since I would be 1000 miles from my stash, I grabbed a great many of the black, white, black and white fabrics – more fabric overall then I would need.  One section of the planned pattern requires a color progression.  I just didn’t have enough yardage of colors that worked for the middle section of the progression.

I did cut everything else, bagged and labeled, and am ready to start.  The contest deadline is in April, so this is my next up project to finish. 

Conclusion


That’s it for the vacation update.  Here’s my running list – staying honest!!

Mariner’s Compass quilt

·         Design layout
·         Print all blocks
·         Cut out/prep all pieces for blocks
·         Assemble blocks
·         Cut sashing pieces
·         Assemble quilt

Curved Piece quilt

·         Finish cutting blocks
·         Assemble blocks
·         Layout quilt/arrange blocks
·         Assemble quilt top

Block of the Month – TCQ

·         Frame 8 inch blocks
·         Make current blocks
·         Determine layout
·         Decide on other blocks to complete layout
·         Make additional blocks
·         Assemble quilt

Scrap Tamers

·         Month 1 – Bali Runner (can’t remember rest of name)
o   Finish binding
·         Month 1 clue
·         Month 2 – (can’t remember name at all)
o   Finish binding
·         Month 2 clue
·         Month 3 – Seven sisters baby quilt
o   Determine layout
o   Cut out any additional blocks needed (most are already cut)
o   Assemble blocks
o   Assemble quilt
o   Bind quilt
·         Month 3 clue
·         Month four – just got, haven’t looked at
o   Determine project; project will be a full sized quilt
o   Cut out blocks
o   Assemble blocks
o   Assemble quilt
o   Bind quilt
·         Month 4 clue

Contest entry

·         Determine color scheme
·         Organize fabrics
·         Cut fabrics
·         Piece blocks
·         Assemble blocks


Thursday, January 12, 2012

Trials and Tribulations of a Makeshift Sewing Room

So, as talked about in my last posting, I’m on vacation and have taken a bit of sewing prep work with me.  This unto itself is a challenge:
·         Have I packed everything I need
·         Modifying the above statement – did I pack things that I do not need, taking up vital space and weight in my checked bag?
·         No printer and special paper along so if I’ve missed a pattern piece, I either have to wait or hand draw it
·         Having only a 17 inch square cutting board presents some unique challenges
·         A small coffee table is really a lot less space than my usual cutting table
·         AND not much space to make piles of pieces while organizing
·         The ironing board cover is so nice and pristine, but the iron really bites – no steam, barely heats up, is light weight; I miss my Rowenta

There’s also a new challenge…. Due to some odd circumstances which I won’t bore you with, my daughter’s young cat is staying with us.  His name is Loki.  As in the Norse god of mischief.

Yes, he lives up to his name….

Very much so.

In his defense, he’s not been around my sewing long enough to learn the things that he can and cannot do.   The cats who live in my home – all five of them – may pull pins out of things, sit on every piece of fabric and scatter pieces as I’m trying to lay them out, but we have an established routine.  Loki is unpredictable.  I’m not used of him, and he’s a bit trying.  He’s also very cute, so he’s getting away with a lot.

Here’s a picture:


He’s on the ironing board of course, getting ready to pounce.  If you can tell, he’s wearing a bow.  It’s a scrap trimmed from the edge of a piece of fabric I brought along.

So far, Loki has dumped a bunch of organized pieces from the coffee table, hidden a small plastic template and is trying very hard to keep me from writing about how mischievous he is (he’s biting my hands and trying to sit on the keyboard!).  If you remember my last post, I wrote the following:

Since Daughter and some friends will be with us, and since we’ll have a large floor space without five cats, I’ve got both a juried panel and the ability to lay a quilt out for more than ten minutes with the blocks retaining their positions.  I figure that even though these 3 or 4 (the number keeps changing) young adults are not quilters, they have eyes and will have opinions – some of which I may listen to.
Ok, that changed…. Loki is going to DESTROY things as I lay them out.  He’s still a kitten, and does a several/many hour passed out nap each day (and then is very active all night); maybe I can get it laid out during that time.  I only have two full days left here.

Project Updates

Supplies:  I think that I planned pretty well.  I brought plastic baggies for the cut pieces, but I should have brought more.  That’s an easy one though – there’s a grocery store nearby.  Additionally, I did not bring hand needles or thread as I only intended to cut and organize.  However, shortly after arriving, daughter presented me with a pair of her pants that are brand new but have a small cut.  She asked me to mend them.  We happened by a Joann’s while out touring and I bought needles and a small spool of thread.  I have more needles than I ever need….. and now I bought more…..  Word to the wise:  always bring a spool of thread and a needle – those two things fit nicely in any bag.

Projects:  I’m pretty much on schedule with the cutting/organizing projects I brought.  However, I also brought crochet and wire / jewelry work and haven’t touched those.  Oh well, its vacation…. I have to have some fun outside of my projects too!


