Wednesday, November 24, 2021
Thanksgiving Wishes
Tuesday, November 9, 2021
Nine-Patch Quilts
I love simple nine-patch quilts. A couple of years ago, I bought this small quilt on eBay. It was listed as an antique crib quilt. After it arrived, I could tell that it clearly was not an antique quilt. But it was cheap enough and cute enough that it didn't really matter. I really loved the primitive look of it. I think the blocks may be antique but on close inspection the rest of the fabric doesn't seem that old. The blocks may have been cut down from a larger quilt and made into a small quilt. Anyway, I created a pattern if anyone is interested. Pretty easy to figure out but see my Etsy shop if you need more directions. It's just too cute so I know I have to reproduce it someday. Maybe even make a larger quilt? Hah - like I don't already have enough of those that are unfinished. The pile keeps building.
Friday, November 5, 2021
Jacob's Ladder Quilt
I really love making simple quilt blocks using lots of reproduction fabric scraps. What about you?
This month we're finishing up the small quilts from the Schoolgirl Sampler book with quilt # 6 - Jacob's Ladder quilt on page 31. It uses a very simple block with lots of possibilities. Marian Edwards made this little quilt for the book and her color scheme really gives it a nice primitive look.
Jacob's Ladder has always been one of my favorite blocks - simple four patches mixed with half-square triangles. Here's the same block with a different look -
Some of you who've made quilts a looong time ago from my first book, American Doll Quilts, will remember this block used in the little Underground Railroad quilt. The colors and pieces are just arranged a little differently. Turn the block around and use darker fabrics for the inner triangles and you get a completely different look. Experiment and see all the things you can do with it.
This little quilt wraps up our small quilt sew along for all the quilts in the Schoolgirl Sampler book. I hope some of you who joined us this year had a lot of fun making these quilts. So many of you actually finished your Sampler quilt! It's been wonderful seeing all the completed quilts with so many variations and different colors. I also felt extremely proud hearing that a few of you entered your sampler quilts in shows and won ribbons. Imagine that.
I really want to thank all of you for taking on this Sampler journey in the Facebook group. I loved seeing everyone's work every week. I sympathized with your struggles with certain blocks and cheered your successes and progress. So many quilters have told me that they felt they learned quite a lot and improved their skills by working with these small pieces and following some of my tips. I hope I even convinced those of you who had never worked "small" that making these blocks can be incredibly satisfying and fun. Even if some of them didn't turn out quite as perfectly as you would have liked. It's the learning from our mistakes that helps drive us to become better quilters. All in all, I'd say we did good - wouldn't you agree??
Thursday, October 21, 2021
A Little Fall Fun
Went to the Chicago Botanic Garden today. Cloudy and cool (and a teeny bit drizzly at times) but it was nice to get out of the house. Enjoy my walk!
Monday, October 4, 2021
October Doings
Can you believe it's October already?? I finished my wool Window box quilt. Wasn't sure if I would like the dark background for my applique but I'm really happy with the way it turned out. And even though it's not in orange and brown or fall colors it still has a warm feel and I'll display it for fall.
The Schoolgirl Sampler Sew Along Facebook group has been making all six of the small quilts from the book. This is Quilt Number 5 in our series - so colorful and scrappy. Sue Bennett took a few of her favorite blocks and made this cute little sampler. Wonderful fabrics and colors that sort of have a fall look. Some of you may have leftover blocks from your sampler quilt. Take a few and sew them together to make this darling mini quilt. You can find the instructions for this quilt on page 18 of the book. It's fun to be creative when you have so many options to choose from.
Of course, you have to make it with scraps, which only adds to the fun. Take a little time to sort through your scrap box or basket. You never know what you'll find. And you know how playing around with fabric always makes your creativity flow. So does buying new fabric. I got some new fabric last week and as I was putting it away in my sewing room, I came across a really pretty older fabric I had set aside to use in my Dear Jane quilt. Well, just looking at that fabric inspired me to take out my DJ blocks again and sew the sashing on a few more blocks. The center blocks for my Dear Jane are all finished but so far only 3/4 of them are sashed together in rows.
Not all Dear Jane quilts have sashing with tiny cornerstones. The original does not. The very first Dear Jane quilt I saw in person had sashing with blue cornerstones. Then and there I knew that that was how I wanted to make mine.
Silly - I only have a few rows left to do but I kept getting distracted by other projects and family things and so I'm constantly putting them aside. I'm hoping I'm on a roll now and will be done with all that sashing by . . . next week? If I can actually keep at it every day. This would truly be a milestone for me - to get that center finished. I'm still working on my triangles and have slightly more than half of those finished.
I'm wondering if any of you who've finished the Schoolgirl Sampler quilt has now gotten the sampler bug and is thinking about making a Dear Jane quilt . . . . Did you know that Brenda Papadakis, who wrote the Dear Jane book, has come out with a second edition of her book? It's the 25th Anniversary edition. The original one with the yellow cover has been out of print for quite a few years and is really hard to find. When there are so few copies of a book circulating, that always makes the price go up. If you can actually find one for sale. Some of the prices on Amazon were outrageous. My own copy is all dog eared and marked up after ten years of working on it and so I think I'm going to spring for a brand new one just because it's got a pretty blue cover, LOL. I believe it's being released later in October. Hopefully, this will renew interest in The Quilt and some of us will get inspired to finish the ones we've started when others begin theirs for the first time.
If Jane is not your thing and you think you'd like to work on a simpler project, remember that it's not too late to join my Schoolgirl Sampler sew along. Just get that book, jump in and start making the six blocks for Week One. See what happens. Then make the blocks for Week 2 . . . . It's that simple. If I did it, you can too. Follow the plan and you'll finish all the blocks in 12 weeks.
It's fun to make the quilt in a group where you have some support from others and encouragement to finish. We've been making them in numerical order to make it easy for you to follow. There are tons of tips in the group files and so many wonderful, helpful members to encourage you along the way if you have questions or get stuck. Don't be afraid to ask for help.