Mariner’s Compass quilt
·         Cut out/prep all pieces for blocks
Curved Piece quilt
·         Layout quilt/arrange blocks
Scrap Tamers
·         Determine layout Layout will be a 4-3-4-3-4 blocks/rows, and partials on the ends of the 3 block rows.
·         Cut out any additional blocks needed (most are already cut)
Contest entry
·         Organize fabrics
·         Cut fabrics

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Vacation and Projects

I have just packed for my trip to Colorado.  Now, I’ve mentioned before in this blog that I usually pack light and take little hand projects with me on my week long vacation trips. 

That has now changed….

I have the Delta Sky miles Amex card that lets me check a bag. 

I generally fear checking bags, because when things are out of your sight is when things go missing.  However, my desire to work on my quilting projects during vacation far, far, outweighs my fear of losing a bag.  I do plan on doing other things on vacation; however the hubby and I are not constant action people.  A large part of vacation for us is being away from the house and just relaxing…. And relaxing often means in front of the TV.  We don’t have standard TV at home, so it’s really part of our vacation routine to explore during the day, back to the resort for dinner (we own timeshare and usually stay with a kitchen) then watch the latest Law and Order, CSI, etc., marathons that always seem to be running on some network.

However, I cannot sit and just watch.  It’s not in my nature… I have to do something.  That’s why I bring hand project on vacation.  When we vacation somewhere that we drive to, I usually bring cutting/organizing projects.  Now, I’m bringing my cutting/organizing projects on the fly in vacation too.

Part of this particular vacation is fetching daughter #2 and some of her friends along the way and they’ll be going us.  We’ve booked a two bedroom “lockout” at the resort.  That means that while we have a two bedroom unit like we usually get (we take friends on vacation a lot too), those two bedrooms are actually two SEPARATE units with a door that locks between them.  There’s an A side which is a deluxe room with a full kitchen, whirlpool tub, large living room, separate dining room, etc, and a B side which – despite having a bedroom that is indeed a full room with a door – is basically a studio.  The B side has a kitchenette, no dining area, no whirlpool.  Guess which part of our group gets the A side? 



There are two sides to my personality when I pack.

Side 1 – the logical side:  I pack a smaller roller bag with everything I need for a week clothes wise.  My laptop, ipad, books and miscellaneous things go into my backpack.  Even my purse is fit into the backpack so that I have two bags – the limit for carryon.  The motto is:  “If I can’t carry it, I don’t need it”.  I have sample sizes of all my cosmetics and other consumables.  If I will have access to laundry facilities while traveling (which I usually do), even less is brought. 

Side 2 – the artistic side:  When I go on quilt retreats, I take everything except the kitchen sink.  If I’m working on a blue quilt for example, I will bring a full grocery bag of additional blue fabrics “just in case”.  I bring every color of thread, the big iron and the hand iron, a spare machine, usually the Juki (the quilting machine) in addition to the Viking (piecing) and the spare, the bin of batting scraps, extra projects, etc., etc.  When daughter #1 and I went on a quilting retreat last fall, there was barely enough room in the minivan for her and her few things.  The minivan is an extended length minivan……

The same logic has been applied to this trip.  I have my backpack, my smaller roller bag with clothes and the LARGE roller bag full of fabrics, patterns, cutting tools, and a cutting board.

Hubby just shook his head…..

I’ve also upgraded the rental car from a standard to a SUV….

In my defense – Art is not exact.  Things come to me; I MUST have choices!  I’m the type of quilter who never plans all the fabrics for a quilt on the front end.  I hardly ever select a pattern and buy all the fabrics.  I buy fabrics that I like, and add them to my hoard stash.  Then, when I have an idea, I go search through the well organized and shelved piles of fabric (organized by type, color, and even broken down into general amounts).  Borders are usually decided after the main part of the top is pieced.  Backing is only selected after the entire top is pieced. 

The Circle Dance Quilt

I took a class at Calla Lily Quilt shop.  I am chagrined to say that I basically failed the class.  The instructor has a technique using a special foot to sew curved pieces without using pins.  I like pins.  I’ve done a lot of garment sewing and learned early on to use a lot of pins to set in sleeves and other curves and how to avoid caught fabric and puckered pieces.

I decided to take the class on a whim after seeing the Stonehenge fabrics and falling in love.  The class requirement was 24 fat quarters, which I bought brand new, non-discounted fabric for...

Ca-ching….$$

The class also needed two sets of templates…..

Ca-ching…. $$

The special foot was even more.  The class materials stated that the quilt shop had the feet and that the instructor would let us try hers out.  I did so, one several blocks and just could not get the technique down.  I did a ton of ripping that night and was quite frustrated.  I declined to buy the foot and just decided to pin every curve.  I did so and I’m very happy with the blocks now.  I had to pin nearly 250 curves, but it didn’t take that much once I got a system down and I’d rather well done blocks than struggling with a technique.  I also think that the time spent ripping would have far exceeded the payoff for not pinning.

So I failed a class.  My quilt class GPA has now dipped below 4.0….. Oh well, done is better than perfect!!!

One of the projects I’m bringing along on vacation is my completed blocks.  I’ve made 120 or so large (7 inch) blocks and 120 or so small (3 ½ inch) blocks out of 20+ different fabrics from the Stonehenge line.  With this quilt pattern, you put four of the small blocks together to make more larger blocks and then arrange all the blocks as you see fit.  The blocks can be put together to make circle, partial circles that form waves, etc.  Each quilt – even if two people use the same fabrics – will be totally different than others.  The biggest step is not assembling the blocks, but rather determining the layout of the pattern.  Click here to see a picture of a sample quilt (not mine).  I predict that it’s going to be:  lay out, * look, move blocks *, repeat steps between stars multiple times until satisfied, then ask others to look and repeat again.

Since Daughter and some friends will be with us, and since we’ll have a large floor space without five cats, I’ve got both a juried panel and the ability to lay a quilt out for more than ten minutes with the blocks retaining their positions.  I figure that even though these 3 or 4 (the number keeps changing) young adults are not quilters, they have eyes and will have opinions – some of which I may listen to.

Twin City Quilting Block of the Month

I’ve said it before – I love doing block of the month programs.  However, I’m a snob.  The BOM programs that I like are the ones where the quilt shop shows all their new fabrics, books, tools, etc., talks about them, has a show and tell, and does a proper “mini-class” on that month’s block(s).  Twin City Quilting does it right, Glad Creations does it right, Fat Quarter Quilting does NOT.

TCQ did a block of the month in two colorways/fabric types – batiks and the “Troy” line.  I chose the Troy line because I wasn’t yet into batiks when it started nearly a year ago.  I’m now into batiks, wish that I’d done them, but also don’t regret doing the Troy line.  The last date for the program is a week from tomorrow, when I will be coming back from vacation.  I’m actually not sure if there’s another block to be handed out or if it’s just finishing instructions.

I’ve not yet finished a block of the month quilt the way it was “supposed” to be done.  Even the mystery that I did in Scrap Tamers two years ago I changed.  That quilt just seemed small, so I added another set of blocks all around the outside.  In fact, a friend of mine who also did the program also wanted a bigger quilt and used my idea (and fabrics!) to finish hers.  The set of blocks was quite fitting with the rest.

The TCQ BOM got the same treatment – not an extra row, but rather different finishing.  We made two blocks a month for ten of the months (20 blocks).  Note:  I’ve talked about the TCQ BOM before in this post.  Each month, we got a block pattern and four fat eighths of different fabrics.  This made a scrappy look to the quilt.  My blocks were even more so as I bought fat quarters and even half yards a couple times in the same fabric line.  Some of the blocks were 8 inches and some were 12.  One of the months (count to 11 now), was spent using scraps from all blocks to frame the 8 inch blocks to 12 inch size.  All along the way doing this, TCQ has stated how many more blocks needed to be made to make the quilt up to a Queen or King.  They also sold finishing / sashing kits in accordance with those plans.  I chose not to buy them; remember me saying above that I don’t choose borders ahead of time?  The same is true of sashing; when I have the blocks done, some fabric will call out to me.

When I had the 20 blocks pieced, and the 8-inchers brought up to 12 inches, a friend who A. knows me well and B. is also an artist type, stopped over.  She looked at all the blocks and said “you didn’t pick the individual fabrics, right?”  It wasn’t an insult.  She knew that it wasn’t something I would have chosen and she was right.  The blocks are well done, they look nice, and the finished top is very nice looking but it isn’t “me”.  The quilt is not something that I feel an artistic need to keep in my stash.  It doesn’t call out to me.  Again, I repeat, it’s a very nice quilt and I think I did a good job.  This friend also declared that the blocks looked more masculine than anything else.  That statement struck me and it told me what to do to finish the quilt. 

My son loves my quilts.  He also really likes flannel fabric – something about the feel of it appeals to him.  I’ve just given him and his SO a king sized quilt for their bed so I figure that a lap/slightly larger than lap sized piece would be a nice thing to have.  They live in North Carolina which doesn’t get too cold, but he’s also male and I’ve seen him sleep on the couch!  I decided that putting the blocks on point would look nicer.  The blocks are busy which gave some challenges. 

First:  Laying the blocks on point created large (along the sides) and smaller (four corners) triangular spaces.  I felt that putting larger chunks of a single fabric in those spaces would look odd against the busy blocks.  Also, 20 blocks was an odd number for a good on point layout.  18 was a good number, but that left me with blocks. 
·         I made three more blocks with my scraps, and cut those blocks and two others diagonally in half.  Those half blocks filled larger triangular spaces.
·         I cut other scraps into 2 inch wide pieces and sewed them side by side.  I then trimmed these “blocks” to triangles to fill the four corners.  While these weren’t a traditional block pattern like the taught blocks, they came out fitting the scrappy look of those blocks.

Second:  Sashing.  I didn’t think that sashing in one fabric would work.  However, using multiple fabrics could have run into an issue with the scrappy blocks not being separate enough to be distinguishable.  To address this, I sashed the blocks with 12 inch (size of block) strips of one fabric and squares of a different fabric at the corners of the blocks.  I’m not sure what you call this technique.  Here’s a not so great picture of my finished top.



The borders – true to my style – were decided after I pieced the top and laid it on the floor.  I thought yellow and asked hubby (not saying color) and he also said yellow.  I had exactly ONE yellow fabric in my stash that was anywhere near acceptable.  That surprised me.  I didn’t think I didn’t like yellow, but I certainly don’t have much of it.  I also thought that the quilt called out for a narrow border between the yellow and the blocks – kind of a stopping point.


Project Update

My list of updates follows.  I am SOOO proud of myself; I’ve been keeping to this list, only doing things on it and trying very hard to get through my backlog of projects.  When I started reporting on this list in this blog, I stated that this is my “Done by the end of January” list.  I think that I am still on track for that.  I got less done this week than I counted on (work exploded), but I think a good weekend at home will catch me up.  I also NEED to get all my cutting/organizing projects that I’m taking on vacation done during vacation.

When I’m done with this list, there are two more steps to my backlog elimination. 
1.       All the projects in the “box”.  The box is a handled box (like grocery boxes but a little bigger with a metal frame), that I started throwing things into for retreat over a YEAR ago and never emptied.  It’s taken on a life of its own and needs to be finished, emptied and returned to the attic WITHOUT fabric.  It’s probably a 3-4 month backlog activity.
2.       The actual project bin.  Years ago, hubby and I bought a wicker chest.  That was to be my project box.  It is a piece of furniture that looks nice in the dining room rather than a cardboard box.  However, it’s currently a dumping ground for things and the “box” took over.  When I’m done with the box, then I will list out everything in the bin.  Some things in there will wind up going to the quilting garage sale at Guild and/or thrift store.  It kind of became the spot for things that I started, didn’t work/look right, and I pretty much decided I wouldn’t finish.  But – one person’s junk is another’s treasure!   I think there’s probably only really 1-2 months in there.

Confession – in looking through the “box” for a missing pattern piece, I pulled out one project and included it in my pile for vacation.  It’s a piece of Asian fabric bound for a One Block Wonder quilt.  That pattern requires six repeats of a fabric and some specific fabric prep and cutting.  Its a couple hours to cut out for me.  I felt it was something that I could add to my cutting pile for the trip.

I’ve also taken bits and pieces for cutting for my Sylvia’s sampler.  I don’t actually count that project in any of my backlogs.  Since its small blocks, cutting intensive and also scrappy, it’s always been a “take-to-meetings” type of project.  There’s no fixed timeline on it – it’s been two years – and will probably be more.  It’s a constant “filler” type of project.

Legend:
·         Strike through = done
·         Red text = bringing on trip

Mariner’s Compass quilt

·         Design layout
·         Print all blocks
·         Cut out/prep all pieces for blocks
·         Assemble blocks
·         Cut sashing pieces
·         Assemble quilt

Curved Piece quilt

·         Finish cutting blocks
·         Assemble blocks
·         Layout quilt/arrange blocks
·         Assemble quilt

Block of the Month – TCQ

·         Frame 8 inch blocks
·         Make current blocks
·         Determine layout
·         Decide on other blocks to complete layout
·         Make additional blocks
·         Assemble quilt

Scrap Tamers

·         Month 1 – Bali Runner (can’t remember rest of name)
o   Finish binding
·         Month 1 clue
·         Month 2 – (can’t remember name at all)
o   Finish binding
·         Month 2 clue
·         Month 3 – Seven sisters baby quilt
o   Determine layout
o   Cut out any additional blocks needed (most are already cut)
o   Assemble blocks
o   Assemble quilt
o   Bind quilt
·         Month 3 clue
·         Month four – just got, haven’t looked at
o   Determine project; project will be a full sized quilt
o   Cut out blocks
o   Assemble blocks
o   Assemble quilt
o   Bind quilt
·         Month 4 clue

Contest entry

See here for the “test” quilt I made for the contest.  The contest is a challenge; I can use black, white, black and white and a green fabric.
·         Determine color scheme
·         Organize fabrics
·         Cut fabrics
·         Piece blocks
·         Assemble blocks